RIO DE JANEIRO: The world’s best known Olympic historian said Friday it will take something more destructive than the Zika virus to cancel the Rio de Janeiro Olympics.

“Historically, the only times the games have been cancelled is in war — World War I and World War II,” David Wallechinsky said. “Other than that, nothing has done it.”

Brazil is the epicentre of the rapidly-spreading mosquito-borne Zika virus, which is also generating rumours that South America’s first Games may be called off instead of opening on Aug 5.

Researchers have linked the virus to a birth defect that can leave newborns with long-lasting health and developmental problems.

Brazil’s Sports Minister George Hilton issued a statement saying that canceling the games “is not in discussion,” and Rio organisers and the International Olympic Committee have repeatedly shot down the notion it’s even being considered.

Wallechinsky, president of the International Society of Olympic Historians, said the only similar case was the 2014 Youth Olympics in Nanjing, China, when three athletes from west Africa were banned from competing over fears they had contracted the Ebola virus and the subsequent possibility of it spreading.

“That’s the only time that disease has ever entered into it,” he said.

The 1916 Olympics were called off during World War I, and four Games — two summer and two winter — were cancelled between 1940 and 1944. Two Summer Olympics were hit by partial boycotts in 1980 and 1984.

Wallechinsky said it was too late to move the games from Rio.

“A lot of money has been put into this; the athletes, the infrastructure,” he said. “It’s pretty late to move the games so I think they’ll go forward.”

Brazil is spending at least $10 billion to prepare for the games. Add to that, billions spent on television rights, and maybe just as much on sponsorship, advertising across 28 sport federations, and the more than 200 nations that participate. “There would be a lot of lawsuits,” Wallechinsky said. “It would be a dream event for lawyers.”

Published in Dawn, February 7th, 2016

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