GENEVA -- Encouraged by progress this week in finding a COVID-19 vaccine and staging sports events in Japan, the IOC is getting 鈥渕ore and more confident鈥 that next year's Tokyo Olympics can have fans in the venues.
After the 2020 Summer Games were postponed by one year, the International Olympic Committee has put faith in progress for rapid testing for COVID-19 and vaccines to ensure that they can take place starting July 23.
News from pharmaceutical firm Pfizer on Monday of promising trials of its vaccine followed Tokyo hosting an international gymnastics competition at the weekend.
鈥淗aving seen now the different (event) tests in Japan I think we can become more and more confident that we will have a reasonable number of spectators then also in the Olympic venues,鈥 IOC President Thomas Bach said.
Asked if the IOC could itself try to acquire vaccine doses for Olympic participants, Bach said contact is ongoing with the World Health Organization and 鈥渁 number of the manufacturers.鈥
鈥淭here are different options under consideration, how vaccines can be made available,鈥 he said.
However, he added that athletes should not be a top priority worldwide.
鈥淭he first wave of vaccination ... must be for the people in need, for the high-risk groups, for the nurses, for the medical doctors and for everybody who is keeping our societies alive,鈥 Bach said.
The IOC leader said he will go to Tokyo next week for a first visit since the postponement decision was made in March, and the travelling Olympic party had begun a period of quarantine to prepare.
Bach gave a firm 鈥渘o鈥 in response when asked if a contingency for cancelling the Olympics would be discussed.
In other Olympic business Wednesday:
- Bach welcomed the NBA's 2020-21 schedule that frees players for the Tokyo Olympics. The regular season starts two months later than usual, in mid-December, but is cut by 10 games to 72.
鈥淭his is what the players want and the Olympic movement wants,鈥 Bach said.
Basketball's international body, FIBA, said the Olympic-friendly NBA schedule followed 鈥渞egular and constructive exchanges鈥 with the league and players' union leaders.
- The IOC passed a 16% increase in its 2021-24 budget to help national Olympic bodies and athletes prepare for the Summer and Winter Games. The Solidarity Commission will have $590 million to distribute with a bigger share going direct to athlete scholarships.
- Activists in Belarus sent evidence received by the IOC this week to support claims that athletes are facing reprisals for protesting the disputed re-election of state President Alexander Lukashenko. The IOC pledged investigations last month.
The IOC has resisted calls to suspend Lukashenko, who has been president of the Belarus Olympic Committee for 23 years.
- The troubled International Weightlifting Federation will not face a review of its place at the 2024 Paris Olympics until after the Tokyo Games, Bach said.