Crowds form at Olympic torch event in Japan despite virus caution

Japanese three-time Olympic gold medalists Saori yoshida, left, and tadahiro nomura light a tokyo 2020 Olympic cauldron with the Olympic flame. (AFP)
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Updated 21 March 2020
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Crowds form at Olympic torch event in Japan despite virus caution

  • Organizers have repeatedly said the Games, due to run from July 24 to Aug. 9, will go ahead

TOKYO: An Olympic torch event in Japan drew hundreds of spectators on the day of the flame’s arrival on Friday, creating the type of packed gathering the government and Tokyo 2020 organizers have warned against to prevent coronavirus from spreading further. 

About 500 people gathered in a jostling crowd to look at the flame and popular comedians taking part in a ceremony in Ishinomaki, 335 km (208 miles) north of Tokyo. 

The Greek part of the torch relay began last week, but a day later the remainder was canceled to avoid attracting crowds. 

“It is not a good decision (to come here) but I am not sure if I will get another chance to see the cauldron,” Ishinomaki resident and teacher Kiyotake Goto, 44, told Reuters. 

Earlier in the day, a plane carrying the torch from Greece arrived at Japan Air Self-Defense Force’s Matsushima Air Base, which was devastated by a powerful earthquake and tsunami in 2011. 

No spectators were present for the arrival ceremony at the base, where officials pledged the Tokyo 2020 Games will proceed despite mounting pressure to halt the world’s biggest sporting event due to the coronavirus pandemic. 

HIGHLIGHTS

  • The event created the type of packed gathering the government and Tokyo 2020 organizers have warned against to prevent coronavirus from spreading further.
  • About 500 people gathered in a jostling crowd to look at the flame and popular comedians taking part in a ceremony in Ishinomaki.

“We originally planned to have children here to welcome the flame. But, prioritising their safety, we’ve decided to do without them,” Tokyo 2020 chief Yoshiro Mori said. 

“That was an agonizing decision ... We will do our utmost in preparing for a safe and secure event,” said Mori, a former prime minister. 

Organizers have repeatedly said the Games, due to run from July 24 to Aug. 9, will go ahead, but as the rapid spread of the virus brings the sports world to a virtual standstill, fears are growing that the Olympics may be postponed or canceled. 

“I think it’s impossible (to hold the Games). It’ll be a global issue if the virus spreads even further,” Koichiro Maeda, a 55-year-old company employee, told Reuters in downtown Tokyo. 

The respiratory disease, which emerged in China late last year, has killed more than 10,000 people worldwide. 

Japan is grappling with pressure to avoid a health crisis among 600,000 expected overseas spectators and athletes at an event that could see $3 billion in sponsorships and at least $12 billion spent on preparations evaporate. 

The plane with the torch arrived nearly empty after the Tokyo 2020 organizing committee decided not to send a high-level delegation that was originally to have included Mori and Olympics Minister Seiko Hashimoto. 

“This is a tough time. I hope the torch relay will bring people vigor and hope,” Saori Yoshida, three-time gold-medal winning wrestler, told the welcome ceremony. 

The flame will travel round the Tohoku region hit by the 2011 tsunami and earthquake, in what organizers call a “recovery flame” tour before the official kick-off ceremony in Fukushima on
March 26. 

Organizers have urged the public not to crowd the relay route, canceling many events along the way and restricting public access to others. Runners and staff will have their temperatures and health monitored, organizers said. 

Some athletes, including reigning Olympic pole vault champion Katerina Stefanidi, said the International Olympic Committee’s decision to go ahead was putting their health at risk when entire countries have shut down to curb the virus. 

The torch relay will begin at J-Village, a soccer training center in Fukushima that served as an operations base for workers who battled triple meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant after the 2011 tsunami. 

It is due to pass many of Japan’s most famous landmarks over a 121-day journey to Tokyo’s Olympic stadium, including Mount Fuji, Hiroshima’s Peace Memorial Park and Kumamoto Castle.


Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics open with dazzling ceremony

Updated 8 sec ago
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Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics open with dazzling ceremony

  • The extravaganza reflected the most geographically widespread Olympics in history
MILAN: The Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics opened on Friday with a glittering ceremony at the San Siro stadium echoed by festivities at Games venues across the snow-capped Italian Alps.
The extravaganza reflected the most geographically widespread Olympics in history.
It culminated in the lighting of two cauldrons, one at Milan’s Arch of Peace and one in Cortina d’Ampezzo, the chic resort 400 kilometers from Milan that is hosting the women’s alpine skiing.
Alberto Tomba and Deborah Compagnoni, two Italian skiing Olympic champions of the past, lit an intricate cauldron inspired by Leonardo da Vinci’s knot patterns at Milan’s Arch of Peace.
In the freezing mountain air of Cortina, the task fell to Sofia Goggia — an Italian former gold medalist who had earlier taken part in a training run for the women’s downhill event.
The ceremony in Milan showcased Italy’s rich cultural heritage, with a nod to late fashion giant Giorgio Armani.
An otherwise harmonious event was punctuated by loud boos from the crowd when US Vice President JD Vance appeared on the big screen at the San Siro stadium.
But the US team received loud applause from spectators as they began their parade.
There has been anger in Italy over the presence of agents from the US immigration enforcement agency ICE as part of security for the American delegation, even though the Italian government has said the agents will not have any operational role on its soil.
Performers at the San Siro show wore outsized heads of the three great masters of Italian opera — Giuseppe Verdi, Giacomo Puccini and Gioachino Rossini while American diva Mariah Carey, in a white sequined dress with feathers, sang “Volare” in Italian and “Nothing is Impossible.”
Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli got a rapturous reception after performing “Nessun Dorma” and dozens of models honored Armani by streaming across the stage wearing red, green, and white trouser suits.
Italian President Sergio Mattarella declared the Games open after International Olympic Committee chief Kirsty Coventry told the competitors: “You remind us that we can be brave, that we can be kind, that we can get back up, no matter how hard we fall.”
In a first, 2,900 athletes paraded in the venues closest to where they will compete in the February 6-22 Games, in a bid to minimize travel.
Remarkable Vonn
Earlier Friday, Lindsey Vonn, the biggest star at the Milan-Cortina Olympics, passed a crucial test of her injured knee.
The American skier successfully completed her first training run for the women’s downhill event, despite competing with a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament.
It kept alive the 41-year-old’s hopes of medal glory in Italy.
Vonn won her only Olympic gold at the Vancouver Games, 16 years ago, but also has two bronze medals.
A top-three placing in Sunday’s final would cap a remarkable comeback from retirement that has been elevated to extraordinary by the injury she suffered in a pre-Olympics race.
Wearing a knee brace, Vonn completed the run at Cortina without apparent difficulty.
Before skiing she posted on Instagram: “Nothing makes me happier! No one would have believed I would be here... but I made it!!... I’m not going to waste this chance.”
Asked by reporters after the race if everything was “all good,” Vonn responded simply “yeah.”
Competitive action in the figure skating began, with defending champions the United States taking an early lead in the team event thanks to world champion ice dancers Madison Chock and Evan Bates.
The men’s downhill race, one of the prestige events, kicks off the first full day of action on Saturday.
China’s freestyle skier Eileen Gu, one of the faces of the 2022 Games in Beijing, launches her bid for triple gold as the women’s slopestyle gets underway at Livigno Snow Park.