The NOC*NSF and the Dutch Athletes’ Commission believe the International Olympic Committee (IOC) should play a leading role in the potential vaccination of athletes in the run-up to the Tokyo Olympics. According to NOC*NSF, otherwise, an unfair playing field threatens to emerge between countries where athletes have already been vaccinated and countries where it has not yet. At the moment, the university sports organization does not intend to appeal to the Dutch government for “priority” in the vaccination process for Olympic athletes.
“We believe the IOC should play a greater role in this,” said a spokesperson for the National Oil Corporation*NSF. “The ideas we have are put on paper and sent to the IOC. The discussions we have on this are still ongoing. It may just be a theoretical discussion, given the unprecedented speed at which vaccines are now being approved and produced. In any case, we do not intend to take priority in the vaccination process if not all of those vulnerable groups have been vaccinated yet.”
Henkelin Schroeder, president of the Dutch Athletes’ Committee, agrees. The most at-risk groups should qualify first. “These are not the athletes,” said the former swimmer. “We are on the eve of a complex discussion. That is why it would be good for the IOC to play a leading role in this matter.”
Schroeder knows that in some countries athletes are already vaccinated. “Vaccines are available in rich countries, but in less prosperous countries, athletes are at the bottom of the queue. How fair is that in the lead-up to the Games? Another important question is to what extent athletes who go to Tokyo can be forced to take a vaccine. It appeals. The International Olympic Committee Solidarity Principle: As an athlete, you are a guest in Tokyo and the Games would only be possible if everyone was vaccinated. But everyone has the right to self-determination. It is very difficult to manipulate this for sporting purposes and to differentiate based on that. It is a complex issue.”
The head of the Athletes’ Committee expects the games that were postponed for a year to continue next summer, despite all the questions that still have to be answered. “I think the IOC and Japan are all about that. But the big question is: In what form? I think our athletes still really want to go to the Games. For an Olympic athlete, that remains the highest level that can be achieved.”
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