<p>Olympics chief Thomas Bach revealed "doubts" and "sleepless nights" over the postponed Tokyo Games on Tuesday as the opening ceremony nears after a year's delay and coronavirus chaos that has made them deeply unpopular with the Japanese public.</p>.<p>Bach, speaking at the International Olympic Committee session in Tokyo, said the unprecedented step of postponing the Games had proved more complicated than he thought.</p>.<p>The build-up to Friday's opening ceremony has been exceptionally rocky, with Tokyo still under a state of emergency and public opinion consistently against the Games, which will be held largely without spectators.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/thomas-bach-lauds-health-workers-says-tokyo-olympics-will-send-powerful-message-of-peace-1010653.html" target="_blank">Thomas Bach lauds health workers, says Tokyo Olympics will send powerful message of peace</a></strong></p>.<p>"Over the past 15 months we had to take many decisions on very uncertain grounds. We had doubts every day. We deliberated and discussed. There were sleepless nights," said Bach.</p>.<p>"This also weighed on us, it weighed on me. But in order to arrive at this day today we had to give confidence, had to show a way out of this crisis," he added.</p>.<p>Bach has drawn scattered protests during his visit to Japan, where the latest poll in the Asahi Shimbun newspaper showed 55 percent of respondents oppose holding the Games now.</p>.<p>Four people have tested positive in the Olympic Village, heightening fears that the influx of thousands of athletes, officials and media will add to a spike in cases in Japan.</p>.<p>A teenage US gymnast staying outside the Village was also among the 71 Games-related cases reported so far.</p>.<p>Olympic and Japanese officials have staunchly defended the Games, which are being held in a strict biosecure "bubble" with daily testing. Eighty percent of athletes at the Games have been vaccinated.</p>.<p>"We can finally see at the end of the dark tunnel," said Bach, adding: "Cancellation was never an option for us. The IOC never abandons the athletes... we did it for the athletes."</p>.<p>Delegates unanimously approved an update of the Olympic motto, "Faster, Higher, Stronger", to "Faster, Higher, Stronger -- Together", to reflect global solidarity during the pandemic.</p>.<p>"We see everywhere the collaborative effort bringing faster and better solutions than working in silos," said Bach.</p>.<p>Ski mountaineering, where competitors race up a mountain on foot and ski down it, was also approved as a new sport for the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan-Cortina.</p>.<p>The changes were waved through at an unusual IOC session, where mask-wearing delegates sat socially distanced at individual desks and the podium microphone was wiped after each speaker.</p>.<p>On Wednesday, World Health Organisation chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus will make a keynote address.</p>.<p>The session precedes an Olympics which will mainly take place in empty stadiums to the sound of recorded crowd noises, starting with the opening ceremony in the 68,000-capacity Olympic Stadium.</p>.<p>The ceremony will go ahead without the music of Keigo 'Cornelius' Oyamada, who quit on Monday after an outcry over past interviews where he described bullying disabled schoolmates.</p>.<p>Major sponsor Toyota, the world's biggest carmaker, also scrapped plans to run an Olympic-linked brand campaign in Japan, as a senior official said the Games lacked "understanding" from the public.</p>.<p>Japan's Emperor Naruhito will attend the opening ceremony although an official from the Imperial Household Agency said it was not known if he will speak at the event.</p>
<p>Olympics chief Thomas Bach revealed "doubts" and "sleepless nights" over the postponed Tokyo Games on Tuesday as the opening ceremony nears after a year's delay and coronavirus chaos that has made them deeply unpopular with the Japanese public.</p>.<p>Bach, speaking at the International Olympic Committee session in Tokyo, said the unprecedented step of postponing the Games had proved more complicated than he thought.</p>.<p>The build-up to Friday's opening ceremony has been exceptionally rocky, with Tokyo still under a state of emergency and public opinion consistently against the Games, which will be held largely without spectators.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/thomas-bach-lauds-health-workers-says-tokyo-olympics-will-send-powerful-message-of-peace-1010653.html" target="_blank">Thomas Bach lauds health workers, says Tokyo Olympics will send powerful message of peace</a></strong></p>.<p>"Over the past 15 months we had to take many decisions on very uncertain grounds. We had doubts every day. We deliberated and discussed. There were sleepless nights," said Bach.</p>.<p>"This also weighed on us, it weighed on me. But in order to arrive at this day today we had to give confidence, had to show a way out of this crisis," he added.</p>.<p>Bach has drawn scattered protests during his visit to Japan, where the latest poll in the Asahi Shimbun newspaper showed 55 percent of respondents oppose holding the Games now.</p>.<p>Four people have tested positive in the Olympic Village, heightening fears that the influx of thousands of athletes, officials and media will add to a spike in cases in Japan.</p>.<p>A teenage US gymnast staying outside the Village was also among the 71 Games-related cases reported so far.</p>.<p>Olympic and Japanese officials have staunchly defended the Games, which are being held in a strict biosecure "bubble" with daily testing. Eighty percent of athletes at the Games have been vaccinated.</p>.<p>"We can finally see at the end of the dark tunnel," said Bach, adding: "Cancellation was never an option for us. The IOC never abandons the athletes... we did it for the athletes."</p>.<p>Delegates unanimously approved an update of the Olympic motto, "Faster, Higher, Stronger", to "Faster, Higher, Stronger -- Together", to reflect global solidarity during the pandemic.</p>.<p>"We see everywhere the collaborative effort bringing faster and better solutions than working in silos," said Bach.</p>.<p>Ski mountaineering, where competitors race up a mountain on foot and ski down it, was also approved as a new sport for the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan-Cortina.</p>.<p>The changes were waved through at an unusual IOC session, where mask-wearing delegates sat socially distanced at individual desks and the podium microphone was wiped after each speaker.</p>.<p>On Wednesday, World Health Organisation chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus will make a keynote address.</p>.<p>The session precedes an Olympics which will mainly take place in empty stadiums to the sound of recorded crowd noises, starting with the opening ceremony in the 68,000-capacity Olympic Stadium.</p>.<p>The ceremony will go ahead without the music of Keigo 'Cornelius' Oyamada, who quit on Monday after an outcry over past interviews where he described bullying disabled schoolmates.</p>.<p>Major sponsor Toyota, the world's biggest carmaker, also scrapped plans to run an Olympic-linked brand campaign in Japan, as a senior official said the Games lacked "understanding" from the public.</p>.<p>Japan's Emperor Naruhito will attend the opening ceremony although an official from the Imperial Household Agency said it was not known if he will speak at the event.</p>