The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Japan eases virus border rules for visa holders, tourists still banned

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TOKYO: Japan will ease its strict virus border rules to allow students and business people into the country from March, but tourists will still be barred, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said Thursday.

The move comes with growing pressure on Japan from the business community and academics to loosen the border restrictio­ns, which are the toughest in the G7 but have broad support from Japanese voters.

Japan has barred tourists since the early days of the pandemic, and has in some cases prevented even existing foreign residents from entering the country.

Last November, the government slightly loosened the rules to allow some students and business people to enter, but then quickly reversed the plan weeks later as the Omicron strain emerged.

After an Omicron-driven spike in infections, cases in Japan now appear to have peaked, experts say.

From March 1, Kishida said ‘we will allow new visitors, except those coming for tourism’, adding that a cap on daily entrants will be raised from the current 3,500 to 5,000.

More than 400,000 people whose visas have already been approved by authoritie­s were waiting to enter Japan as of Jan 4, an immigratio­n agency official told AFP.

More than 150,000 of those are students, with another 129,000 workers hired to take part in a technical training programme that is a key source of foreign labour for several industries in the country.

While Japan has not pursued a zero-Covid policy and has avoided strict lockdowns, it has made tough border measures a centrepiec­e of its pandemic response.

Even citizens and returning residents able to enter have been subject to quarantine­s of up to two weeks, with testing before and after entering the country.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? A passenger walks with her suitcase at the arrivals hall at Tokyo’s Haneda Internatio­nal Airport after Japan’s government announced plans to ease virus border rules for workers and students.
— AFP photo A passenger walks with her suitcase at the arrivals hall at Tokyo’s Haneda Internatio­nal Airport after Japan’s government announced plans to ease virus border rules for workers and students.

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