Tokyo Games said 'unrealistic' in 2021 unless Covid-19 vaccine found

Holding the delayed Olympic Games and Paralympics in Tokyo next year is "very unrealistic" unless a vaccine against the coronavirus has been found by then, a leading global health scientist has warned, according to a BBC report Friday. Photo: Reuters/Athit Perawongmetha

Holding the delayed Olympic Games and Paralympics in Tokyo next year is "very unrealistic" unless a vaccine against the coronavirus has been found by then, a leading global health scientist has warned, according to a BBC report Friday. Photo: Reuters/Athit Perawongmetha

Published Apr 18, 2020

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LONDON - Holding the delayed Olympic Games and Paralympics in

Tokyo next year is "very unrealistic" unless a vaccine against the

coronavirus has been found by then, a leading global health scientist

has warned, according to a BBC report Friday.

"We're hearing from the scientists that this could be possible. I had

thought it would be a year or a year and a half away but we're

hearing possibly this could come sooner," Professor Devi Sridhar,

chair of global health at the University of Edinburgh, told a news

conference.

"If we do get a vaccine within the next year then actually I think

that (Olympics) is realistic. The vaccine will be the game-changer -

an effective, affordable, available vaccine," Sridhar asserted.

"If we don't get a scientific breakthrough then I think that looks

very unrealistic," she added.

Last month, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and Japanese

organizers agreed to postpone this summer's Tokyo Games to 2021 due

to the rapid worldwide spread of the novel coronavirus.

The rescheduled Olympic Games are to begin with an opening ceremony

on 23 July 2021 and close on 8 August.

dpa

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