Olympic News: Tokyo Olympic Chief Yoshiro Mori Creates Controversy with Sexist Remarks

Tokyo Olympic Head Yoshiro Mori apologized for remarks made on Wednesday, but many are calling for him to step down. Photo: Nikkei Asia

If the Japanese leaders of this Summer’s Tokyo Olympic Games wanted to take the focus off speculation that the event will be cancelled, they got their wish yesterday.

But it’s certainly not in a way they would have hoped for.

Click HERE to read our story Tokyo Olympic Games: Will They Be Cancelled This Year? Some Are Saying “Yes”

As reported by Rurika Imahashi and Francesca Regaldo of Nikkei Asia, sexist remarks made by Tokyo Olympics chief Yoshiro Mori have drawn international condemnation, in a further blow to organizers who face criticism for persisting in holding the event this summer despite rising COVID-19 infections and costs.

Many in Japan are calling for the Tokyo Games to be cancelled because of rising COVID cases and costs. Photo: Carl Curt, Getty Images via USA Today.

Per the Nikkei Asia story, Mori, 83, on Wednesday said board meetings with a lot of women “take so much time,” in comments about a government initiative to increase representation of female directors.

“Women have a strong sense of competition,” and that is why “everyone speaks” so much, he added.

The remark immediately caught domestic attention and many Japanese people vented their feelings on social media. His comments eclipsed the International Olympics Committee’s publication the same day of its action guidelines for sports federations.

The comments quickly made waves overseas, were picked up in publications ranging from The New York Times to The Washington Post as well as the Associated Press and ESPN.

“I apologize and am remorseful for the remarks,” Mori told reporters in Tokyo on Thursday. He said he “withdraws” his comments as they were inappropriate and against the Olympic spirit. However, he said he has “no intention” to step down.

That doesn’t mean, however, he won’t have to deal with his comments down the road.

“Definitely going to corner this guy at the breakfast buffet,” Hayley Wickenheiser, a Canadian IOC member, tweeted on Thursday.

 

“Yes, Mr. Mori, women can be concise. For example, to answer you, two words are sufficient: ‘Shut up’,” Nathalie Loiseau, a French politician currently serving as a Member of European Parliament, tweeted in French on Thursday.

Mori, a former prime minister, has a track record of making disparaging remarks.

In 2000, when recalling a 1969 election win, he said: “When I was greeting farmers from my car, they all went into their homes. I felt like I had AIDS.” As prime minister (2000-2001), his cabinet approval rating plummeted to 9% after poorly handling a fatal collision between a Japanese fishing vessel and a U.S. submarine.

Yet despite his gaffes and unpopularity, Mori was nominated as Tokyo 2020 president in January 2014 after a three-party meeting between the Japanese government, the Tokyo metropolitan government, and the Japan Olympic Committee.

Hakubun Shimomura, Olympic minister at that time, said that Mori was the best candidate because of his strong network with domestic and overseas sports and business circles. Mori has been involved in national sports organizations since he retired from politics in 2001, including the Japan Rugby Union.

The government reportedly offer the job to other candidates, such as Fujio Mitarai, president of Canon at that time, and Fujio Cho, the then honorary chairman of Toyota Motor. Both of them declined the offer.

On Twitter, posts with hashtag “#Please resign, Mr. Yoshiro Mori” went viral.

Noriko Mizoguchi, a former Japanese Olympic judo silver medalist, tweeted the IOC code of ethics, pointing to a clause on protecting human rights and rejecting any form of discrimination.

In an interview with the Japanese newspaper Mainichi Shimbun, Mori stressed that he had “no intention to disparage women,” but suggested that he would resign if public calls grow for him to be ousted.

Rurika Imahashi and Francesca Regaldo, Nikkei Asia

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