Morning Sun

Japan imposes new coronaviru­s measures in Tokyo ahead of Games

- By Mari Yamaguchi

Japan announced Friday that it will raise the coronaviru­s alert level in Tokyo to allow tougher measures to curb the rapid spread of a more contagious variant ahead of the Summer Olympics.

Japan’s national vaccinatio­n drive has lagged and most people in the capital still have not been inoculated as infections have surged.

The raised status announced by Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga will allow Tokyo’s governor to mandate shorter opening hours for bars and restaurant­s, along with punishment­s for violators and compensati­on for those who comply. The measures are to begin Monday and continue through May 11.

Many of Tokyo’s cases have been linked to nightlife and dining, though they have recently spread to offices, elderly care facilities and schools, experts say.

Suga also raised the alert level for Kyoto in western Japan and the southern island prefecture of Okinawa, where cases have surged in recent weeks. The new status there is to continue through May 5, the end of Japan’s “Golden Week” holidays, to discourage traveling.

“We will do everything to contain infections within the affected areas and prevent them from spreading across the country,” Suga told reporters.

Under the measures, people are urged to avoid nonessenti­al travel outside their cities, health officials will patrol bars and restaurant­s to ensure safety measures are observed, and testing will be increased at elderly care facilities, Suga said.

Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike asked residents to avoid nonessenti­al trips and practice social distancing. She asked bars and restaurant­s in many areas of the prefecture to close at 8 p.m.

“In order to protect the medical systems in Tokyo, we have to work much harder to further reduce the movement of people,” Koike said. “We must curb the infections so we don’t have another resurgence at the time of the Olympics.”

“We must endure this difficult time until vaccines are widely available,” she added.

The alert status was also raised on Monday for parts of three other prefecture­s — Osaka, neighborin­g Hyogo and Miyagi in the north. They have had sharp increases in daily cases since early March, soon after Japan scaled down a partial and non-binding state of emergency that began in January.

With Friday’s additions, 15 cities in the six prefecture­s, including downtown Tokyo, are designated for elevated virus measures.

The steps come less than three weeks after the emergency was lifted for Tokyo, underscori­ng the difficulty of balancing anti-virus measures and the economy. Suga’s government has been criticized for being too slow in enacting antivirus measures out of a reluctance to further damage the pandemic-hit economy.

The new alert status come with binding orders but only for businesses to close early while measures for the residents are only requests, and some experts are skeptical about their effect.

Dr. Shigeru Omi, head of a government experts’ panel, said many people are tired of restrictio­ns and have become less cooperativ­e in response to requests despite the spread of the new variant.

“I think requests for cooperatio­n can no longer effectivel­y reduce infections,” Omi said, adding that medical systems will collapse unless Japan manages to prevent a big resurgence through June, when elderly people are due to complete their vaccinatio­ns. “We are at a very difficult time.”

 ?? EUGENE HOSHIKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, next to the mascots of Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games, speaks to media after a government task force meeting for the new virus measures, at the prime minister’s office Friday in Tokyo.
EUGENE HOSHIKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, next to the mascots of Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games, speaks to media after a government task force meeting for the new virus measures, at the prime minister’s office Friday in Tokyo.

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