Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Asia Today: Japan halts all foreign arrivals over UK variant

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TOKYO » Japan is barring entry of all nonresiden­t foreign nationals as a precaution against a new and potentiall­y more contagious coronaviru­s variant that has spread across Britain.

The Foreign Ministry says the entry ban will start Monday and last through Jan. 31.

Last week, Japan banned nonresiden­t foreigners coming from Britain and South Africa after confirming the new variant in seven people over the last two days — five from Britain who tested positive at airports and two others in Tokyo.

Japan is also suspending the exemption of a

14 - day quarantine for Japanese nationals and resident foreigners in a short-track program that began in November. The entrants now must carry proof of a negative test

72 hours prior to departure for Japan and selfisolat­e for two weeks after arrival.

Japan is struggling with surging cases since November. It has confirmed a total of 217,312 cases including 3,213 deaths, up

3,700 from the previous

24 -hour period. Tokyo alone reported 949 cases, setting a new record, despite calls by experts and government officials for people to spend a “quiet” holiday season.

Elsewhere in

Pacific region:

— Health of ficials in Thailand say two new clusters of coronaviru­s cases appear to be linked to a major outbreak discovered a week earlier among migrant workers in an industrial province near Bangkok. The new cases were

the Asiafound in 19 members of a motorcycli­ng club who held a holiday gathering on Lanta Island in the southern province of K rabi, and nine others who visited a gambling den in the eastern province of Rayong. They’re part of 110 cases reported Saturday, bringing Thailand’s total to 6,020. Sixty of the new cases are linked to migrant workers. The government warned that unless social distancing and other restrictio­ns are observed, a nationwide lockdown might have to be implemente­d by March.

 ?? PARK MIN-SUK/NEWSIS VIA AP ?? A medical worker wearing protective gears prepares to take samples at a coronaviru­s testing site in Seoul, South Korea, Sunday, Dec. 27.
PARK MIN-SUK/NEWSIS VIA AP A medical worker wearing protective gears prepares to take samples at a coronaviru­s testing site in Seoul, South Korea, Sunday, Dec. 27.

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