Guinea Drops Out Of Tokyo Olympics Citing Covid-19 Concerns

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Guinea Drops Out Of Tokyo Olympics Citing Covid-19 Concerns
Athletes from the Republic of Guinea at the [-]
Olympic Village ahead of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, on August 4, 2016.
AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
Guinea withdrew from Tokyo Olympics on Wednesday, just two days before the Summer Games’ opening ceremony, citing concerns over COVID-19 variants as more athletes and Olympic officials test positive for the coronavirus while the Olympics get underway.

The country’s Minister of Sport, Sanoussy Bantama Sow in a statement said the country’s government “has regretfully decided to cancel their participation” in the Olympics “out of concern for the health of the Guinean athletes.”

Read Also: Tokyo Olympics Could Still Be Cancelled – Organising Chief

The country was slated to send five athletes to the Olympics, who had yet to travel to Japan when their participation was called off.

A source close to the government told Agence France-Presse the decision was actually made because “the ministry cannot pay” the costs of sending athletes to the games, which the outlet reports was also reported in Guinean media.

Guinean Olympic committee secretary general, Ben Daouda Nassoko told the Associated Press governmental funds had been released for the athletes to attend the games “days before” the team withdrew, however.

North Korea also previously withdrew from the Tokyo Olympics and cited COVID-19 concerns, and Samoa pulled its weightlifting team out of the games, though other athletes from the country are still participating.

Read Also: Olympics: Nigerian Official Hospitalised In Tokyo After Positive COVID-19 Test

Though Guinea has participated in 11 past Olympics, the country has never won a medal, AFP reports.

Meanwhile, there are over 80 confirmed COVID-19 cases in Japan among people affiliated with the Olympics as of Thursday, organizers said at a news conference.

Of those positive tests, 52 are Japanese citizens, including staffers and contractors working on the games, and 35 are people who traveled from overseas.

Read Also: US Teen Tennis Star, Coco Gauff To Miss Tokyo Olympic Over Positive COVID-19 Test

COVID-19 has long been a concern ahead of Tokyo Olympics, which were postponed for a year amid the pandemic, as public health experts have expressed significant doubts about whether the games can be held safely and the Japanese public has remained largely opposed to the event moving forward.

While stringent health and safety protocols are in place, including largely banning spectators entirely, the coronavirus has already proved to be an issue as the Olympics get underway, particularly as COVID-19 continues to surge in Tokyo and the highly transmissible Delta variant spreads worldwide.

A growing number of athletes have tested positive for COVID-19 in recent days, and the head of Tokyo 2020 organizing committee declined Tuesday to rule out the games still being canceled.

World Health Organization acknowledged on Wednesday that COVID-19 infections at the Olympics are inevitable, but WHO director-general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the “mark of success” at the games won’t be “zero cases,” but rather “making sure that any cases are identified, isolated, traced and cared for as quickly as possible and onward transmission is interrupted.”

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