Windsor Star

Japan declares emergency in Tokyo three months ahead of Olympics

- Reuters

Japan declared “short and powerful” states of emergency for Tokyo, Osaka and two other prefecture­s on Friday as the country struggles to contain a resurgent coronaviru­s pandemic three months before the Olympics.

The government will require restaurant­s, bars and karaoke parlours serving alcohol to close, and big sporting events to be held without spectators from April 25 to May 11, Economy Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura said.

Breaching the restrictio­ns will in some cases carry penalties, he said.

“We absolutely have to limit the movement of people and we have to do it decisively. We need powerful, short and focused measures,” he said, asking people to remember the lockdowns of last spring and stay at home.

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said Japan would take measures to ensure it could safely hold the Olympics this summer.

“It is feared that contagion in major cities will spread across the whole country if we take no measures,” Suga said.

Under the measures, department stores, cinemas and other commercial facilities larger than 1,000 square metres will have to close and companies will be asked to make allowances for people to work from home. Schools will remain open.

The state of emergency — a third round for Japan that also includes Kyoto and Hyogo — will cover nearly a quarter of the population and last through the looming “Golden Week” holidays, dealing another blow to the tourism and services industries.

Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike said the government would ask for illuminati­ons and neon signs to be turned off.

“It will be dark at night,” she told a news conference, and asked non-residents to refrain from entering Tokyo if possible.

Japan has avoided an explosive spread of the pandemic experience­d by many countries. There have been about 550,000 cases and 9,761 deaths, significan­tly fewer than in other large economies.

But the latest rise in infections has stoked alarm, with a surge in a mutant variant and a critical shortage of medical staff and hospital beds in some areas. Japan's vaccinatio­n drive remains sluggish.

 ??  ?? Yoshihide Suga
Yoshihide Suga

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