Indigenous basketball star Patty Mills and swimming champion Cate Campbell have led out the Australian team during the opening ceremony of the Tokyo Olympic Games.
Australia was the 38th nation to walk out into the stadium on Friday night with a team of 63 athletes all donning the green and gold.
Mills is the first Indigenous athlete to carry the flag while Campbell is the first female swimmer.
The rest of the Aussie athletes watched on with pride from the Olympic village with many excitedly waving the national flag.
As Mills and Campbell carried the flag together as they led the team into the stadium, a string of other athletes marched on behind them waving to friends and family watching on from home.
Most donned their green and gold facemasks and held high tiny Australian flags.
Some of these included world champion surfer Steph Gilmore and canoeist Jess Fox.
Japan had earlier kicked off the Covid-delayed event with a symbolic show of hope and tenacity in the face of adversity.
Indigenous basketball star Patty Mills and swimming champion Cate Campbell have led out the Australian team during the opening ceremony of the Tokyo Olympic Games
Australia is seen walking out in the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games on Friday night
Mills is the first Indigenous athlete to carry the flag while Campbell is the first female swimmer
One Aussie athlete poses for a photo during the opening ceremony on Friday night
Australia was the 38th nation to walk out into the stadium on Friday night with a team of 63 athletes all donning the green and gold
There were just 950 VIPs and world leaders inside the 68,000-seat main arena in Tokyo to watch the display of light and colour on Friday night amid rising case totals in the country which forced organisers to ban crowds.
Sombre and socially-distanced – gone were the tightly-packed dance routines that traditionally mark opening ceremonies as directors instead made the best use of projection technology to add colour and pageantry.
A large firework display did add a burst of sound to what was otherwise an eerily quiet event, after organisers opted against playing artificial crowd noises in the arena.
Earlier in the day hundreds of sports fans had gathered outside the main Olympic arena in Tokyo on Friday certainly seemed to be enjoying themselves, some dressed in traditional Japanese regalia while others posed for photos in front of the Olympics’ famous rings.
Supporters were also treated to a fly-past by the Blue Impact military display team, whose jets streaked through the sky above the stadium trailing coloured smoke.
The Tokyo Olympics began with a bang as fireworks exploded over an otherwise eerily quiet arena after crowds were banned with less than 1,000 dignitaries, delegates, and VIPs in attendance
Fireworks explode over the main Olympic stadium in Tokyo as the Opening Ceremony gets underway, a year after the event was delayed due to the Covid pandemic
Fireworks go off during the opening ceremony of the Tokyo Olympic games
Wooden Olympic rings made from the wood of trees planted the last time Tokyo hosted the Olympics are brought into the main arena during the Opening Ceremony
Performers take part in the Tokyo Olympics opening ceremony, a year after it was scheduled due to Covid delays
Team GB enter the Olympic stadium in Tokyo, Japan, led by flagbearers Hannah Mills and Mohamed Sbihi after rules were changed to allow one male and one female flagbearer
Olympic rings are formed during the Opening Ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games at Olympic Stadium
Fireworks go off inside the stadium during the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games
Fireworks go off and performers dance during the Opening Ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games at Olympic Stadium
Performers take part in the Olympics opening ceremony in Tokyo on Friday night as the Covid-delayed games got underway
A group of performers carry out a routine during the Opening Ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games
A routine featuring traditional Japanese woodworkers which built much of Japan’s infrastructure before the introduction of concrete and steel in the modern era
Performers play traditional Japanese woodworkers, symbolizing the country’s history during the opening ceremony
Performers dance as the Olympic Cauldron is seen during the Opening Ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games
The national anthem is performed during the opening ceremony of the Covid-delayed 2020 Olympics in Japan
The Japanese flag is carried onto the stage during the Opening Ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games
Japan raises its flag in the Olympic Stadium as the national anthem is sung during the opening ceremony
The Japanese flag is raised over the main Olympic stadium in Tokyo during the opening ceremony
The image of a single athlete rising from the ground with a plant shoot behind them began the opening ceremony, symbolizing hope that springs anew in the face of adversity
An opening dance routine showed performers entangled in a web of red threads, symbolizing the fear and anxiety that many have been through in the last 18 months
Performers dance during the Opening Ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games
The theme of the opening segment was of athletics being used to overcome adversity, which organisers hope will be the lasting legacy of the Tokyo Olympics
Performances dance during a light show during the Opening Ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games
Dancers take part in the opening performance of the ceremony, which featured the theme of sport overcoming adversity
Performers are seen during the opening ceremony taking place in Tokyo after a year of pandemic delays
Performers during the opening ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games at the Olympic Stadium in Japan
A group of performers carry out a routine during the Opening Ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games
A performance paying tribute to all those who have died due to Covid and other causes in 2020 takes place before viewers were asked to observe a moment of silence
A performer dances on stage during the Opening Ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games
Performers at the opening ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympic Games at the National Stadium
A group of performers carry out a routine during the Opening Ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games
A darkened Tokyo Olympic stadium is seen shortly before the start of the much-anticipated Olympic opening ceremony
The main Olympic stadium in Tokyo is seen illuminated against the city skyline during the opening ceremony
Meanwhile Olympic torchbearers beamed as they took part in a final relay event – taking just a few steps before passing the flame instead of the usual running due to Covid rules – before the flame is taken to the main arena where it will be used to light a cauldron and officially open the Games during tonight’s ceremony.
Few know what to expect from the ceremony itself, which has been extensively re-planned since the Games were delayed from last year – coming amid a pandemic which will make traditional routines of choreographed dancers nigh-on impossible to replicate.
It will also take place in front of just 950 attendees including 15 heads of state after large crowds were banned due to Tokyo’s spiralling Covid case tolls.
The show is expected to focus on Japan’s history as well as its contribution to modern culture and technology, though will have a less celebratory tone than previous years as it comes amid the pandemic.
A tribute to those who are suffering from or have died of Covid is expected to feature as part of the performance, though how directors choose to handle the topic of the virus is sure to be much-talked-about.
Adding a further unepected element to the performance is the fact that one of the directors – Kantaro Kobayashi – was forced to resign just yesterday after a past comedy sketch he performed that included jokes about the Holocaust resurfaced.
The Games were supposed to take place last year but organisers took a high-stakes gamble to postpone them due to the Covid pandemic, in the hopes that the virus would be under control by now.
Officials now have the unenviable task of staging the Games while the most-infectious form of Covid to date is in circulation, causing cases to rise rapidly in Japan amid fears the Olympics will become a super-spreader event.
Tokyo reported 1,359 COVID-19 cases on Friday, part of a wave of infection in the capital as the Olympic Games kick off, it’s highest one-day toll since January.
Even this slimmed-down version of the competition – with strict limits on who can stay in Athletes’ Village and crowds banned from stadiums – will see some 50,000 people gather in the largest international event since the pandemic began.
And while Covid cases driven by the Delta variant are rising rapidly in other countries – such as the UK – Japan has fully vaccinated just 20 per cent of its population, one of the lowest rates among developed countries.
But comparison, the UK has fully vaccinated more than half of its population.
That has made the Games unpopular with the Japanese public, with polls consistently showing a majority of people do not support the event going ahead and do not expect to enjoy watching.
That anger was visible on Friday as locals waving banners that read ‘NOlympics’ and ‘Cancel the Tokyo Olympics’ were pictured in Tokyo at a torch relay event.
President of the International Olympic Committee Thomas Bach (centre), Japanese Emperor Naruhito (second right) and Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga (far right) enter the Olympic arena as during the opening ceremony
Japan’s Emperor Naruhito, the Games’ guest of honour, waves to the small crowd of VIPs and special guests in the stadium
US First Lady Jill Biden speaks with French President Emmanuel Macron as they arrive at the opening ceremony
Jill Biden drops her head for a moment of silence to remember those lost during the Covid pandemic at the opening ceremony
But, even at the 11th hour, demonstrators furious that the event is going ahead during a pandemic and against the backdrop of rising cases in Japan gathered to call for the event to be scrapped.
There are now 110 cases of Covid linked directly to the Games after another 25 were reported Thursday, bringing the total number of infected athletes to 13 including another member of the Czech team – road cyclist Michal Schlegel.
Three members of the media were also included in the latest total – which only counts those who tested positive in Japan and not those who were diagnosed in their home countries before making the journey.
Schlegel tested positive at the team’s training base in Izu and will miss Saturday’s road race.
The Czech Olympic Committee said in a statement Friday that Schlegel is in isolation, and that Michael Kukrle and Zdenek Stybar will be its only two riders lining up at Musashinonomori Park for one of the first medal events of the Summer Games.
Czech beach volleyball players Marketa Slukova and Ondrej Perusic and table tennis player Pavel Sirucek also tested positive earlier this week.
That has prompted the Czech Olympic team to investigate whether the outbreak is linked to its chartered flight to Tokyo.
Meanwhile a series of scandals has plagued organisers, with no fewer than five Olympic officials and artists linked to the Games being forced to quit – mostly over claims of inappropriate past behaviour.
The most-recent was Opening Ceremony director Kantaro Kobayashi who was forced to step down on Thursday after an old comedy skit in which he jokes about the Holocaust came to light.
It was the third resignation just this week, after Opening Ceremony composer Keigo Oyamada was sacked over historic allegations of bullying, and children’s author Nobumi quit a cultural event related to the Games also over bullying claims.
Despite Kobayashi’s resignation, organisers insisted the Opening Ceremony – already re-planned at short notice due to Covid – would go ahead as planned.
Even on the field the Games is running into controversy amid a growing backlash against anti-protest gestures by the International Olympic Organising Committee.
The IOC has already watered down a 50-year-old rule on political gestures at the Games to allow footballers to take a knee against racial injustice before matches.
Sports fans gather outside Tokyo’s main stadium to take pictures in front of the Olympic rings and soak in the atmosphere ahead of the Olympics opening ceremony
Olympic super-fan Kyoko Ishikawa, who has attended every Summer Olympics in the past 30 years, celebrates outside Tokyo’s main stadium as the Games finally comes to her country
Japanese display team Blue Impulse take part in an aerial show over Tokyo’s Olympic stadium ahead of the opening ceremony
Blue Impulse display jets release coloured smoke over Tokyo hours before the main Opening Ceremony is due to take place
Crowds point their cameras at the sky as jets from the Blue Impulse display team perform in the skies over Tokyo
Japanese sports fans have put aside their worries about rising Covid cases in the city to gather outside the Olympic stadium
People take photographs as jets fly over Tokyo ahead of the official start of the Olympics
Tokyo is poised to kick off its Olympic Games after a year of delays due to the Covid pandemic and despite rising cases
People stand outside the National Stadium before the opening of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games
A woman in traditional clothing looks on from behind a fence prior to the Opening Ceremony of the Tokyo Olympic Games
People excited about the arrival of the Games stand outside the National Stadium before the opening of the Tokyo Olympics
A giant digital clock in Tokyo counts down to the start of the opening ceremony as fans gather in front of it
Japan’s Emperor Naruhito delivers a speech to the guests including French President Emmanuel Macron and U.S. First Lady Jill Biden at the Imperial Palace ahead of the official opening of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games
French President Emmanuel Macron is pictured arriving in Tokyo ahead of the Olympic Opening Ceremony, where he will be one of just 15 world leaders in attendance
U.S. First Lady Jill Biden gestures as she arrives at Imperial Palace for a meeting with Japan’s Emperor Naruhito in Tokyo
But on Friday a group of 150 athletes, academics, and social justice campaigners submitted a letter saying a ban on political gestures on podiums should be revoked.
The letter said it was adding ‘a collective voice’ to calls for amendments to Rule 50.
‘We believe the global sport community is at a turning point in matters of racial and social justice, and we call on you as leaders in the Olympic and Paralympic movements to make a stronger commitment to human rights, racial/social justice, and social inclusion,’ the letter read.
Among the signatories were Black U.S. sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos, who were expelled from the 1968 Olympics after they bowed their heads and raised black-gloved fists on the podium to protest racial inequality.
The Muhammad Ali Center also signed the letter, with the late boxing world and Olympic champion’s cauldron lighting at the Atlanta 1996 Games having become an iconic moment of Olympic history.
The letter called for no sanctions to be imposed on athletes who protested on the podium in Japan and demanded a review of Rule 50 after next year’s Beijing Winter Olympics.
British track and field medal hope Dina Asher-Smith also joined the chorus of opposition as she prepared for the Games.
‘Protesting and expressing yourself is a fundamental human right,’ she told reporters. ‘If you were to penalise someone for standing up against racial inequality how on earth would that go? How on earth are you going to enforce that?’
‘When people feel strongly about something, particularly when it’s something that’s so close to your heart – and as a Black woman you think about racism – I just think you can’t police people’s voice on that.’
Protesters opposed to the Tokyo Olympics gather outside a torch relay venue in the Japanese capital to express their anger just hours before the Games officially begin
Polls show most Japanese do not support the Games being held during Covid, particularly as cases rise across the country with a state of emergency declared in Tokyo itself
A man holds a banner declaring ‘shame’ on ‘greedy’ Olympic organisers and athletes for pursuing ‘money and honour’ while ordinary Japanese only feel ‘despair’
Olympic organisers have vowed to push ahead with the event despite widespread opposition that has even seen some sponsors distance themselves from the Games
Protesters gather outside Tokyo’s main Olympic stadium carrying banners that demand the event is called off, just hours before it goes ahead
Protesters march outside the Tokyo Olympics’ main stadium ahead of the Opening Ceremony
Activists hold an anti-Olympics rally in Tokyo just hours before the Games are due to start
Police officers gather outside a train station near the Tokyo Olympic stadium during protests against the Games