One Year Late, Tokyo Olympics Torch Relay to Get Up and Running

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The Tokyo Olympics torch relay sets off from disaster-hit Fukushima Thursday, a year later than originally planned and with organizers hoping it will sweep away persistent doubts about the pandemic-postponed Games.

The nationwide relay, like the Olympics themselves, will be vastly different from previous editions, with spectators banned from cheering and kept away from the launch ceremony and first leg over coronavirus concerns.

Fans will be able to line the route and clap as the flame traverses the country, borne by 10,000 runners and passing through all 47 prefectures before arriving at Tokyo's National Stadium for the July 23 opening ceremony.

But parts of the relay could be suspended if too many spectators gather in one place. Masks are mandatory for onlookers.

The ceremonial flame, lit last March in Greece's Olympia, birthplace of the ancient Olympics, has been in Japan for just over a year and went on display in a Tokyo museum in September.

Organizers were making final preparations for the relay when the coronavirus prompted the historic decision to postpone the Games, as sport around the world ground to a halt.

A year on, the pandemic is still in full swing despite vaccine rollouts, and organizers are battling public skepticism in Japan about holding the Olympics.

With overseas spectators barred from the Games and limits likely on domestic fans, the relay is seen as a vital opportunity to build enthusiasm.

"The torch relay is intended to communicate that the Olympic Games will take place," Tokyo 2020 CEO Toshiro Muto told reporters this week.

"It makes people feel that the Games are about to start -- that's the nature of the torch relay."

The relay begins at Fukushima's J-Village sports complex, which was used as a base for workers responding to the 2011 nuclear disaster.

The Games were initially billed as the "Recovery Olympics", showcasing reconstruction in the northeastern region of Tohoku that was devastated by the quake, tsunami and nuclear meltdown a decade ago.

The pandemic has overshadowed that message, but Fukushima's torchbearers hope the relay will still shine a positive light on the area.

- Challenges ahead -

"From afar, Fukushima might look like a place where time has stood still," Hanae Nojiri, a TV reporter who will be one of the torchbearers, told AFP.

"But when people see the spectators lining the roads and the passion of the runners, I think they'll update their image of the place."

The relay will pass through some towns that remain only partially open to the public, as decontamination continues in radiation-affected areas.

And some in the region are ambivalent about the Olympics.

"It's annoying if we're going to be used for some kind of propaganda" for the Games, Yoshiaki Suda, mayor of Onagawa town in Miyagi region, said recently.

Others are more keen, with Makoto Sugioka, mayor of Fukushima's Iitate village, seeing the Games as a chance "for us to say thank you, we owe you, to people who have supported our reconstruction efforts."

The relay will take a circuitous route, first heading south to the islands of Okinawa before reversing course for the northern region of Hokkaido and finally back to Tokyo.

The flame will pass landmarks including Mount Fuji and the Hiroshima City Peace Memorial Park. 

However, there are still challenges ahead for organizers. 

Several dozen torchbearers have dropped out, citing issues including scheduling conflicts and concerns about the coronavirus.

Officials from one region have warned they might cancel the relay there if virus countermeasures aren't improved.

But organizers are hopeful the event will offer respite after a difficult year.

"People are feeling cut off from each other at this time," Games president Seiko Hashimoto said Wednesday.

"These 10,000 runners can connect with people everywhere."