JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Thursday, May 8, 2025

A month from Winter Olympics, Beijing seals off games ‘bubble’

by

1220 days ago
20220104
Zhangjiakou Winter Olympic Village athletes' village for the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics in China.  The global media and roughly 3,000 athletes are expected to start arriving in the Chinese capital in the weeks ahead [Thomas Suen/Reuters]

Zhangjiakou Winter Olympic Village athletes' village for the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics in China. The global media and roughly 3,000 athletes are expected to start arriving in the Chinese capital in the weeks ahead [Thomas Suen/Reuters]

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGEN­CIES

 

■ Thou­sands of games-re­lat­ed staff, vol­un­teers, clean­ers, cooks and coach dri­vers to be co­cooned for weeks in so-called ‘closed loop’ ■

 

(AL JAZEERA) — A month away from host­ing the Win­ter Olympics, Bei­jing has sealed off its games “bub­ble” for what is ex­pect­ed to be the world’s strictest mass sport­ing event since the start of the COVID-19 pan­dem­ic.

Chi­na, where the coro­n­avirus was first de­tect­ed to­wards the end of 2019, has pur­sued a ze­ro-tol­er­ance strat­e­gy on COVID-19. It is now tak­ing the same ap­proach to lim­it the pan­dem­ic’s po­ten­tial ef­fect on the Feb­ru­ary 4-20 Win­ter Olympics and sub­se­quent Par­a­lympics.

Start­ing on Tues­day, thou­sands of games-re­lat­ed staff, vol­un­teers, clean­ers, cooks and coach dri­vers will be co­cooned for weeks in the so-called “closed loop” with no di­rect phys­i­cal ac­cess to the out­side world. Most ma­jor venues are out­side of the cap­i­tal.

The iso­la­tion ap­proach con­trasts with the COVID-de­layed Tokyo Sum­mer Olympics – held be­tween Ju­ly 23 and Au­gust 8, 2021 – which al­lowed some move­ment in and out for vol­un­teers and oth­er per­son­nel.

Jour­nal­ists from across the world and rough­ly 3,000 ath­letes are ex­pect­ed to start ar­riv­ing in the city in the weeks ahead and will re­main in the bub­ble from the mo­ment they land un­til they leave the coun­try.

Any­one en­ter­ing the bub­ble must be ful­ly vac­ci­nat­ed or face a 21-day quar­an­tine when they touch down. In­side, every­one will be test­ed dai­ly and must wear face masks at all times.

The sys­tem in­cludes ded­i­cat­ed trans­port be­tween venues, with even “closed-loop” high-speed rail sys­tems op­er­at­ing in par­al­lel to those open to the pub­lic. It is set to be op­er­at­ing well in­to late March and pos­si­bly ear­ly April.

Fans will not be part of the “closed loop” and or­gan­is­ers will have to en­sure that they do not min­gle with ath­letes and oth­ers in­side the bub­ble.

Re­port­ing from Zhangji­ak­ou, on the out­skirts of Bei­jing, Al Jazeera’s Ka­t­ri­na Yu said that while re­sorts around the cap­i­tal had their busiest sea­son this win­ter be­cause of the Olympics, “this en­tire area will be forced to close in the weeks lead­ing up the games to con­trol the spread of the coro­n­avirus”.

Au­thor­i­ties are anx­ious to pre­vent any out­break of the high­ly trans­mis­si­ble Omi­cron vari­ant from spread­ing across the coun­try, so peo­ple who live in­side Chi­na must al­so quar­an­tine up­on leav­ing the bub­ble to re­turn home.

Still, many were look­ing for­ward to the games.

“Of course, I am very ex­cit­ed and proud be­cause the Win­ter Olympics will be held in my moth­er­land,” a woman in Zhangji­ak­ou told Al Jazeera. “It makes me very hap­py, these sports have be­come very pop­u­lar in Chi­na in re­cent years.”

Yu said the Chi­nese gov­ern­ment had poured bil­lions of dol­lars in­to prepar­ing to host the Games “in­clud­ing in­vest­ing in Ital­ian snow-mak­ing equip­ment to help build up its fledg­ling win­ter sports in­dus­try”.

 

‘Ful­ly pre­pared’

 

In a re­cent in­ter­view, Zhao Wei­dong, head of the Olympic or­gan­is­ing com­mit­tee’s me­dia de­part­ment, said Bei­jing was “ful­ly pre­pared”.

“Ho­tels, trans­porta­tion, ac­com­mo­da­tion, as well as our sci­ence and tech­nol­o­gy-led Win­ter Olympics projects are all ready,” Zhao told AFP news agency on Fri­day.

Yet, the pan­dem­ic has not been the on­ly chal­lenge or­gan­is­ers face.

Some West­ern gov­ern­ments, in­clud­ing the Unit­ed States, the Unit­ed King­dom and Cana­da, an­nounced diplo­mat­ic boy­cotts in protest against the treat­ment of Uighurs in Chi­na’s Xin­jiang re­gion.

The Chi­nese em­bassy in Wash­ing­ton de­scribed the boy­cott as “po­lit­i­cal ma­nip­u­la­tion”.

An­a­lysts say ad­di­tion­al boy­cotts by Eu­ro­pean Union or Asian coun­tries would be very em­bar­rass­ing for Chi­na.

“No teams are go­ing to boy­cott the Games them­selves,” Steve Tsang, from the Uni­ver­si­ty of Lon­don School of Ori­en­tal and African Stud­ies, told Al Jazeera. “But if the Eng­lish-speak­ing democ­ra­cies are be­ing fol­lowed by oth­er ma­jor coun­tries, then the ef­fect will be much big­ger.”

healthCOVID-19Sports


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored