Tokyo Unveil Cherry-Blossom Shaped Olympic Torch
20th March 2019
The shiny rose-gold torch, which is 71 centimetres (28 inches) long and weighs 1.2 kilograms (2 pounds 10 ounces)

- Organisers of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics on Wednesday unveiled a cherry-blossom shaped torch for the Games as the city prepares for the famed flower season to begin in coming days
- The passing of the flame is scheduled to start on March 26, 2020, and the torch will head south to the sub-tropical island of Okinawa -- the starting point for the 1964 Tokyo Games relay
TOKYO, Japan- Organisers
of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics on Wednesday unveiled a cherry-blossom shaped torch
for the Games as the city prepares for the famed flower season to begin in
coming days.
The top part of the torch is shaped in the traditional
emblem of the sakura, or cherry blossom using the same cutting-edge technology
as in production of Japan's bullet trains, the organisers said.
The shiny rose-gold torch, which is 71 centimetres (28 inches)
long and weighs 1.2 kilograms (2 pounds 10 ounces), uses aluminium construction
waste from temporary housing built for victims of the 2011 quake and tsunami.
"Cherry blossoms drawn by kids in the disaster-hit area
(in Fukushima)... inspired me," designer Tokujin Yoshioka, whose works are
known internationally, told reporters.
Fukushima was chosen as the starting point for the Olympic
torch relay.
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The passing of the flame is scheduled to start on March 26,
2020, and the torch will head south to the sub-tropical island of Okinawa --
the starting point for the 1964 Tokyo Games relay -- before returning north and
arriving in the Japanese capital on July 10.
The designer added the torch is designed to ensure the flame
will not go out even during the typhoon season.
The March 2011 tsunami, triggered by a massive undersea
quake, killed around 18,000 people and swamped the Fukushima nuclear plant,
sending its reactors into meltdown and leading to the world's worst nuclear
disaster since Chernobyl.
More than 50,000 people have not returned to their home
towns.
Japan has dubbed the 2020 Games the "Reconstruction
Olympics" and wants to showcase recovery in regions devastated by the
disaster.