BEIJING - February's Beijing Winter Olympics will be held without overseas spectators and athletes must be fully vaccinated
against the coronavirus or face 21 days' quarantine, the International
Olympic Committee said.
The measures, which do allow spectators who are living in mainland China,
were revealed with the Games just four months away and after the Tokyo 2020
Olympics similarly juggled with how to go ahead safely during the pandemic.
The Tokyo Games, which were postponed by a year because of the health
crisis, mostly took place without any spectators to prevent infections.
Another difference from Tokyo will be that all participants must be
vaccinated or will need to do a 21-day quarantine on arrival in the Chinese
capital. Athletes who can provide a "justified medical exemption" will have
their cases considered.
All attendees will enter a strict "bubble" as soon as they land that covers
Games-related areas and stadiums as well as accommodation, transport,
catering and the opening and closing ceremonies.
The decisions, announced by the IOC but taken by Chinese organisers, are a
foretaste of a package of measures to be released in October designed to
prevent the Games from turning into a source of contamination.
All domestic and international Games participants and workforce in the
bubble, known as the "closed-loop management system", will be tested daily.
The 2022 Beijing Olympics, which is facing calls for a boycott from rights
groups, is scheduled for February 4-20.
The IOC said that allowing domestic fans "will facilitate the growth of
winter sports in China by giving those spectators a first-hand Olympic and
Paralympic experience of elite winter sports, as well as bringing a
favourable atmosphere to the venues".
Speaking at Beijing's Olympic Park on Thursday, locals said that safety
must come first, even if that means foreign fans missing out.
"I think it's the right thing to do because foreign spectators can watch it
broadcast live," said Zhang Xinyu, 29.
"But if there are a lot of people travelling, it won't be safe for either
the athletes or the foreign guests."
China, where the coronavirus emerged towards the end of 2019, has wrestled
down the number of local infections to a trickle by deploying aggressive, mass testing and keeping its borders extremely tight.BSS/AFP