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Japan’s sports minister to stand down over 2020 Tokyo Olympics stadium fiasco

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Japan’s sports minister to stand down over 2020 Tokyo Olympics stadium fiasco


Hakubun Shimomura said he would stay on until a cabinet reshuffle next month

PUBLISHED : Friday, 25 September, 2015, 4:36pm
UPDATED : Friday, 25 September, 2015, 5:16pm

Agence France-Presse in Tokyo

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Hakubun Shimomura, Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, has tendered his resignation over the scrapping of plans for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics centrepiece stadium after a cost blowout. Photo: Reuters

Japan’s sports minister said on Friday he had tendered his resignation over abandoned plans for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics main stadium after the venue’s US$2 billion price tag sparked a public backlash.

But Hakubun Shimomura added that he would stay in the job until a cabinet reshuffle expected next month – a request from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

The stadium fiasco has pushed back a new venue’s completion date, embarrassing Japanese sport officials who have also been forced to find an alternate showpiece site for Rugby World Cup matches in 2019. Japan is hosting the event.

“I offered my resignation to the prime minister over the phone last night,” Shimomura said on Friday. “I caused trouble and made the public worry.”

He will also return six months’ worth of ministerial salary, worth a total of 900,000 yen (HK$58,000). Shimomura’s parliamentary salary of 1,315,000 yen per month will be unaffected, however.

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An aerial view of the construction site for the main Olympic stadium for the 2020 Tokyo Games. Photo: Kyodo

His departure comes after a third-party panel released a report on Thursday that said the minister was responsible for the stadium fiasco.

Abe shocked Olympic organisers in July when he pulled the plug on Iraqi-British architect Zaha Hadid’s winning design as soaring costs put it on course to become the world’s most expensive sports stadium.

The futuristic design had also been criticised by some architects who said it would be an eyesore.

Japan slashed the cost of the new Olympic stadium by more than 40 per cent, setting a 155 billion yen cap on construction costs, well below the 265 billion yen estimated under the now-ditched design.

Following Tokyo’s decision to scrap the design plans, Kimito Kubo, a Japanese official heading the stadium construction, stepped down, saying it was for “personal reasons”.

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An artist's rendering of the previously planned stadium for the 2020 Olympics, which was later scrapped over spiralling costs. Photo: AP

But the resignation was widely seen as him taking the blame for the embarrassing row.

Local media reported last week that renowned Japanese architects Kengo Kuma and Toyo Ito would take part in a new design competition.

Hadid’s firm has said it would not be bidding as it could not find a contractor.

Japan last month promised a new list of venues for the 2019 World Cup after rugby’s governing body demanded fresh plans in the wake of the proposed national stadium being scrapped.

World Rugby issued a strongly-worded statement saying it was giving the Japanese hosts until the end of September to come up with a “revised detailed host venue proposal” as organisers scramble to find a replacement.

The governing body has also requested a fresh tournament budget that supplies “appropriate financial security”.

Japan does have other stadiums that could host the event – including one in Yokohama just south of Tokyo which staged the 2002 soccer World Cup final.

But there could be repercussions over reduced ticket revenues because any replacement venue would have fewer seats than the originally planned stadium.

The International Olympic Committee has also demanded that Japan complete its new national stadium by January 2020, three months earlier than planned. Tokyo is due to host the opening ceremony on July 24 that year.


 
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