The Herald (South Africa)

Japan expands curbs as Covid surges

Hospitals take strain in Olympic host city Tokyo

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Japan decided yesterday to expand its Covid-19 emergency curbs to cover more than 70% of the population as a record surge in cases strained hospitals in Olympics host city Tokyo and other parts of the country.

Infections are rising fast as new cases hit record highs in Tokyo, overshadow­ing the July 23-August 8 Olympics and fuelling doubts over Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga’s pandemic response.

Suga announced the new steps which are mostly voluntary, unlike strict lockdowns overseas as new daily cases in Tokyo hit a record 5,042.

Nationwide, new cases topped 15,000 for the first time, while medical advisers to the capital said the Tokyo figure could double in two weeks, NHK public TV reported.

“The situation on the ground [at hospitals] is extremely severe,” economy minister Yasutoshi Nishimura told a panel of experts before Suga’s formal announceme­nt.

He said serious cases had doubled in the past two weeks.

The panel signed off on the proposal to declare “quasiemerg­encies” in eight more of Japan’s 47 prefecture­s.

But Nishimura told a news conference some members had said the situation was severe enough to require a nationwide emergency.

Suga told reporters the government was not considerin­g that now and would focus on hotspot areas.

Six prefecture­s, including Tokyo, are already under full states of emergency to last through August 31 and five others are under less strict directives, meaning just more than half the population is covered by some restrictio­ns.

Both types of curbs have recently focused on asking restaurant­s to close early and stop serving alcohol while urging people to stay at home as much as possible.

Suga yesterday also asked people to refrain from travel during summer holidays.

The latest steps, to take effect from Sunday, mean that more than 70% of the population will be under some form of restrictio­n.

The government says the Olympics has not caused the latest surge but experts say holding the Games now has sent a mixed message to an already weary public about the need to stay at home.

Games organisers yesterday reported 31 new Games-related Covid-19 cases, bringing the total since July 1 to 353.

It remains to be seen whether the latest restrictio­ns, which are mostly voluntary, will have much impact as the highly transmissi­ble Delta variant spreads.

The latest expansion follows a backlash against Suga’s plan to limit hospital admission of Covid-19 patients to those who are seriously ill and those at risk of becoming so.

Others are told to isolate at home.

The shift is intended to address a hospital bed crunch, but critics say it will lead to an increase in deaths because the condition of patients can worsen rapidly.

In response to criticism from within and outside his ruling coalition, Suga said on Wednesday the change was aimed at regions suffering a surge in Covid-19 cases, such as Tokyo, and was not nationally uniform.

Yesterday, he appeared to backpedal further, saying moderately ill patients in need of oxygen treatment would be admitted to hospital and doctors would make final decisions.

Just under 31% of Japan’s residents are fully vaccinated.

With 15,221 deaths recorded by Wednesday, the Covid-19 mortality rate was about 1.6%, in line with the US. —

 ?? Picture: ANDRONIKI CHRISTODOU­LOU/REUTERS ?? MASK AWARENESS: A woman wearing a protective face mask stands next to a masked lion statue in Ginza shopping area amid the coronaviru­s outbreak in Tokyo, Japan, yesterday
Picture: ANDRONIKI CHRISTODOU­LOU/REUTERS MASK AWARENESS: A woman wearing a protective face mask stands next to a masked lion statue in Ginza shopping area amid the coronaviru­s outbreak in Tokyo, Japan, yesterday

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