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DESCRIPTION:6/11 STOP The Criminal Insanity Of Holding The Tokyo Olympics In The Middle 
 Of A Pandemic-Lives Over Profits!\nTokyo Olympics Is A Threat To The 
 World!\n6/11 SF Rally At SF Japanese Consulate\nSpeak Out On \nFriday June 
 11, 2021 3:00 PM \n\n\nSan Francisco Japanese Consulate \n275 Battery 
 St/California St.\nSan Francisco \nSponsored by No Nukes Action \n\nThe 
 plan by the International Olympics Committee IOC and Japanese government to 
 go ahead with the Tokyo Olympics in the middle of a global Covid Pandemic 
 is a threat to not only the people of Japan but the world. Despite the 
 desperate  pleas of doctors and many healthcare workers in Japan who are 
 overloaded with covid patients, the government has said it doesn’t matter 
 what they or the people of Japan think about the Olympics. \n\nOver 80% of 
 the people oppose having the Olympics in the midst of a full scale pandemic 
 but the IOC and Japan government with the support of Secretary of State 
 Blinken and the the Biden administration could care less.  The profits for 
 NBC and the media companies come first for the IOC and the Japanese 
 government.\n\nIt is the people be damned for these politicians, 
 governments and the IOC. Japanese medical doctors are even warning of a 
 possible Tokyo Olympic Covid variant coming out of these events which\nwill 
 bring tens of thousands of people from around the world to Japan for the 
 Olympics.\n\nThe Suga Japanese government is also planning to restart more 
 nuclear plants and also release over a million tons of  radioactive water 
 from  Fukushima where the burned nuclear reactor plants continue to leak 
 radioactive material more than ten years after the melt-downs.\n\nNuclear 
 clean-up workers including workers from overseas and other workers continue 
 to get contaminated with no proper health and safety education and tens of 
 thousands of bags of radioactive waste continue to remain scattered 
 throughout the prefecture with no place to go. The government is also 
 seeking to spread the contaminated waste throughout Japan in road 
 construction and other projects.\n\nThe denialism of the dangers of having 
 the Olympics in Japan is directly connected to the denialism of the dangers 
 of Fukushima, the denialism of the Comfort Women and the Japanese 
 government’s denialism during the 2nd World War that they could not lose 
 the war. This effort to deny the present reality is connected historically 
 to the rulers of Japan and it has led to the cost of millions of 
 lives.\n\nNo Nukes Action asks you to join us and speak out to demand the 
 cancellation of the Olympics, the halt to re-opening Japan’s  nuclear 
 plants and defense of the Fukushima people. We oppose as well the 
 militarization of Asia supported by the US and Biden along with 
 Congressional leader Nancy Pelosi. Thiis  includes the building  of the new 
 Haneko base in Okinawa. \nThe Okinawan residents continued to be terrorized 
 by US military jets and helicopters and the US is even training with these 
 aircraft in the center of Tokyo despite the great dangers to the people of 
 Tokyo.\n\nPhysical distancing and masks for all participants at action 
 \n\nSpeak-out In Stop The Japan Olympics In The Middle Of Covid Pandemic 
 \nDefense of the Residents of Fukushima\nDon’t Dump The Radioactive Water 
 In The Pacific Ocean and Stop The Nukes\n\nFriday June 11, 2021 3PM \nSan 
 Francisco Japanese Consulate \n275 Battery St/California  St.\nSan 
 Francisco \nNo Nukes Action \nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/ 
 \n\n\nEDITORIAL: Prime Minister Suga, please call off the Olympics this 
 summer \nhttp://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/14357907\nMay 26, 2021 at 14:14 
 JST\n\n The Olympic Rings monument casts a shadow in Tokyo’s Shinjuku 
 Ward on May 9. (Asahi Shimbun file photo)\nThe COVID-19 pandemic has yet to 
 be brought under control, rendering it inevitable that the government will 
 have to declare another extension of the state of emergency currently 
 covering Tokyo and other prefectures.\nIt is simply beyond reason to hold 
 the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics this summer.\nThe central government, 
 the Tokyo metropolitan government and Olympic officials are forging ahead 
 relentlessly, refusing to address the public's perfectly legitimate 
 questions and concerns. Naturally, people's distrust and apprehension are 
 growing.\nWe demand that Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga evaluate the 
 situation calmly and objectively, and decide against holding the Olympics 
 and Paralympics this summer.\nPEOPLE’S LIVES AND HEALTH MUST COME 
 FIRST\nA truly astounding remark was made last week by John Coates, vice 
 president of the International Olympic Committee.\nDuring a news 
 conference, Coates stated his view that the Games can be held under a state 
 of emergency.\nBut the issue was not just about staging the event without 
 incident. Coates' thinking was clearly at odds with popular sentiment in 
 Japan, and his attitude of saying "yes" to the Games without presenting any 
 supporting evidence served only to remind us anew of the IOC's 
 self-righteousness.\nCanceling the Olympics is certainly best avoided, not 
 only for the sake of athletes who have trained hard for the Games, but also 
 for the many people who have made all sorts of preparations for the 
 event.\nBut the foremost priority must lie on maintaining a basic structure 
 that protects the lives, health and livelihoods of citizens. The Olympics 
 must never be allowed to invite a situation that threatens this 
 structure.\nOur biggest fear, needless to say, concerns the Games' impact 
 on the health of citizens.\nThere is no guarantee that the infections will 
 be brought under control in the days ahead. In fact, the emergence of 
 COVID-19 variants has made the situation even more alarming.\nAlthough mass 
 inoculations have begun, the recipients are still limited to seniors, and 
 Japan certainly won't be acquiring a herd immunity anytime soon.\nAgainst 
 this backdrop, more than 90,000 athletes and Olympic-related personnel will 
 be entering Japan. And even if there won't be any spectators at the Games, 
 there will be far more than one hundred of thousands of people coming 
 together, if volunteers are added to the equation.\nAll these people will 
 go home when the Games are over. There is no discounting the possibility 
 that after virus carriers from around the world have converged in Japan, 
 the virus will then scatter to all over the world.\nThe IOC and the Tokyo 
 Olympic organizing committee say they will beat the odds with "testing and 
 isolation," stressing the success of this approach with many international 
 competitions in the past.\nBut none can match up to the Olympics in 
 scale.\nGAMBLING IS NOT PERMITTED\nIt may be possible to control most of 
 the movements of athletes and Games officials. But where everyone else is 
 concerned, the success is bound to hinge largely on their readiness to 
 practice self-restraint.\nHowever, the details of the rules they are to 
 observe have yet to be worked out, which means there will be no time for 
 rehearsals before the Games.\nThe situation that awaits will be anything 
 but easy, not to mention that the organizers must also deal with Tokyo's 
 brutal heat in summer, which was a huge concern even before the pandemic 
 struck.\nThe organizing committee claims to have more or less found a way 
 to secure health care personnel for the Olympics.\nBut what about hospital 
 beds for emergencies?\nThe governors of prefectures around Tokyo, where the 
 health care system is already severely strained, have all stated clearly 
 that they will not be in a position to provide "priority beds" for 
 Olympic-related patients.\nOf course. It is the responsibility of every 
 prefectural governor to protect their citizens.\nThe present situation is 
 nowhere close to making anyone feel safe, and that's the unfortunate 
 reality.\nOf course, there is always the possibility of everything turning 
 out fine. But staging the Olympics requires multiple layers of 
 risk-minimizing preparations that must function properly.\nIf problems 
 arise because of hasty decisions, made even though the preparations were 
 known to be insufficient, who should, or can, take responsibility?\nThe 
 organizers must understand that gambling is not an option.\nMany citizens 
 share this awareness, and an Asahi Shimbun survey this month found only 14 
 percent of respondents in favor of going ahead with the Olympics this 
 summer.\nThe number also suggests the public's deepening skepticism about 
 the merits of hosting the Olympics.\nThe Games are not just for deciding 
 which athletes are No. 1 in the world in their respective fields.\nDespite 
 all kinds of questions that have been raised about this quadrennial 
 sporting extravaganza, ranging from its over-bloated scale to excessive 
 commercialism, the event still continued to receive support because of the 
 Olympic spirit's popular appeal.\nThe Olympic Charter calls for equal 
 opportunities, friendship, solidarity, fair play and mutual understanding, 
 and advocates the establishment of a society that upholds human 
 dignity.\nWHERE DID OLYMPIC SPIRIT GO?\nBut what is the present 
 reality?\nThe pandemic has prevented some athletes from competing in 
 qualifiers. A huge gap exists between countries where progress has been 
 made in mass inoculations and those where it hasn't, obviously affecting 
 athletes' training and performances.\nFor the Tokyo Olympics, athletes' 
 movements in the Olympic Village will be restricted, rendering it difficult 
 for them to mix with local citizens as was hoped for by the local 
 governments that volunteered to host pre-Olympic training camps.\nClearly, 
 parts of the Olympic Charter have become a dead letter.\nWhat meaning is 
 there in holding the Olympics when people's activities are being restricted 
 and their daily lives have become difficult?\nIn our editorials, we have 
 repeatedly asked the central and metropolitan governments and the Olympic 
 organizing committee to explain, but none has come forward to respond to 
 our satisfaction.\nFurthermore, the slogan of "compact, post-disaster 
 reconstruction Olympics," created by the Japanese government at the time of 
 the bidding, was cast aside along the way and replaced by "Olympics to 
 prove mankind's triumph over COVID-19."\nBut now that this, too, is 
 untenable, the Tokyo Olympics are becoming a tool for the Suga 
 administration to remain in power and win the next election.\nThe prime 
 minister is reportedly determined to proceed with the Games, no matter what 
 the Japanese people have to say.\nCome to think of it, what are the Olympic 
 Games, after all? If the highly divisive Tokyo Olympics are staged without 
 the public's blessing, what will have been gained and lost?\nSuga must mull 
 all this over, and the same goes for Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike, Tokyo 
 Olympic organizing committee President Seiko Hashimoto, and all senior 
 members of the committee.\n--The Asahi Shimbun, May 26\n\nCOVID-19 medical 
 care in Osaka stretched to 'natural-disaster levels': hospital 
 chief\nhttps://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20210507/p2a/00m/0na/013000c\nMay 
 7, 2021 (Mainichi Japan)\n\nYukio Nishiguchi, head of Osaka City Juso 
 Hospital in Yodogawa Ward, Osaka, is seen speaking to the Mainichi Shimbun 
 on May 6, 2021. (Mainichi/Satoshi Hishida)\nOSAKA -- Since mid-April, Osaka 
 Prefecture's patients with serious COVID-19 symptoms have outnumbered 
 available hospital beds for them, thereby forcing beds for patients with 
 mild or moderate cases to be used to care for individuals in greater 
 danger. \n\nOsaka City Juso Hospital in the west Japan city's Yodogawa Ward 
 has 70 beds for moderate COVID-19 cases. Its manager, 64-year-old Yukio 
 Nishiguchi, described the situation on the ground: "We've had cases where 
 the disease has taken a sudden turn, and we've not been able to get people 
 to hospitals with beds for seriously ill patients in time. I want people to 
 understand this is a natural-disaster level situation where they can't 
 always receive necessary treatment."\n\nIn May 2020, the hospital became 
 the first in the country to become a coronavirus-specialist facility with 
 90 beds for COVID-19 patients with moderate symptoms. By May 6, 2021, it 
 had accepted around 1,100 coronavirus patients for treatment in about a 
 year. When infection numbers fell in July 2020, the hospital restarted 
 ordinary medical services, and now it runs them alongside its coronavirus 
 outlay.\n\nNishiguchi said that in the current "fourth wave" of infections 
 in which a U.K. variant is spreading, trends around severe cases differ 
 from before. Relatively young patients in their 30s and 40s are also 
 seriously suffering from COVID-19, and some people's symptoms are suddenly 
 worsening after initially improving. "A patient in their 40s who we planned 
 to discharge the following day suddenly became much sicker, and they were 
 moved to a ward for serious cases. Things can change so quickly, so we 
 can't afford any complacency," Nishiguchi explained.\n\nHe also cited the 
 example of a patient who died; they had wanted the use of a ventilator, but 
 their condition deteriorated so rapidly that staff weren't able to 
 administer it in time. Nishiguchi said with a sense of regret, "Perhaps if 
 we'd been able to get them the appropriate treatment at an early stage, the 
 result might have been different."\n\n\nYukio Nishiguchi, head of Osaka 
 City Juso Hospital in Yodogawa Ward, Osaka, is seen on May 6, 2021. 
 (Mainichi/Satoshi Hishida)\nPressure on hospital bed availability is 
 becoming more intense. In early April, the hospital was able to transfer to 
 other hospitals in the evening patients who developed serious symptoms on 
 the morning of the same day, but from mid-April shortages of beds for 
 severe cases means it now has to sequentially choose the most serious cases 
 to transfer.\n\nThe hospital also has no intensive care units, and 
 appropriate care can't be given while patients are on ventilators, meaning 
 that its infrastructure for supplying large volumes of oxygen is given over 
 to treating seriously ill patients who cannot be transferred to other 
 hospitals.\n\nAs of the morning of May 6, more than half of its currently 
 hospitalized COVID-19 patients -- 32 of 62 people -- needed to be supplied 
 with oxygen. Among them, seven to eight people have symptoms consistent 
 with serious COVID-19 that mean they need large amounts of oxygen supplied, 
 among other treatment. They are all reportedly waiting to be moved to wards 
 for seriously ill patients.\n\nAdditionally, the emergence of patients who 
 have severe COVID-19 symptoms when they are hospitalized has reportedly 
 become a hallmark of the fourth wave of infections. Nishiguchi said, "In 
 our CT scans to evaluate how serious a patient's condition is, we're seeing 
 some people whose lungs are already coming up completely white when they're 
 being admitted to hospital." The rate of transfer to beds for seriously ill 
 patients has also risen; while it was a maximum of about 15% during the 
 third wave, it reached around 20% in April.\n\nDuring the "Golden Week" 
 holiday between April 29 and May 5, 32 more patients were admitted to the 
 hospital, and in the latter half of the holiday between May 3 and 5, an 
 additional doctor was put on call -- more than during a normal 
 holiday.\n\nNishiguchi sees hard times ahead: "At the end of the third 
 wave, patients aged 70 or older accounted for more than 70% of patients 
 admitted. Now it's about 60%, so perhaps infections among older people are 
 going to spread again. It seems we're still a while off from an end to 
 this." \n\nHe also called on people to take thorough infection prevention 
 measures, saying, "I want people to imagine that this is like it is during 
 a natural disaster when people want to be hospitalized but can't be, and 
 for them to change the way they behave."\n\n(Japanese original by Satoshi 
 Kondo, Osaka Science & Environment News Department)\n\n\nCOVID-19 
 front-line doctors at Tokyo hospital describe hellish working 
 conditions\n\nhttps://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20210601/p2a/00m/0na/016000c\nJune 
 1, 2021 (Mainichi Japan)\n\nTokyo Metropolitan Komagome Hospital is seen in 
 this photo taken on May 11, 2021, in the capital's Bunkyo Ward. 
 (Mainichi/Masahiro Sakai)\nTOKYO -- The Mainichi Shimbun reported in May 
 how doctors at a metropolitan government-run hospital designated for 
 infectious disease care had been forced to work overtime far above the 
 "death by overwork" recognition threshold (an average of 80 hours a month 
 over multiple months) to respond to COVID-19 patients.\n\nHearing testimony 
 from medical professionals at the hospital, we shed light on the 
 developments that led to such harsh working conditions.\n\nKomagome 
 Hospital in Tokyo's Bunkyo Ward has actively engaged in caring for 
 coronavirus patients since it accepted a Japanese national who returned 
 from Wuhan, China, in January last year after they tested positive for the 
 virus.\n\nThe Mainichi Shimbun earlier reported following a 
 freedom-of-information request with the Tokyo Metropolitan Government that 
 a doctor at the hospital's infectious disease department worked a total of 
 1,180 hours of overtime over four months -- May, November, December 2020 
 and January this year.\n\nOvertime posted by the four full-time doctors at 
 the department ranged from 169 to 327 hours in the pay period for the month 
 of May 2020, four to 314 hours for the month of November, 93 to 282 hours 
 for the month of December and 136 to 257 hours for the month of January 
 2021. Every month, at least one doctor worked more than 200 hours of 
 overtime.\n\nKomagome Hospital also serves as a regional cancer center that 
 works with medical institutions in the area and where specialized cancer 
 treatment is available. The hospital therefore had to balance between its 
 regular services such as accepting cancer patients whose conditions would 
 be challenging for other hospitals and caring for COVID-19 patients. 
 However, there was no full support system to offset the workload of the 
 infectious disease department even after the first state of emergency was 
 declared in spring last year.\n\nThere was also little support from other 
 departments even when infections were spreading, and most of the time the 
 department's full-time doctors took care of adjusting patients' 
 hospitalization and on-call duties. They were on call as many as 10 times a 
 month and often worked 36 hours straight.\n\nA support system was only 
 established around December last year when the third wave of infections was 
 hitting Tokyo. Several doctors from other departments took turns and 
 pitched in every two weeks. At that point, however, the doctors at the 
 infectious disease department were already showing signs of depression, as 
 well as physical and mental exhaustion. The support came too late.\n\nOne 
 of the reasons the hospital was reluctant to send help to the department 
 was circumstances unique to infectious disease treatment. If doctors or 
 nurses who come in contact with patients make a mistake when putting on or 
 removing protective gear, it could spread the virus.\n\nAs a measure to 
 prevent in-hospital infections, Komagome Hospital initially intended to 
 limit medical workers who would engage in COVID-19 treatment. Furthermore, 
 because helping out the infectious disease department was not a job 
 instruction but a request, few doctors or nurses proactively stepped in to 
 support.\n\nThe workload was most severe during times when the graph showed 
 new infection numbers climb steeply toward the peak during periods when 
 infections were spreading, which would later come to be called "waves" of 
 infections. \n\nDuring those times, the hospital was receiving endless 
 calls from the metropolitan government's task force in charge of adjusting 
 COVID-19 patients' hospitalization slots, and the doctors were scrambling 
 to learn the conditions of newly admitted patients referred to the hospital 
 one after another while also providing them with treatment. The doctors 
 weren't able to go home until midnight even on days when they were not on 
 call.\n\nIt took about two weeks for supporting doctors or nurses from 
 other departments to actually be stationed at the infectious disease 
 department, as they needed to prepare for handing their own patients over 
 to their co-workers. The doctors recall that the waiting period was 
 particularly tough.\n\nWhen infection numbers dropped temporarily, those 
 doctors and nurses from other departments went back to their workplaces and 
 came back again when infections resurged. This cycle was repeated multiple 
 times. If some of them had remained at the infectious disease department, 
 it could have helped reduce overtime and eased the burden on each 
 doctor.\n\nCOVID-19 treatment is the same as responding to a disaster, and 
 it's not something only a certain group, such as the infectious disease 
 department of one medical institution, can handle. Doctors and nurses were 
 able to work tirelessly in the beginning, driven by their sense of mission, 
 but that can only take them so far as the pandemic prolongs. The doctors 
 asked authorities to think about how medical professionals could continue 
 working without sacrificing their physical and mental 
 well-being.\n\n\nPrioritizing profit over life, Tokyo Olympics are 
 increasingly dangerous\nJapan is barely able to contain its COVID-19 
 outbreak, but it still wants to invite more than 100,000 to the Olympic 
 Games\nhttp://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_editorial/997123.html\n\nPosted 
 on : May.28,2021 16:50 KST Modified on : May.28,2021 16:50 KST\n\nA banner 
 for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games is pictured in downtown 
 Tokyo. (Reuters/Yonhap News) \nAs of Thursday, there were 57 days left 
 until the Tokyo Olympics. The Tokyo 2020 Olympics have already been delayed 
 by one year — a first in the Olympic Games history — and they’re now 
 facing another crisis. With COVID-19 sweeping the world, the international 
 festival of the Olympics has turned into a global headache.\nAt the moment, 
 Japan is barely able to contain its COVID-19 outbreak. Ten areas in the 
 country, including Tokyo, Osaka, and Hokkaido, are in an “emergency 
 situation,” representing the toughest level of quarantine measures. Even 
 so, Japan has been unable to stop the infection from spreading. Each day, 
 it’s reporting 4,000-5,000 new cases.\n90% of those new cases represent 
 viral variants. Even more seriously, the number of patients in critical 
 condition topped a thousand this month and has now reached 1,300, the 
 largest number since the beginning of the pandemic. It’s becoming more 
 common for more than a hundred deaths to be reported in a single day.\nEach 
 day, Japan’s hospitals face a desperate shortage of hospital beds and 
 medical workers. Only 5.2% of the total population have received at least 
 one dose of COVID-19 vaccine, just half of the global average of 9.9%. 
 That’s the lowest level among member countries of the Organisation for 
 Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).\nAmid these circumstances, 
 it’s hardly surprising that 83% of Japanese who responded to a poll by 
 the Asahi Shimbun newspaper were opposed to holding the Olympics and said 
 that human lives be prioritized. \nExperts think the Olympics could be 
 deadly if held during the pandemic. At least 90,000 coaches and athletes 
 from around the world would have to enter Japan for the Olympics. When 
 volunteers are included, more than 100,000 people would be occupying the 
 same space.\nJuly and August, when the Olympics and Paralympics are 
 scheduled to be held, are the hottest and muggiest time of the year in 
 Tokyo. There are too many factors that complicate efforts to implement 
 strict control measures. There are even concerns that the Olympics could 
 become an incubator for the coronavirus.\nDespite the surge of demand both 
 inside and outside of Japan for the Olympics to be called off, the 
 International Olympic Committee (IOC) and the Japanese government doggedly 
 insist that the Olympics can be held safely.\n“The Olympic steamroller 
 rumbles forward. There are three main reasons: money, money, and money,” 
 an Olympic scholar wrote in a guest essay for the New York Times.\nThe IOC 
 is slated to make US$2.65 billion from the Tokyo Olympics for selling 
 rights to broadcast the games, its primary source of income. NBC, the US 
 broadcaster that holds the rights, would then profit immensely from 
 advertising during the games.\nIf the Olympics are canceled, the IOC would 
 lose income from selling the rights, while NBC would have to cough up the 
 money it’s been paid for scheduled commercials.\nSources with the IOC 
 have said the games will go ahead even if Japanese cities remain in an 
 emergency situation, and even if the Japanese Prime Minister himself asks 
 for a cancellation. Such remarks are extremely dangerous.\nIn an editorial, 
 the Asahi Shimbun criticized the “IOC’s self-righteousness.”\nThe 
 financial issue is also important for Japan. The question isn’t about how 
 much money Japan can make, but how much it can reduce its losses.\nDelaying 
 the Olympics raised the cost of hosting the games to 1.64 trillion yen 
 (US$14.96 billion). Holding a no-frills Olympics would leave Japan around 
 US$900 million in the hole. Canceling them altogether would probably cost 
 Japan US$3.7 billion in economic damage. The penalties that Japan would owe 
 the IOC for backing out of the games are another wrinkle.\nAnother factor 
 causing Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga to hesitate is the major 
 political fallout his cabinet would face. If the Japanese government has to 
 call off the Olympics because it failed to keep COVID-19 in check, Suga 
 will likely be held to blame.\nThe situation in Japan forces us to confront 
 the steadily growing precariousness of “mega events.” Our illusions 
 about huge commercial events such as the Olympics and World Cup have been 
 collapsing for some time now.\nThese events require huge budgets, but 
 it’s unclear how much they actually benefit the host country’s image or 
 economy. What is clear is that such events funnel money into international 
 sporting organizations, the media and corporations.\nThese mega events are 
 often used for political purposes, such as propping up regimes. The 
 COVID-19 pandemic, in particular, is a vivid example of how dangerous the 
 Olympics can be.\nNowadays, the Japanese are frequently asking who the 
 Olympics are for. I think someone ought to answer that question.\n\nKim 
 So-youn \nBy Kim So-youn, Tokyo correspondent\n\n\nIOC treating Japan 'like 
 its colony': opposition party leader slams executives "treating Japan like 
 a colony of the IOC 
 empire."\n\nhttps://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20210528/p2a/00m/0na/009000c\n\nMay 
 28, 2021 (Mainichi Japan)\nJapanese version\n\n\nJapanese Communist Party 
 Chairman Kazuo Shii (Mainichi/Masahiro Kawata)\nTOKYO -- Japanese Communist 
 Party Chairman Kazuo Shii slammed a series of comments from International 
 Olympic Committee (IOC) executives rejecting the possibility of canceling 
 the Tokyo Games, saying that they are "treating Japan like a colony of the 
 IOC empire."\n\nThe opposition party leader's anger came following IOC Vice 
 President John Coates's remark that the Tokyo Olympics would go ahead even 
 if Japan was under a coronavirus state of emergency. Furthermore, in an 
 interview with Japanese weekly magazine Shukan Bunshun, which hit the 
 stands on May 27, the IOC's longest-serving member Dick Pound of Canada 
 insisted that even if Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga wanted the games to be 
 canceled, it would be nothing but a personal opinion, and that the games 
 would go ahead.\n\nSpeaking at a news conference on the same day, Shii 
 said, "Those comments are out of line and we cannot overlook them. ... They 
 indicate that holding the Olympics has priority over Japanese people's 
 lives." He condemned the IOC, saying, "Who on earth do they think they are? 
 What gives them the authority to say such things? Those comments could lead 
 to an infringement on Japan's sovereignty."\n\n(Japanese original by Shu 
 Furukawa, Political News Department)\n\n\n\n\nJapan doctors union warns 
 games could \nlead to 'Tokyo Olympic' virus 
 strain\nhttps://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2021/05/27/national/doctors-covid-19-tokyo-olympics/\nMedical 
 staff work at a hospital treating COVID-19 patients in Yokohama. A doctors 
 union has said that holding the Olympic Games in Tokyo this summer could 
 lead to the development of a new "Olympic" strain of the coronavirus. | 
 REUTERS\nBY ROCKY SWIFT AND ELAINE LIES\nREUTERS\nSHARE\nMay 27, 2021\nThe 
 head of a doctors union in Japan warned Thursday that holding the Olympic 
 Games in Tokyo this summer, with tens of thousands of people gathered from 
 around the world, could lead to the development of a new “Olympic” 
 strain of the coronavirus.\nAlthough Japan has repeatedly pledged to hold a 
 “safe and secure” 2020 Olympics in Tokyo after a yearlong postponement, 
 it is struggling to contain a fourth wave of the pandemic and preparing to 
 extend a COVID-19 state of emergency that covers much of the 
 country.\nJapanese officials, Olympics organizers and the International 
 Olympic Committee (IOC) have all vowed the games will go ahead, albeit 
 under strict virus prevention measures. Foreign spectators have already 
 been banned, and a decision on domestic audiences is expected next 
 month.\nBut even with these steps in place, worries remain about the influx 
 of athletes and officials into Japan — where the vaccination process 
 remains glacially slow and just over 5% of the population have been 
 inoculated.\nWith people from over 200 nations and territories set to 
 arrive in Tokyo, it will be dangerous to host the games in July, said Naoto 
 Ueyama, head of the Japan Doctors Union.\n“All of the different mutated 
 strains of the virus that exist in different places will be concentrated 
 and gathering here in Tokyo. We cannot deny the possibility of even a new 
 strain of the virus potentially emerging after the Olympics,” he told a 
 news conference.\n“If such a situation were to arise, it could even mean 
 a Tokyo Olympic strain of the virus being named in this way, which would be 
 a huge tragedy and something that would be the target of criticism, even 
 for 100 years.”\n\nProtesters opposed to Japan going ahead with hosting 
 the Olympics this summer hold banners denouncing requests by the government 
 for the dispatch of doctors and nurses to help out with the games, during a 
 protest in Tokyo last week. | REUTERS\nThe Asahi Shimbun, an official 
 partner of the Tokyo Olympics, \ncarried an editorial on Wednesdayurging 
 for the games be cancelled, but former IOC vice president Dick Pound said 
 later in the day the sports extravaganza should and would go ahead.\nThe 
 government is currently preparing to extend a state of emergency across 
 much of the nation, originally set to be lifted on May 31, most likely well 
 into June, officials have said, just weeks before the games are set to open 
 on July 23.\nBut IOC member John Coates has said the Olympics could be held 
 even under a state of emergency, an opinion Ueyama said was 
 infuriating.\n“In regards to these statements, the people of Japan are 
 indeed holding great anger towards this, and this is even more the case for 
 health care and medical professionals,” Ueyama said.\nJapan’s medical 
 system is currently under extreme stress and officials in some areas worry 
 about potential additional strains from the games. In hard-hit Osaka, for 
 example, 96% of the 348 hospital beds reserved for serious COVID-19 cases 
 were in use last week.\nEarlier this week the United States advised against 
 travel to Japan, but Olympics organizers have said this will not affect the 
 games. The White House on Wednesday said it had been assured by the 
 Japanese government that it would keep in close contact about concerns over 
 the Olympics.\nChief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato said Japan would 
 continue making every effort to control the virus irrespective of the 
 Olympics.\nIn a sign of how uncertain the situation remains, however, 
 Australia’s major sports leagues and Olympic hopefuls were left 
 scrambling Thursday to make contingency plans after authorities announced a 
 seven-day lockdown in the southern state of Victoria, to contain a COVID-19 
 outbreak in Melbourne.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/06/03/18842915.php
SUMMARY:STOP Criminal Insanity Of Holding Tokyo Olympics In Middle Of Pandemic-Lives Over Profit
LOCATION:San Francisco Japanese Consulate\n275 Battery St./California St.\nSan 
 Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/06/03/18842915.php
DTSTART:20210611T220000Z
DTEND:20210611T233000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
