Jamaica Gleaner

Explainer: How will the virus emergency affect the Olympics?

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A VIRUS state of emergency began yesterday in Japan’s capital as the number of new cases is climbing fast and hospital beds are starting to fill just 11 days ahead of the Tokyo Olympics.

Here is a look at the state of emergency and how it will affect the Olympics.

WHAT RESTRICTIO­NS ARE THERE?

The six-week emergency is Japan’s fourth since the pandemic began and will last until August 22. The main target of the new state of emergency is alcohol served at bars and restaurant­s as authoritie­s want people to stay home and watch the games on TV and not gather in public.

Like past emergencie­s, most of the measures are requests because the government lacks a legal basis to enforce hard lockdowns. Authoritie­s have recently given themselves more power to issue binding orders for businesses to close or shorten hours in exchange for compensati­on. They can also now fine businesses that violate those orders.

The new state of emergency requests that restaurant­s, bars, karaoke parlours, and other entertainm­ent outlets either close or not serve alcohol. It asks liquor stores to suspend business with restaurant­s and bars that defy the request, but liquor stores say that would hurt their business ties.

Schools will stay open during this emergency, while theme parks, museums, theatres, and most stores and restaurant­s are requested to close at 8 p.m.

Tokyo residents are asked to avoid nonessenti­al outings, work from home, and stick to mask-wearing and other safety measures. Measures for the general public are non-mandatory.

WHAT AREAS DOES IT COVER?

The latest state of emergency covers Tokyo’s nearly 14 million residents while less-stringent measures focusing on shortened hours for restaurant­s and bars affect 31 million other people in nearby cities of Chiba, Saitama, and Kanagawa that are home to some Olympic venues.

The measures also cover Osaka, which was hit hard by a virus surge in April, and the southern island of Okinawa.

HOW WILL THIS AFFECT THE OLYMPICS?

The state of emergency will cover the entire duration of the July 23-August 8 Olympics, and its main impact will be in barring fans from stadiums and arenas in the Tokyo area.

While the state of emergency mainly covers Tokyo, Olympic officials have decided to bar fans from events hosted in Tokyo’s three neighbouri­ng prefecture­s while allowing limited fans at other outlying venues. Football events in Hokkaido and baseball and softball games in Fukushima, however, will also bar fans due to virus concerns.

The Games have already been postponed from 2020 by the pandemic, and fans from abroad were banned months ago.

With the new restrictio­ns, the Games will now be a largely TV-only event.

HOW BAD IS JAPAN’S VIRUS SITUATION?

Japan has weathered the pandemic better than many other countries, logging about bout 820,000 cases and 15,000 deaths. But the situation has grown more serious in recent weeks, and Tokyo hit a two-month high of 950 new cases on Saturday. Experts have warned that the delta variant, which is thought to be more contagious, is spreading fast in offices and classrooms, and without tough measures, the numbers could skyrocket by August.

About 16.8 per cent of the population has been fully vaccinated, a number that has picked up since May but is still far short of where officials hoped to be before the Olympics. Younger people are largely unvaccinat­ed.

 ?? FILE ?? A group of students from Uruguay pose for a souvenir picture on the Olympic Rings set outside the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo, Japan, on Saturday, March 21, 2020.
FILE A group of students from Uruguay pose for a souvenir picture on the Olympic Rings set outside the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo, Japan, on Saturday, March 21, 2020.

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