A flame from the 1964 Tokyo Olympic torch that was supposed to be kept alight eternally actually went out four years ago, it emerged today after red-faced officials confessed.
The flame, housed in a sports training facility in the southwestern Japanese city of Kagoshima, was touted as an "Olympic sacred flame" from 1964 and received widespread media coverage when Tokyo was awarded the 2020 Games.
But it turned out that the flame had gone out in November 2013, two months after Tokyo won the Games, and had been hastily re-lit, the then head of the facility told AFP.
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"I saw with my eyes that the flame went out on November 21," he added. "We re-lit the fire and kept it going for about two weeks, but I thought that was not good."
At that time, there was considerable media interest in the flame as Japan had just been awarded the 2020 Games, he said.
"In addition, we kept receiving a number of requests from various people to use the 'sacred flame' for town festivals and weddings. I decided to come clean," he said.
Local Kagoshima official Mitsuru Horinouchi also told AFP the flame was extinguished for good in November 2013.
The facility now keeps a different flame -- ignited by a magnifying glass and sunlight in December 2013 -- in a camp site.
"We now have a display panel explaining the that existing flame was created after the flame from the 1964 Olympics went out," the current head of the facility Etsuko Tabata told AFP.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)