The Citizen (Gauteng)

Bizarre rules in place in Japan

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No phone calls on the train, no smoking on the streets, and don’t pack your Vicks inhaler: that’s the message for rugby fans in Japan for the World Cup. Japan has rolled out the welcome mat for rugby fans, stocking up on beer and relaxing tattoo taboos, but there are still some faux pas that visitors from around the world would do well to avoid.

Public decorum

Japanese society is unfailingl­y polite and reserved. Loud conversati­ons are rare even in the street, and virtually non-existent in enclosed spaces like trains and restaurant­s.

Signs on trains remind riders to avoid using their phones or playing music loud enough to be heard from their headphones.

So eyebrows were raised when a video began circulatin­g online of French fans seated on the floor of a subway carriage, passing a crowdsurfi­ng friend over their heads.

“I was watching them with a smile at first, but it escalated gradually and they were bumping other people,” wrote the Japanese Twitter user who posted the video.

But the incident has proved the exception rather than the rule, and while some Twitter users worried whether it was a sign of things to come ahead of next year’s Olympics, others brushed it off.

“Please be generous to cheerful foreigners. The Rugby World Cup is a special festival,” wrote one. Littering

Japan is among the cleanest countries in the world, with spotless streets even in the sprawling capital of Tokyo, with 16 million residents.

But paradoxica­lly, the country has almost no trash cans, with Japanese carrying their litter around with them until they can dispose of it at home.

That has left some visitors bemused.

“It was a surprise. They’ve got beautiful clean places, but I don’t know how they do it with no bins,” Irish fan Alan Parker said.

“So you just have to carry your stuff with a plastic bag.”

But most of the convenienc­e stores in cities like Tokyo have rubbish bins inside. Smoking in public

Japan has long been considered a rare smoker’s paradise, one of the last places in the developed world to allow smoking in restaurant­s and bars.

But the smoking rate has been falling, and local government­s have cracked down on public smoking.

Many of Tokyo’s streets are no-smoking zones, with signs warning of fines for lighting up.

Instead, smokers must hunt for small areas set aside for the purpose, generally partially screened and set back from the street.

But some visitors confessed they were bending the rules.

“I smoke in the streets,” said Mark Clifford, 48, an Australian watching a game at a Tokyo pub.

“It’s the World Cup, there are a lot of foreigners, so they have to be tolerant. Especially if they want us to have a good image of their country.” Drugs

Japan has zero tolerance rules on recreation­al drugs, and there have been no moves towards loosening restrictio­ns on marijuana as has happened in some countries.

So far there has been little sign of trouble, though two Irish fans were arrested on suspicion of heroin possession in Tokyo last week.

The country also bans a wide variety of over-the-counter medication from Vicks inhalers and allergy pills and some painkiller­s.

In the run-up to the World Cup, the British embassy in Tokyo released a series of videos warning visitors about the rules.

“Don’t get arrested or get deported for smuggling... nasal spray,” one warns. –

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