国际奥委会主席巴赫日前宣布,将从中国购买新冠疫苗,并和中国奥组委一起合作,向东京奥运会和北京冬奥会的参赛人员提供疫苗。
Competitors at this year's Tokyo Olympics and the 2022 Beijing Winter Games will be offered coronavirus
vaccines2 bought from China, Olympic chief Thomas Bach announced Thursday.
The Chinese Olympic Committee have made "an offer to make additional
vaccine1 doses available to participants for Tokyo 2020 and Beijing 2022", Bach said.
"The IOC will pay for these additional doses of vaccines for the Olympic and Paralympic teams.
"The IOC will also pay for two doses more that can be made available to people in that country," in what Bach said was a "
demonstration3 of
solidarity4" in the fight against the Covid-19 pandemic.
Bach said the Chinese Olympic Committee, in cooperation with the IOC, was ready to make vaccine doses available in two ways.
"This can be via international partners or in countries where
partnerships5 are already in place with the Chinese government," he said.
Bach added that a significant number of Olympic teams "have already been
vaccinated6".
"Another significant number have received a commitment from their governments or are in very positive discussions."
Bach also tried to play down risks to Japan from hosting the Olympics, citing the fact that 270 world championships had been held involving more than 30,000 athletes following "rigorous health and safety
protocols7" since September 2020.
"Not a single one of these events turned into a virus spreader," Bach said, adding they had posed no danger to host communities: "It's clean and obvious proof."
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