Daily Dispatch

Japan to allow ‘ large-scale ’ overseas visitors for Tokyo Games

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Japan aims to allow “largescale ” numbers of overseas visitors to attend 2020’ s Tokyo

Olympics without mandatory vaccinatio­ns or quarantine, provided they submit negative Covid-19 test results and download tracking apps, the Nikkei business daily reported on Wednesday.

The report, which did not identify the source of the informatio­n or detail how many visitors would be allowed, also said Japan would not restrict tourists from using public transporta­tion systems.

Under current restrictio­ns imposed to curb the spread of the novel coronaviru­s, travellers are required to self-isolate for 14 days on arrival as well as sign up for contact-tracing apps.

Tokyo organisers were not immediatel­y available for comment when contacted.

Organisers of the Games, which were pushed back by a year in March because of the pandemic, had sold nearly one million tickets overseas, the paper said, compared with fourand-a-half million in Japan.

In November, senior Internatio­nal Olympic Committee official John Coates said the number of athletes participat­ing in the Games would not be reduced and it was down to organisers to make them feel safe.

More than 11,000 athletes are expected in Tokyo for the Olympics and thousands more will come for the subsequent Paralympic­s.

The plan to allow large numbers of visitors from overseas would underscore Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga s pledge to revitalise Japan s battered economy by boosting tourism a — pillar of the nation s economic measures also supported by his predecesso­r.

Suga has been promoting domestic travel campaigns despite a surge in novel coronaviru­s infections that is quickly filling hospital beds.

The surge has dented Suga’ s approval rating, with many saying his reluctance to put the brakes on domestic travel has contribute­d to the rising number of infections.

Japan has avoided the high numbers of infections and deaths from the virus seen in Europe and the US but with the cold season approachin­g, the country has posted record numbers of daily cases in recent weeks.

The Nikkei report provoked a strong reaction online, with some saying the government was putting people’ s lives at risk.

“I wonder why the government wants to hold the Games in this situation.

“They must be crazy,” one social media user with the handle @nuna-13 tweeted.

“Are they going to kill Japanese citizens?”

 ?? Picture: REUTERS/KIM KYUNG-HOON ?? BACK ON: Bystanders watch as giant Olympic rings are reinstalle­d at the waterfront area at Odaiba Marine Park, after they were temporaril­y taken down in August for maintenanc­e amid the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Tokyo, Japan on Tuesday.
Picture: REUTERS/KIM KYUNG-HOON BACK ON: Bystanders watch as giant Olympic rings are reinstalle­d at the waterfront area at Odaiba Marine Park, after they were temporaril­y taken down in August for maintenanc­e amid the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Tokyo, Japan on Tuesday.

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