Encouraged by progress this week in finding a Covid-19 vaccine and
staging sports events in Japan, the IOC is getting more confident that next
year's Tokyo Olympics can have fans in the venues.
Encouraged by
progress this week in finding a COVID-19 vaccine and staging sports events in
Japan, the IOC is getting more and more confident that next year's Tokyo
Olympics can have fans in the venues.
After the 2020
Summer Games were postponed by one year, the International
Olympic Committee has put faith in progress for rapid testing for COVID-19
and vaccines to ensure that the world's biggest sports event can take place
starting July 23.
News from
pharmaceutical firm Pfizer on Monday of promising trials of its vaccine
followed Tokyo hosting an international gymnastics competition at the weekend.
Having seen now
the different (event) tests in Japan I think we can become more and more
confident that we will have a reasonable number of spectators then also in the
Olympic venues, IOC President Thomas Bach said.
Asked if the IOC
could itself try to acquire vaccine doses for Olympic participants, Bach said
contact is ongoing with the World Health Organization and a number of the
manufacturers. There are different options under consideration, how vaccines
can be made available, he said.
However, he added
that athletes should not be a top priority worldwide.
The first wave of
vaccination ... must be for the people in need, for the high-risk groups, for
the nurses, for the medical doctors and for everybody who is keeping our
societies alive, Bach said.
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