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Tuesday, April 23, 2024

WHO message to Olympics: World’s failing

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The head of the World Health Organization (WHO) told Olympic chiefs “the world is failing” to stop COVID-19 as the pandemic-delayed Tokyo 2020 sports program got underway on Wednesday.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said an uneven vaccine rollout risked worsening the crisis but hoped the Olympics could be a “message of hope” to a pandemic-weary world.

“The pandemic is a test the world is failing. More than 4 million people have died and more continue to die. Already this year the number of deaths is more than double last year’s total,” Tedros said.

“The threat is not over anywhere until it’s over everywhere. Anyone who thinks the pandemic is over is living in a fool’s paradise,” he added.

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Tedros spoke without wearing a mask at the International Olympic Committee session, held at a luxury hotel in Tokyo with masked delegates sitting at socially distanced desks.

Separately, the sports program of the delayed 2020 Games started with a softball game in Fukushima, which was ravaged by the 2011 earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear disaster.

The Tokyo Olympics, which formally open with Friday’s opening ceremony, will be held largely behind closed doors with the Japanese capital under a state of emergency following a surge in cases.

Tedros was symbolically handed an Olympic torch by IOC chief Thomas Bach at the end of his keynote address.

He said 75 percent of vaccines had been administered in just 10 countries.

“The haves are opening up, the have-nots are locking down,” he said, adding: “This is the thing about an inferno, if you hose only one part of it the rest will continue to burn.”

Organizers announced eight more infections connected with the Games on Wednesday, taking the total to 79.

Games have newly tested positive for the coronavirus

“The celebrations may be more muted this year, but the message of hope is all the more important,” Tedros said, repeating his call to have 70 percent of the population vaccinated in each country by mid-2022.

“May these Games be the moment that unites the world and ignites the solidarity and determination we need to end the pandemic together,” he said.

While the organizers have pledged to ensure the safety of the games during the pandemic and at a time when Tokyo is under a COVID-19 state of emergency, infections have been reported since athletes and officials started to arrive earlier this month.

Seiko Hashimoto, president of the committee, said at a press conference she has noticed that support for the games has dropped in Japan in the days leading up to the opening because the organizers have not been able to keep fresh cases at zero despite anti-virus measures.

She said the decision to hold events behind closed doors at almost all venues has enabled the Olympics to go ahead, instead of being cancelled. 

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