Tokyo 2020 organisers unveiled a new Olympic logo featuring traditional Japanese designs yesterday, seven months after they were forced to scrap the original motif over accusations of plagiarism.

The new logo, chosen from more than 14,000 candidates, adopts a traditional indigo-blue chequered pattern called “ichimatsu moyo” that dates back to the Edo period (1603-1868).

The individually-shaped rectangles in the design represented differences in culture and nationalities and symbolised “unity in diversity”, the committee that chose the emblem said.

“It took me a long time to create this logo – it’s like my own child,” Tokyo-based artist Asao Tokoro, who designed the winning emblem, told reporters.

“From today, these emblems will serve as the face of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games. I very much hope that the emblems will prove popular with people everywhere,” said Ryohei Miyata, chairman of the Tokyo 2020 Emblems Selection Committee.

The members of the committee emphasised the transparency of the selection process, saying the logo was selected through an open competition .

A dispute over the original logo erupted soon after it was unveiled last July, when a Belgian-based designer said it was too similar to his emblem for a theatre, demanding its use be halted and filing a lawsuit in local court.

The logo’s designer Kenjiro Sano and Tokyo 2020 Olympics organisers denied the pattern had been copied but eventually scrapped it, saying its reputation was too damaged to be used at the Games.

Japan’s second hosting of the Summer Games after Tokyo 1964 has been hampered by a series of setbacks, including a complete overhaul of the stadium design, abandoned in response to growing public anger over soaring costs.

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