Analysis | Tokyo Olympics: IOC puts Covid-19 risks on athletes’ shoulders as groups hit out at ‘Playbook’ and medical experts express concern
- The IOC Playbook – a blueprint for Covid-19 safety measures – has a clause that absolves organisers of any responsibility should an athlete test positive
- World Players United says it is ‘unconscionable’ that athletes should assume the risk as leading epidemiologist says it’s too late for everyone to be vaccinated
![Athletes will be inside a bubble during the Tokyo Olympics even as the Covid-19 pandemic rages on in Japan. Illustration: Joe Lo](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/d8/images/methode/2021/05/24/5ce5fe54-ba36-11eb-9461-e80e43f535ad_image_hires_095601.jpg?itok=LgSAoJ30&v=1621821378)
In the fourth instalment of our Tokyo Trail series on key issues surrounding the Olympics, we look at why rights groups want the removal of a waiver absolving the IOC, Japanese government and organisers of any responsibility should athletes become infected with Covid-19 while in Japan.
One storyline tracks an athlete from a poor country that lacks vaccine supplies. They arrive in Tokyo, complete their events and return home – taking the coronavirus with them and spreading it in communities devoid of proper health care.
Another involves a player in a team sport such as football or hockey who tests negative on landing in Tokyo. Several days later, when they reach the semi-finals, he or she tests positive after the virus completes its incubation period and the whole team is quarantined. Do they cancel the semi-final?
Then there are the enthusiastic, party-loving young athletes whose future badge of honour would be to boast about how they once escaped the Olympics’ safety bubble to enjoy the bright lights of Tokyo … where they would promptly become infected. For many, even in some of the richer countries, vaccines are not yet an option.
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