North Korea will not take part in Tokyo Olympics due to Covid-19 fears

To optimise for archiving, the original image and related documents associated with this article have been removed.

North Korea has announced that it will not compete in this years Tokyo Olympics in order to protect its athletes from Covid-19.

State run media reported that the decision was made at an Olympic committee meeting on 25th March with the decision making North Korea the first country to skip the delayed 2020 Games. North Korea previously boycotted the 1988 Games in Seoul during the Cold War meaning that this will be the first Olympic Games that they have missed since then.

Since the pandemic broke out North Korea has enacted strict measures such as shutting borders and enforcing mandatory quarantine periods with Pyongyang claiming there are currently no cases of the virus, although health experts believe that this is highly unlikely.

South Korea had hoped that the Tokyo Olympics would be used as a catalyst for peace between the two countries, similar to the PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics which saw the two countries unify to enter a Korea hockey team rather than two separate teams. Diplomatic meetings between the two countries during the Winter Games resulted in the most progress in decades between the two nations that are technically still at war as no peace treaty was signed when the Korean War ended in 1953. The relations have since deteriorated once more and it was hoped that Tokyo would have the same positive effect as PyeongChang, with South Korea and North Korea also expected to submit a joint bid to host the 2032 Olympics, although Brisbane is seen as the preferred host. 

Japan is still struggling with high numbers of Covid cases, it was recently announced that the Osaka Olympic torch relay stage would be cancelled as infections rates hit an all time high. There are growing concerns that a fourth wave may hit the country in the coming months, with the Games due to start on 23rd July.

You may also like

View All

FIFA president to possibly expand 2030 World Cup to 64 teams

FIFA president, Gianni Infantino, will possibly expand this year’s 48-team World Cup tournament to 64 teams by 2030 

Read More

Job Opportunity: Case Manager (International)

Sport Resolutions has an exciting opportunity for an individual to join its skilled, diverse and experienced case management team to assist, primarily, with international referrals.

Read More

IOC provisionally lifts suspension of Russian Olympic Committee

The International Olympic Committee has provisionally lifted the suspension of the Russian Olympic Committee, which was implemented in 2023, since the Russian committee no longer has, as its members, any regional sports organisations in territories falling under the jurisdiction of the National Olympic Committee of Ukraine

Read More