The Bakersfield Californian

Japan welcomes back tourists after 2-year pandemic shutdown

- BY HANNAH SAMPSON AND JULIA MIO INUMA

After closing to foreign tourists for more than two years, Japan will allow a wide range of leisure travelers back in this month — with conditions.

Prime Minister Fumio Kishida announced last month that starting June 10, the nation will welcome visitors on guided package tours, which include transporta­tion and accommodat­ions. Tourists from 98 countries with low coronaviru­s infection rates will be permitted; the United States is in that group. June’s larger reopening follows a small trial that allowed about 50 people on organized tours to visit 12 prefecture­s.

“Step by step we will aim to accept (tourists) as we did in normal times, taking into considerat­ion the status of infections,” he said.

Visitors from the low-risk countries will not have to show proof of vaccinatio­n and will not need to isolate or test on arrival regardless of their vaccinatio­n status. According to a checklist published by Japan’s National Tourism Organizati­on, travelers must show proof of a negative test within 72 hours of departure for the country.

The number of people allowed to enter the country daily will increase to 20,000 from the current cap of 10,000. The current number includes business travelers, foreign workers and students but not tourists.

Japan has tightly controlled its borders throughout the pandemic and continued to ban tourists even after many other Asian destinatio­ns started welcoming visitors back. With leisure travelers prohibited, just 250,000 visited the country last year, compared with more than 30 million annually before the pandemic.

The country’s tourism agency estimated that a little more than 100,000 people visited the country between January and March, compared with more than 8 million people during the same period in 2019.

Seino Satoshi, president of Japan National Tourism Organizati­on, said in a statement that the group is working with local government­s, destinatio­n marketing organizati­ons, travel agencies at home and abroad, airlines and others to prepare for inbound travel to start again.

“I wholeheart­edly welcome the accelerati­ng pace at which the internatio­nal community is preparing for the recovery of travel for tourism purposes,” he said. “The government has announced a policy on Japan initiating action to join that effort. I take this as a first step toward the recovery of inbound tourism to Japan.”

 ?? EUGENE HOSHIKO / AP, FILE ?? Tourists in traditiona­l Japanese kimonos walk in Asakusa district in Tokyo in July 2020. Japan has reopened its borders to foreign tourists, but only to package tour participan­ts for now, officials said.
EUGENE HOSHIKO / AP, FILE Tourists in traditiona­l Japanese kimonos walk in Asakusa district in Tokyo in July 2020. Japan has reopened its borders to foreign tourists, but only to package tour participan­ts for now, officials said.

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