Tokyo: Next year's postponed Tokyo Olympics if they happen will be like no other, particularly for non-Japanese fans if they are allowed to enter in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Tokyo organizing committee CEO Toshiro Muto, after a meeting Thursday about infection countermeasures, confirmed for the first time that a limited number of non-Japanese fans may be allowed to attend.
But there will be some stringent guidelines, rule books to follow, and health apps to track fans and monitor the spread of the infection.
By next spring we will be coming up with measures for all spectators including the non-Japan residents," Muto said, speaking in Japanese in an on-line briefing.
For the non-Japanese, we need to be sure we secure a spectating opportunity for them as well.
Organisers and the International Olympic Committee have given themselves at least five more months into the northern hemisphere spring to start finalizing how they will pull off the Olympics for 11,000 athletes and tens of thousands of officials, judges, sponsors, media and broadcasters.
It was in early spring this year that the Games were postponed, unable to see a way forward and now set to open on July 23, 2021.
The spectators' anxiety of not knowing if they can actually go to the games or not is understandable," Muto said.
We would like to be considerate of the spectators as much as possible while we take preventive measures at the same time to be able to accommodate as many spectators as possible."
IOC President Thomas Bach confirmed on Wednesday in a briefing in Switzerland that he will be in Tokyo next week, his first visit since the Olympics were postponed. Bach gave a firm no response when asked if a contingency for canceling the Olympics would be discussed in Tokyo.
Bach is expected to meet new Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, and talk with Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike, Tokyo organizing committee President Yoshiro Mori, and others linked to the Olympics.
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Muto was asked if foreigners visiting Japan would follow the rules. Japan has been largely successful controlling with virus with just over 1,800 deaths reported.