Japan’s Olympic Committee head denies impropriety in 2020 bid procedures

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Tsunekazu Takeda, President of the Japanese Olympic committee, attends a news conference in Tokyo, Japan January 15, 2019. REUTERS/Issei Kato

TOKYO (Reuters) – The head of Japan’s Olympic Committee confirmed that he had been questioned by French authorities in December on Tuesday but repeated his denial there was anything improper about Tokyo’s bid for the 2020 Games and vowed to prove his innocence.

French financial prosecutors investigating a multi-million dollar payment made by the bid committee to a Singaporean consultancy questioned Tsunekazu Takeda in Paris and he was placed under formal investigation for suspected corruption on Dec. 10, a judicial source told Reuters on Friday.

Takeda told a packed news conference there were no reasons to doubt any part of Japan’s dealings with the Singaporean consultancy in connection with Tokyo’s bid and that he would cooperate fully with French authorities.

After apologising to the Japanese people and everyone involved in organising the 2020 Tokyo Games for worrying them, Takeda repeated denials first made on Friday that there were any improprieties in Japan’s dealings with the Singaporean consultancy.

“There were two contracts exchanged between the Tokyo bid committee and the Singaporean company, but they were concluded under the usual sort of procedures and passed around and approved as usual,” Takeda said. “I was the final person to approve them, many others had done so before me.”

He added the contracts were for lobbying and information gathering, that the payments were as usual for such work, and noted that a 2016 investigation by a third-party committee had cleared the 2020 bid committee of any wrongdoing.

“From here on in, I will fully cooperate with the French authorities and make every effort to prove my innocence,” he said.

Under French law, a formal investigation means there is “serious or consistent evidence” implicating a suspect in a crime. It is one step closer to a trial, but such investigations can be dropped without going to court.

French investigators have led a years-long probe into corruption in athletics and in early 2016 extended their inquiry into the bidding and voting processes for the hosting of the 2016 Rio de Janeiro and the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

SHADOW OVER PREPARATIONS

Whatever the outcome of the French investigation, the news now hangs over preparations for Tokyo 2020 just 18 months out from the start of the summer showpiece.

Tokyo 2020 organisers, however, moved to distance themselves from the bidding team’s activities.

“Tokyo won the 2020 race because the city presented the best bid,” Tokyo 2020 spokesman Masa Takaya told Reuters in an interview later on Tuesday.

“The mission of the organising committee is to deliver the Games for athletes and spectators around the world. We want to continue to focus on this mission to make this happen.”

“The organising committee was established after the election so the Tokyo 2020 organising committee has no idea to know the details of its (bidding team) activities.

“There will be no impact to Games preparations,” Takaya stressed.

International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach said during a visit to the Japanese capital in December that he couldn’t remember a host city being as well prepared as Tokyo.

Takaya said there had been no “specific signals or messages” from the IOC to Tokyo 2020 organisers regarding Takeda.

SENIOR IOC MEMBER

The move against Takeda is linked to an investigation French prosecutors launched in 2016 into more than $2 million of payments by the Japanese bidding committee to consultancy firm Black Tidings, which was terminated in 2014.

Prosecuting judge Renaud Van Ruymbeke now suspects Takeda – a former Olympic showjumper, longstanding Olympics official and second cousin of Emperor Akihito – of paying bribes to secure his nation’s winning bid, the judicial source said on Friday.

Takeda, 71, a great-grandchild of Emperor Meiji who competed in the 1972 and 1976 Olympics, has been a member of the Japanese Olympic Committee since 1987 and its president since 2001.

He has helped coordinate preparations for several Winter Olympics as a senior member of the IOC and also heads the IOC’s marketing commission.

The IOC ethics commission opened a file on Takeda on Friday.

This investigation is the latest blow to the governing body, which has been trying to clean up the bidding process around Olympic Games following a spate of corruption allegations and increased spending by host cities.

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