Japan held its first Paralympic flame-lighting ceremonies on Thursday (Aug 12), with athletes waiting to learn whether spectators will be in the stands as the country battles a spike in COVID-19 cases.
Fans were banned from almost all venues at the pandemic-postponed Tokyo Olympics, which ended Sunday, while athletes faced restrictions on movement and were tested daily.
The Paralympics are expected to take place under similar conditions when they begin on Aug 24, Japanese media said, with an official decision on spectators expected early next week.
Although Japan has seen a comparatively small COVID-19 outbreak overall, with about 15,300 deaths, the latest wave driven by the more infectious Delta variant is pushing daily case numbers to new records.
Tokyo and five other regions are currently under a virus state of emergency, which bans bars and restaurants from serving alcohol and asks them to close by 8pm.
Instead of a traditional relay on public roads, “torch-kiss” Paralympic flame-lighting events will be held in towns and cities across Japan over the next week, with the flame transferred from torch to torch.
The flames will be brought to Tokyo and combined, but plans to have spectators line the route of a relay in the capital have been scrapped, a city government official told international media.
“We had planned to hold the Paralympic torch relay in Tokyo with some 700 torchbearers,” said Tokyo Metropolitan Government official Koichi Osakabe.
“But because of the state of emergency, we decided not to do the relay on public roads.”
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