TOKYO (Japan): International Olympic Committee (IOC) chief Thomas Bach said that the athletes won’t be required to take a coronavirus vaccine to compete at the Tokyo Olympics.
Bach, who is in Tokyo to bolster confidence in the pandemic-postponed event, said taking a vaccine would be a “free decision” for athletes and others involved in the Games and added that mandatory shots would be “going too far”.
“There are too many issues to consider. This is a question of private health,” Bach said.
“It is a question also of (the) health conditions of each and every person. It’s a question of availability.”
However, the IOC will “appeal” to athletes and others to be vaccinated, Bach added, calling it a “sign of respect” for other competitors and the Japanese hosts.
Tokyo 2020 was put back by a year to start next July because of the coronavirus, becoming the first Olympics to be rescheduled in peacetime.
Bach and Japanese organisers have sounded a confident note that the event will go ahead — buoyed by recent positive vaccine trials and a successful international gymnastics event in Tokyo this month.
Bach said the organising committee would take “all the necessary precautionary measures, so that athletes can relax and feel safe”.
On Monday, he said the IOC would look to help athletes secure shots if they are available and approved.