World, Sports

Japan: Olympic torch relay begins in Fukushima

Opening ceremony at J-Village football training center held without spectators due to pandemic

Can Erozden  | 25.03.2021 - Update : 25.03.2021
Japan: Olympic torch relay begins in Fukushima Olympic Torchbearer Hiroguchi Takao receives the flame in Iwaki city on day-1 during the Olympic Flame torch relay on March 25, 2021 in Iwaki, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan. Following the postpone of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games to 2021 from July 21st to August 2nd due to the pandemic of the Covid-19, the Olympic torch will traverse all 47 Prefectures across Japan over 121 days from the J-Village National Training Centre in Fukushima Prefecture until Arriving at the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building on July 23. ( David Mareuil - Anadolu Agency )

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The torch relay for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games started on Thursday in Japan's northeastern prefecture of Fukushima.

TOKYO 2020 Olympic Flame torch relay

IWAKI, JAPAN - MARCH 25: Olympic Torchbearer Horiguchi Takao shows his hand on which is written a message ' Thank You ' in Iwaki city on day-1 during the Olympic Flame torch relay on March 25, 2021 in Iwaki, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan. Following the postpone of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games to 2021 from July 21st to August 2nd due to the pandemic of the Covid-19, the Olympic torch will traverse all 47 Prefectures across Japan over 121 days from the J-Village National Training Centre in Fukushima Prefecture until Arriving at the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building on July 23. ( David Mareuil - Anadolu Agency )

The opening ceremony was held at the J-Village football training center but without spectators due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The Japanese women's football team members, who bagged the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup, were the premier torchbearers, with Japanese defender Azusa Iwashimizu taking the torch first.

"The flame kept burning quietly but powerfully, even as the world faced difficult times over the past year," said organizing committee chief Seiko Hashimoto.

"The flame will embark on a 121-day journey and will carry the hopes of the Japanese people and wishes for peace from people around the world," she added.

After a four-month journey across 47 Japanese prefectures, the torch’s final destination will be the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo on July 23, when Tokyo 2020's opening ceremony will be held.

The coronavirus pandemic forced the 2020 games to be postponed for a year. The multi-sport event is now scheduled from July 23 until Aug. 8, without overseas spectators.

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