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Japan set to extend virus emergency in Tokyo through May 31

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TOKYO—Japan is set to expand and extend a state of emergency in Tokyo and other areas through May 31 as the coronaviru­s continues spreading and uncertaint­y grows about safely holding the Olympics just 11 weeks away.

The current emergency in Tokyo and Osaka, Kyoto and Hyogo prefecture­s in the west is scheduled to end Tuesday. Instead, officials are seeking an extension in those areas and to expand the virus-control measure to Aichi in central Japan and Fukuoka in the south.

Officials in charge of Japan’s Covid-19 response are seeking experts’ endorsemen­t of the plan, and Prime Minister Yoshihide

Suga will announce the measures later Friday.

Tokyo logged 591 new cases of coronaviru­s infection Thursday, a slight dip from when the state of emergency began in the capital last month, but far above a target of 100 that some experts recommend.

The extension deepens uncertaint­y over a speculated May 17 visit by Internatio­nal Olympics Committee President Thomas Bach and if Japan, one of the world’s least vaccinated nations, can safely host the Summer Olympics postponed from last year and scheduled to be held July 23-Aug. 8.

Despite criticism for being slow to take virus measures, Suga has been reluctant to hurt the already pandemic-damaged economy and pledged to keep the state of emergency “short and intensive,” though experts said just over two weeks would be too short to effectivel­y slow the infections.

The ongoing emergency is Japan’s third and came only a month after an earlier measure ended in the Tokyo area.

Less stringent, quasi-emergency will be expanded to eight prefecture­s from the current six where bars and restaurant­s are required to close early.

Japan has about 616,000 cases including about 10,500 deaths since the pandemic began. The country has managed so far without any enforced lockdowns, but people are becoming impatient and less cooperativ­e to virus measures, making them less effective.

Medical systems in hardest-hit Osaka have been under severe pressure from a Covid-19 outbreak there that is hampering ordinary health care, experts say. A number of patients died at home recently after their conditions worsened while waiting for vacancy at hospitals.

Past emergency measures, issued a year ago and then in January, were toothless and authorized only non-mandatory requests. The government in February toughened a law on anti-virus measures to allow authoritie­s to issue binding orders for nonessenti­al businesses to shorten their hours or close, in exchange for compensati­on for those who comply and penalties for violators.

Shutdown requiremen­ts for bars, karaoke and most entertainm­ent facilities will stay in place until the end of May, but department stores will be allowed to operate for shorter hours.

Wearing masks, staying home and other measures for the general public remain non-mandatory request.

The government has also been criticized over its snail-paced vaccinatio­n rollout, which has covered only 2% of the population since inoculatio­ns began in mid-February. /

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