According to a company spokesman, the automaker will not be releasing any commercials related to the Tokyo Games, choosing instead to run its "regular" ads in Japan.
The representative, Hideaki Honma, emphasized Monday that the company was not "canceling" any Olympics-related commercials, saying that none were planned in the first place.
Honma also confirmed to CNN Business that
Toyota (TM) CEO Akio Toyoda would not be attending the Olympics opening ceremony, set to take place this Friday.
"We wanted to refrain from attending while people who were looking forward to the event cannot go now," Honma said, noting the recent decision by organizers to
not allow any spectators, because of public health concerns.
This year's Olympics is shaping up
to be unlike any other, with
ongoing protests to cancel the Games and thousands of volunteers
pulling out.
Some business leaders have also spoken out amid the controversy. In May,
Rakuten (RKUNF) CEO Hiroshi Mikitani
told CNN Business that it would be a "suicide mission" for the country to host the Games this summer.
Asked about Toyota's decision during a press conference Monday, Tokyo 2020 spokesman Masa Takaya said he "wasn't aware" of the news.
But he acknowledged that Olympic sponsors "must have been struggling to support" the Games this year, particularly amid "mixed public sentiment."
"In that respect, there must be a decision by each company in terms of ... how they should be able to convey their messages to public audiences from [their] own corporate [perspectives]," he told reporters.
Toyota is one of the Olympics'
top sponsors, alongside major global brands such as
Coca-Cola (KO),
Samsung (SSNLF) and Visa.
Organizers will review the decision to allow stakeholders into the Olympic stadium during the opening ceremony, which is slated for July 23, Seiko Hashimoto, head of the Japanese Olympic Committee
said earlier this month.