IOC chief says Tokyo should go forward with bid
Tokyo shouldn't be discouraged from bidding for the 2020 Olympics just because South Korea recently secured the 2018 Winter Games, the head of the International Olympic Committee said Thursday.
Citing several examples, such Athens in 2004 and Turin in 2006, IOC president Jacques Rogge pointed out the IOC has no formal opposition to hosting successive games on the same continent.
''There is a perception that there is an automatic rotation of countries but this is not the case,'' Rogge said at a press conference. ''We would welcome a strong bid from Tokyo.''
Tokyo, which lost out to Rio de Janeiro in the race for the 2016 Olympics, is expected to announce a formal bid for 2020 this week.
Madrid announced its 2020 candidacy Wednesday. Rome has already declared its bid and Istanbul is also considering joining the race. The IOC will select the 2020 host city in 2013.
Tokyo hosted the Summer Olympics in 1964 and the Winter Games in Sapporo in 1972 and in Nagano in 1998.
Tokyo governor Shintaro Ishihara has said wants the 2020 Olympics to show the world how Japan recovered after the devastation caused by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.
Meanwhile, Rogge all but ruled out North Korea's hopes of co-hosting with Pyeongchang.
''The IOC awards the games to one city in one country,'' Rogge said. ''In the specific case of North and South Korea, there have been times when the two countries paraded together in the opening ceremony and this is something we would consider. As far as spreading venues, that is something that we don't consider under the current Olympic charter.''
A North Korean official had expressed hope that his country could co-host the games with South Korea, a news report said Wednesday.
The head of South Korea's main opposition party also said earlier this week that he favored allowing North Korea to co-host, and the ruling party agreed to push for a joint team of athletes from both Koreas at the Pyeongchang Olympics.
However a South Korean presidential spokeswoman Sohn Jie-ae told reporters that Seoul is not considering sharing the event.
Pyeongchang is in northeast South Korea near the demilitarized zone that separates the two nations. Its province was cut into North and South Korean sides after the 1950-53 Korean War, which ended in a truce.
Rogge was in Tokyo to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Japanese Olympic Committee.