<p>Equality activists called for more radical reform by Tokyo Olympics organisers on Friday, as Games chiefs prepared to replace one octogenarian male president with another after a sexism row.</p>.<p>Saburo Kawabuchi, 84, is expected to take over as head of the Games, with 83-year-old Yoshiro Mori to resign after his claims that women talk too much in meetings sparked a groundswell of condemnation.</p>.<p>But campaigners say only a complete shake-up can bring about real change, and accused Games kingmakers of failing to take the gender imbalance issue seriously.</p>.<p>"They think it's a game where they just invite another friend of theirs to take leadership, without giving other people -- especially younger people -- a chance," Kazuna Yamamoto, founder of gender equality campaign group Voice Up Japan, told AFP.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/other-sports/tokyo-olympics-chief-set-to-quit-over-sexist-remarks-in-another-blow-to-the-games-950260.html" target="_blank">Tokyo Olympics chief set to quit over sexist remarks in another blow to the Games</a></strong></p>.<p>"I feel like they're wasting this chance -- but at the same time, we're not giving up," she said.</p>.<p>"We're going to keep pressuring the Olympic committee to do better."</p>.<p>Mori's comments sparked an outcry in Japan, where a petition calling for his resignation attracted more than 1,10,000 signatures in just two days, as sponsors, athletes and politicians lined up to lambast the former prime minister.</p>.<p>The International Olympic Committee said it considered the matter closed after Mori apologised, but eventually called his comments "completely inappropriate" as criticism mounted.</p>.<p>Campaigners have been heartened by the grassroots response in Japan, which ranked 121st out of 153 nations surveyed in the World Economic Forum's 2020 global gender gap report.</p>.<p>But they say there is still much work to be done -- pointing to the fact that there are just seven women among the Tokyo 2020 organising committee's 35 board members.</p>.<p>"You can't just say that things have changed because he's resigned," said Kazuko Fukuda, a campaigner for women's sexual and reproductive rights.</p>.<p>"If they don't have concrete plans, like having a zero-tolerance policy, saying they're against anti-discrimination and increasing the number of female board members, I don't think there will be any real change."</p>.<p>Japanese media reported that Mori has hand-picked Kawabuchi as his successor, and will continue to serve in an advisory capacity.</p>.<p>Fukuda says such backroom deals are typical of a culture in Japan where "women are not involved in decision-making."</p>.<p>"Important things don't get decided during the day in official meetings, they get decided after work at night," she said.</p>.<p>"Decisions should be made in official places during the daytime, but instead they're just approved. If women raise their voice there, they're labelled troublesome and noisy."</p>.<p>"That culture is one barrier that stops women from advancing."</p>.<p>Pride House Tokyo -- a community hub for LGBTQ people officially recognised as part of the Olympic programme -- published an open letter this week calling for organisers to take concrete steps to ensure discriminatory comments do not occur again.</p>.<p>Project chief Gon Matsunaka believes Olympic organisers must look beyond replacing Mori and undertake genuine reform.</p>.<p>"It's easy to say Mori should quit, but if that happens, that's the end of it," he told AFP.</p>.<p>"Nothing will change. That's why we published an open letter -- because we want to see action being taken."</p>.<p>Male-dominated culture is so "deeply rooted" in Japan that those close to Mori "thought there was nothing wrong and did nothing to stop him", Gon said.</p>.<p>"The fact that Japanese society is centred around men means that a lot of people suffer, and they don't see that. We want to change that way of thinking."</p>
<p>Equality activists called for more radical reform by Tokyo Olympics organisers on Friday, as Games chiefs prepared to replace one octogenarian male president with another after a sexism row.</p>.<p>Saburo Kawabuchi, 84, is expected to take over as head of the Games, with 83-year-old Yoshiro Mori to resign after his claims that women talk too much in meetings sparked a groundswell of condemnation.</p>.<p>But campaigners say only a complete shake-up can bring about real change, and accused Games kingmakers of failing to take the gender imbalance issue seriously.</p>.<p>"They think it's a game where they just invite another friend of theirs to take leadership, without giving other people -- especially younger people -- a chance," Kazuna Yamamoto, founder of gender equality campaign group Voice Up Japan, told AFP.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/other-sports/tokyo-olympics-chief-set-to-quit-over-sexist-remarks-in-another-blow-to-the-games-950260.html" target="_blank">Tokyo Olympics chief set to quit over sexist remarks in another blow to the Games</a></strong></p>.<p>"I feel like they're wasting this chance -- but at the same time, we're not giving up," she said.</p>.<p>"We're going to keep pressuring the Olympic committee to do better."</p>.<p>Mori's comments sparked an outcry in Japan, where a petition calling for his resignation attracted more than 1,10,000 signatures in just two days, as sponsors, athletes and politicians lined up to lambast the former prime minister.</p>.<p>The International Olympic Committee said it considered the matter closed after Mori apologised, but eventually called his comments "completely inappropriate" as criticism mounted.</p>.<p>Campaigners have been heartened by the grassroots response in Japan, which ranked 121st out of 153 nations surveyed in the World Economic Forum's 2020 global gender gap report.</p>.<p>But they say there is still much work to be done -- pointing to the fact that there are just seven women among the Tokyo 2020 organising committee's 35 board members.</p>.<p>"You can't just say that things have changed because he's resigned," said Kazuko Fukuda, a campaigner for women's sexual and reproductive rights.</p>.<p>"If they don't have concrete plans, like having a zero-tolerance policy, saying they're against anti-discrimination and increasing the number of female board members, I don't think there will be any real change."</p>.<p>Japanese media reported that Mori has hand-picked Kawabuchi as his successor, and will continue to serve in an advisory capacity.</p>.<p>Fukuda says such backroom deals are typical of a culture in Japan where "women are not involved in decision-making."</p>.<p>"Important things don't get decided during the day in official meetings, they get decided after work at night," she said.</p>.<p>"Decisions should be made in official places during the daytime, but instead they're just approved. If women raise their voice there, they're labelled troublesome and noisy."</p>.<p>"That culture is one barrier that stops women from advancing."</p>.<p>Pride House Tokyo -- a community hub for LGBTQ people officially recognised as part of the Olympic programme -- published an open letter this week calling for organisers to take concrete steps to ensure discriminatory comments do not occur again.</p>.<p>Project chief Gon Matsunaka believes Olympic organisers must look beyond replacing Mori and undertake genuine reform.</p>.<p>"It's easy to say Mori should quit, but if that happens, that's the end of it," he told AFP.</p>.<p>"Nothing will change. That's why we published an open letter -- because we want to see action being taken."</p>.<p>Male-dominated culture is so "deeply rooted" in Japan that those close to Mori "thought there was nothing wrong and did nothing to stop him", Gon said.</p>.<p>"The fact that Japanese society is centred around men means that a lot of people suffer, and they don't see that. We want to change that way of thinking."</p>