IOC: Tokyo Games to go on despite protests

GENEVA — The IOC on Wednesday downplayed concerns over Japanese public opinion calling for the Tokyo Olympics to be canceled, before its virtual news conference was interrupted by an activist protesting the Games.

The news conference followed a monthly meeting of the International Olympic Committee’s executive board held amid a state of emergency in Tokyo to curb surging COVID-19 cases. Polling in Japan also persistently suggests people want the July 23-Aug. 8 Olympics to be called off, having already been postponed by one year.

“We listen but won’t be guided by public opinion,” IOC spokesperson Mark Adams said, adding “everything is telling us that the Games can go ahead and will go ahead.”

Adams stood in for his boss, IOC president Thomas Bach, whose planned visit to Japan next week was called off Monday after states of emergency in Tokyo and other regions were extended through May.

The final question of the news conference, held by video call, was offered to a reporter from Yahoo Sports. Instead, an activist appeared on the screen holding up a black and white banner opposing the Tokyo Olympics.

“No Olympics anywhere, no Olympics anywhere,” he said, before using a profanity and adding “No Olympics in L.A., no Olympics in Tokyo,” before the line was cut. The 2028 Olympics will be held in Los Angeles.

Adams made light of the interruption, noting that if Bach had been present it “probably would have made that stunt a little bit more interesting.”

The NOlympics LA group later claimed on its Twitter account that it had “crashed the IOC’s press conference.”

A tricky week for the IOC comes just 78 days before the Tokyo Olympics are scheduled to open, which Adams said would be a “historic moment” for the world and make the Japanese people proud.

Olympic Games typically dip in popularity in the host nation before momentum picks up when the Games open and competition begins.

“I am very confident that we will see public opinion hugely in favor of the Games,” Adams said, adding that Japanese people strongly approved of Tokyo’s candidacy. It won a bidding contest in 2013 against Madrid and Istanbul.

Still, opposition has seemed to harden against an Olympics that has cost at least $15 billion of mostly taxpayer money.

Adams said there were private polling numbers known to the IOC and organizers in Tokyo, though no details were given Wednesday.

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