Tropical storm heading for Tokyo as Olympics draw to close

A volunteer huddles under an umbrella as play is suspended due to lightning at Oi Hockey Stadium on Friday

TOKYO— A tropical storm is forecast to hit Tokyo on the last day of the Olympics, organisers said, but did not announce any changes to competition.

 

Japan’s weather agency warned of strong winds, high waves and the risk of landslides and floods along the eastern coastline from Saturday afternoon to Sunday, when Tropical Storm Mirinae is expected to pass over the capital.

 

The Olympics closing ceremony is on Sunday evening, with medal events including water polo and rhythmic gymnastics taking place at indoor venues in the city during the day.

 

Cycling track races are also scheduled in Shizuoka, southwest of Tokyo, while the men’s marathon will kick off early Sunday in the far northern city of Sapporo.

 

“We are firmly and calmly paying attention” to the path of the storm, Tokyo 2020 organising committee spokesman Masa Takaya told reporters.

 

“It is necessary to inform you objectively, so that we can avoid excessive overreaction,” he said.

 

A separate storm hit Japan last week, forcing Games organisers to reschedule some rowing and archery events, although they brought forward the surfing finals to take advantage of strong waves.

 

On Friday, Mirinae was around 100 kilometres north of Minamidaito island, near the southern archipelago of Okinawa.

 

It was moving east, packing gusts of up to 108 kilometres per hour.

 

Another tropical storm is hovering in the Taiwan strait, moving towards Japan.

 

Japan’s typhoon season runs from around May to October, peaking in August and September.

 

In 2019, Typhoon Hagibis smashed into Japan as it hosted the Rugby World Cup, killing more than 100 people.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Weightlifter Diaz Wins First-ever Olympic Gold for Philippines

TOKYO – Weightlifter Hidilyn Diaz made history on Monday when she became the first athlete from the Philippines to win an Olympic gold medal.

The 30-year-old Rio 2016 silver medalist from the southern city of Zamboanga realized her dream in the women’s 55kg class at the Tokyo International Forum, smashing her personal best to see off world record holder Liao Qiuyun of China who had to settle for silver.

With Liao setting a target of 223kg, just four kilograms shy of her own world record, Diaz was faced with a final clean and jerk of 127kg to win — fully 5kg more than she had ever achieved in competition.

With a massive effort she hoisted the huge Olympic-record weight and the tears of joy began to flow even before she dropped the bar to the floor after a triumphant effort.

Liao took the silver, with Kazakhstan’s Zulfiya Chinshanlo the bronze 10kg adrift of the top two.

“It’s unbelievable, it’s a dream, come true,” Diaz told AFP moments after the Philippines Air Force woman shed more tears on the podium as she saluted her flag and sung the national anthem.

“I want to say to the young generation in the Philippines, ‘You can have this dream of gold, too,'” Diaz said. “This is how I started and finally I was able to do it.”

Diaz was already assured a place in her country’s sporting folklore, alongside the likes of boxing icon Manny Pacquiao, as the only woman from the sprawling archipelago ever to win an Olympic medal — her surprise silver five years ago breaking a 20-year medal drought for the Philippines.

Diaz spent the last year and a half training in exile in Malaysia because of COVID restrictions, so dedicated was she to claim an unprecedented gold in her fourth and probably final Games.

“I’m looking forward to going back home to the Philippines to be with my family because I really miss them,” she said, choking up once more with emotion. “I’m looking forward now to enjoy my life after so many sacrifices.”

Diaz’s medal was just the 11th by the Philippines since they first took part in the Olympics in 1924, and now the only gold.

Diaz became just the second athlete from her country to win multiple Olympic medals, joining swimmer Teofilo Yldefonzo who won bronze in the men’s 200m breaststroke in 1928 and 1932.

She became a national hero for her exploits in Rio and her profile soared when she won Asian Games gold in Jakarta in 2018.

But on that occasion China was suspended by the International Weightlifting Federation for multiple doping violations.

China has been dominant since its return later in 2018 and has had it all its own way so far in Tokyo in the absence of fierce rivals North Korea.

The first three weightlifting golds were all won by Chinese athletes — in the women’s 49kg through Hou Zhihui on Saturday and men’s winners Li Fabin (61kg) and Chen Lijun (67kg) on Sunday.

Liao was gracious in defeat as the Chinese gold rush in weightlifting was halted in stunning fashion.

“I really respect Diaz as an opponent because she did the best she could, in fact better than that and that is the ultimate,” Liao said. “She did a better job and it is nice for all the people that were supporting her.”

Diaz, known as “Haidee,” has a huge social media following in her home country, which is set to grow.

Internet platforms instantly turned her into the country’s top trending topic on Twitter as news of her win spread, upstaging President Rodrigo Duterte’s final State of the Nation address.

“Congratulations, Sgt. Hidilyn Diaz!” tweeted the Armed Forces of the Philippines where the weightlifter is enlisted.

Vice President Leni Robredo said: “Big win for the Philippines!! Thank you for making us proud, Hidilyn.”

Duterte’s spokesman, Harry Roque, congratulated Diaz “for bringing pride and glory to the Philippines.”

Source: Voice of America

Typhoon May be Latest Challenge for Already Strange Tokyo Olympics

An already weird Olympics may soon get weirder.

Forecasters say Tropical Storm Nepartak has formed off Japan’s east coast and could hit Tokyo late Monday or Tuesday.

It’s still too early to determine the exact path of the storm, but even an indirect hit could affect the Tokyo Games, especially water sports.

Accuweather says early indications suggest Nepartak will make landfall as a tropical storm, though “the system reaching typhoon strength upon its arrival onshore has not yet been ruled out.”

The storm has forced Olympics organizers to reschedule rowing events from Monday to Sunday.

“Outdoor events will bear the greatest risk, as heavy rain and gusty winds could cause postponement,” said Accuweather meteorologist Jake Sojda in a statement.

“The greatest impact to the Games would obviously come from a direct hit on Tokyo, where the majority of venues and events are located,” Sojda said. “However, even if the storm tracks farther north or south of Tokyo, there are some venues located farther away from the greater Tokyo metroplex that could still be impacted.”

The weather has already been a factor, with athletes competing in sweltering summer heat. Daytime highs have reached 33 degrees Celsius with intense humidity. Some analysts have said this may be among the hottest Summer Games on record.

A Russian archer fainted Friday in the Tokyo heat. Athletes and coaches have used cooling vests, fans and umbrellas to protect themselves.

The storm is just the latest challenge for what many have called the weirdest Olympics ever.

The Games were delayed a year because of the coronavirus pandemic. A recent surge in cases in Tokyo forced nearly all events to be held without fans.

Athletes, officials and journalists at the Games are all required to stay inside tightly regulated protective bubbles and are restricted from wandering around the city.

So far, 132 Olympics-related individuals have tested positive for the virus.

 

 

Source: Voice of America

Tokyo Olympics Chief Declines to Rule Out Cancellation of Games

The Tokyo Olympics is set to open in three days, but the chief of the organizing committee declined Tuesday to rule out a last-minute cancelation if the number of COVID-19 cases among athletes continue to spike.

 

Toshiro Muto said at a news conference he is watching the infection numbers, with 71 coronavirus cases already reported since July 1 of people accredited to participate in the Games or be there in some capacity.

 

“We will continue discussions if there is a spike in cases,” Muto said. “At this point, the coronavirus cases may rise or fall, so we will think about what we should do when the situation arises.”

But a spokesman for Tokyo 2020, so named for last year’s postponed Olympics, later said organizers were “concentrating 100% on delivering successful Games.”

 

Some corporate sponsors have dropped plans to attend Friday’s opening ceremony, and because of the pandemic, no spectators will be at the athletic events, to minimize health risks.

 

Japan’s vaccination program has fallen short of most other developed nations. It has recorded more than 840,000 cases and 15,055 deaths. A surge in cases is being reported in Tokyo, with 1,387 new cases recorded Tuesday.

 

An Olympic “bubble” mandates frequent COVID-19 testing and is designed to limit participants’ movements.

 

But Seiko Hashimoto, the organizing committee president, said at the news conference that safety measures designed to reassure the Japanese public had not necessarily done so, and she was aware that popular support for the Games had dropped.

 

“I really want to apologize from my heart for the accumulation of frustrations and concerns that the public has been feeling towards the Olympics,” Hashimoto said.

 

Hashimoto said the public was concerned “because they feel that the current situation appears to show that the playbooks that were meant to guarantee security is not providing a sense of safety.”

 

The Asahi Shimbun newspaper said 68% of respondents in a poll expressed doubt about the ability of Olympic organizers to control coronavirus infections, with 55% saying they oppose the Games going ahead.

 

Several top athletes — American tennis star Coco Gauff, among them — have dropped out of the Games after testing positive for COVID-19 or for various injuries. This Thursday, a day before the official opening, the South African men’s soccer team could, because of coronavirus, struggle to field 11 players for its match against Japan.

 

Two members of Mexico’s Olympic baseball team tested positive for COVID-19 at the team hotel before their departure for Tokyo, the country’s baseball federation said Tuesday.

 

 

Source: Voice of America

US Charges 4 Chinese Nationals in Hacking Campaign

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Justice Department on Monday announced charges against three Chinese intelligence officers and a Chinese computer hacker in connection with an unlawful cyber campaign that pilfered trade secrets and confidential information from dozens of companies, universities and government entities in the United States and 11 other countries between 2011 and 2018.

The theft included information about sensitive technologies, that was “of significant economic benefit to China’s companies and commercial sectors,” the department said, adding that the hackers targeted research institutes and universities to steal infectious-disease research on Ebola, MERS, and HIV/AIDS.

Like the closely related Ebola virus, the Marburg virus can cause massive internal bleeding, organ failure, fever, shock and delirium, and usually death. Tularemia is a potentially fatal bacterial disease found in rabbits. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says people could become exposed through bioterrorism.

The announcement came as the administration of President Joe Biden and its allies formally attributed a massive cyberattack on the Microsoft Exchange Server email software earlier this year to hackers tied to China’s Ministry of State Security.

“These criminal charges once again highlight that China continues to use cyber-enabled attacks to steal what other countries make, in flagrant disregard of its bilateral and multilateral commitments,” Deputy Attorney General Lisa O. Monaco said in a statement.

Prosecutors identified the three intelligence officers as Ding Xiaoyang, Cheng Qingmin, and Zhu Yunmin, saying they served in the Hainan State Security Department (HSSD), a provincial arm of China’s Ministry of State Security. The computer hacker was identified as Wu Shurong.

In an indictment unsealed Friday, prosecutors alleged that the three intelligence officers coordinated with staff and professors at various Chinese universities to carry out the campaign. The universities helped the Chinese spy agency to identify and recruit hackers and linguists, they said.

To hide the Chinese government’s role in the cyber campaign, the four defendants and other Chinese intelligence operatives established a front company, Hainan Xiandun Technology Development Co., Ltd, prosecutors said. The company has since been disbanded.

In addition to organizations in the United States, the hacking campaign targeted victims in Austria, Cambodia, Canada, Germany, Indonesia, Malaysia, Norway, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Switzerland and the United Kingdom, prosecutors said.

“The breadth and duration of China’s hacking campaigns, including these efforts targeting a dozen countries across sectors ranging from health care and biomedical research to aviation and defense, remind us that no country or industry is safe,” Monaco said. “Today’s international condemnation shows that the world wants fair rules, where countries invest in innovation, not theft.”

In recent years, the Justice Department has charged dozens of Chinese nationals with espionage and cyberattacks.

The Chinese government has long denied U.S. allegations that it carries out cyberattacks against the United States.

The U.S. and its Western allies accused the Ministry of State Security of using “contract hackers” to carry out a wide range of cyberattacks including ransomware attacks targeting companies in exchange for millions of dollars in ransom. They specifically blamed China for the cyberattack in March that affected tens of thousands of organizations via Microsoft Exchange servers.

“The United States and countries around the world are holding the People’s Republic of China (PRC) accountable for its pattern of irresponsible, disruptive, and destabilizing behavior in cyberspace, which poses a major threat to our economic and national security,” U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement.

The public attribution is likely to strain already sour relations between Washington and Beijing and comes at a time when U.S. officials continue to sound the alarm about Chinese cyber espionage activities as part of Beijing’s campaign to supplant the United States as the world’s only superpower.

An advisory released on Monday by the FBI, the National Security Agency, and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) said Chinese state-sponsored malicious cyber activity is “a major threat to U.S. and Allied cyberspace assets.”

“Chinese state-sponsored cyber actors aggressively target U.S. and allied political, economic, military, educational, and critical infrastructure (CI) personnel and organizations to steal sensitive data, critical and emerging key technologies, intellectual property, and personally identifiable information (PII),” the joint advisory said.

The U.S. views China as “a prolific and effective cyber-espionage threat” and says it “possesses substantial cyber-attack capabilities,” according to the U.S. intelligence community’s latest threat assessment released in April.

Source: Voice of America

Azizulhasni Up For Challenge Of Winning Malaysia’s First Olympic Gold

KUALA LUMPUR— Carrying the hopes and aspirations of more than 32 million Malaysians of winning the country’s first Olympic gold medal is certainly a great challenge for any athlete, and national track cyclist Mohd Azizulhasni Awang is ready to overcome all the hurdles in his path to bring home the coveted prize.

 

The 33-year-old rider from Dungun, Terengganu said following the retirement of national badminton ace Lee Chong Wei due to nasal cancer, the country had placed high hopes on him at the world’s biggest Games which will begin on July 23.

 

“Even performing on the Olympic stage is already huge pressure, but being a gold medal prospect is another level for me. I take it positively, it’s my responsibility to the country.

 

“Our preparation and training have been the best ever we had so far in our career. I am happy with everything we have done and want to make sure that everything is according to our plan in Japan,” he said during a virtual press conference on Wednesday.

 

Mohd Azizulhasni said he would not be disappointed with whatever results achieved at the Games, as he knew the team was giving more than 100 per cent in preparation.

 

The 2017 world keirin champion said he was now more mature after representing the country for over 15 years, and was able to control his emotions and nerves at top-level events.

 

Commenting on his physical preparation, the rider nicknamed ‘The Pocket Rocketman’ said he had gained around 10kg, especially in lower body muscle mass since the 2016 Rio Olympics, to increase his strength.

 

“When you add muscle composition, it will help increase power output, thus increasing acceleration. This can be seen as my time for the 200m acceleration has improved over time, culminating in me breaking the Asian, national and personal records by clocking in at 9.548s at the Berlin World Championships in March 2020.

 

“So we have continued to work hard during the lockdown period, and continue to work hard now, because it’s not a small mission, it’s a big mission for our country,” said the athlete who will be making his fourth consecutive Olympic appearance since Beijing 2008.

 

Armed with the ‘WX-R Vorteq’ bicycle developed through an RM13 million research and development (R&D) project between the National Sports Institute (ISN) and United Kingdom firm TOTALSIM Ltd, he is confident of competing with the world’s best riders after missing out on the bronze in the keirin event in Rio 2016.

 

Meanwhile, Muhammad Shah Firdaus Sahrom, who will make his first appearance at the Olympics, said he was not setting too high a target.

 

“Most importantly, I will go there, do my best, and take whatever outcome I get,” he said.

 

Mohd Azizulhasni and Shah Firdaus will compete in the sprint event from Aug 4-7 and the keirin event from Aug 7-8 at Izu Velodrome in Shizuoka.

 

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK