The IOC is confident that despite public opinion, which is largely against the games, the Japanese government will be able to host the Olympics in a spectacular fashion. In fact, it believes that once the Olympics start in Tokyo, the public sentiment will turn in favour of the event.
"As things stand, and as we talk to our Japanese partners and friends, we are moving full ahead", IOC spokesman Mark Adams said in an online press conference on Wednesday. "There has been a small extension of the emergency situation, but we continue to plan for full Games – and that's the way it has to be and that's the only way it can be for us. And everything is telling us, from the test events to international events, that the Games can go ahead and will go ahead".
"We are now very much in an implementation phase. With 78 days left before the Games we are fully concentrated now in this last implementation phase of delivering an excellent Games which will really bring the world together".
The Tokyo Games are scheduled to begin on 23 July, but with just about two months left to go, coronavirus cases in the country are seeing an upsurge, prompting the government to extend a state of emergency.
About 7,800 athletes have already qualified for the Olympics in Tokyo and national sports federations across the world are working overtime to prepare their athletes for the games, as all the participating nations want to put up a stellar show in Tokyo.
While the IOC spokesman acknowledged that the public opinion was not in favour of the games, he insisted that the situation will change once the Games start in Tokyo. "In terms of Japan and Tokyo we understand the caution of people and we are fully in solidarity with them", he said.
"We understand that these are tough times. We understand that people are very cautious. But the test events and the playbooks should give the Japanese people confidence that these Games can be held in a very safe and secure way".
With 600,000 cases and 10,500 deaths, Japan has recorded the highest number of COVID-19 infections and deaths in East Asia. Also, there are concerns about Japan's vaccination programme, as the nation has only inoculated only about 2% of its 126-million population, and this includes those who have received only one dose of the vaccine. But the bigger worry at the moment is that the hospitals are finding it extremely difficult to cope with the rising number of patients, especially in Tokyo and Osaka prefectures.