Speaking at a news conference, Tokyo 2020 CEO Toshiro Muto confirmed an individual involved in organizing the Games had tested positive, adding that the person has been taken into quarantine outside of the village. He would not reveal the person’s nationality, citing privacy concerns.
There have now been a total of 45 Covid-19 cases linked to the Games, with athletes, officials and contractors testing positive for the virus. Athletes are just starting to arrive for the Games, which run July 23 through August 8.
The embattled Games have been marred by controversy, with Japan struggling to rein in its Covid outbreak ahead of the opening ceremony on Friday and as critics
continue to question whether it is safe for them to go ahead.
Organizers already decided in March to ban overseas fans from the stands, but this month the Japanese Olympic Committee said Tokyo venues
will not have spectators due to the city’s coronavirus state of emergency — an unprecedented move, according to an IOC spokesman.
Some athletes have pulled out of the games altogether, including Australian tennis star
Nick Kyrgios and Australian basketball player
Liz Cambage. Thousands of Tokyo Olympic volunteers have
also quit.
Japan’s public has been lukewarm about the Games amid a resurgence in new infections and worries that an influx of foreign visitors may help turn the Olympics into a super-spreader event, which in turn could put further strain on Japan’s already stretched medical system.
More than
11,000 athletes from 205 National Olympic Committees are scheduled to compete in the Games. Around 85% will have been vaccinated against Covid-19, according to the IOC.
Japan has lagged behind Western countries in rolling out its vaccination drive. Only 20% of its population are fully vaccinated, compared to 48% in the United States and more than 52% in the UK, according to
CNN’s global vaccine tracker.
Additional reporting by Reuters.
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