Japan to shorten quarantine period for international arrivals to 10 days

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Japan to shorten quarantine period for international arrivals to 10 days


Japan to shorten quarantine period for international arrivals to 10 days

Japan to shorten quarantine period for international arrivals to 10 days

A passenger walks past empty counters at a departure hall at Tokyo's Haneda Airport in November. | REUTERS
Japan said Friday it will shorten the quarantine period for travelers arriving in the country to 10 days from the current 14, effective Saturday.

Citizens and Japan residents arriving from countries severely hit by the omicron variant of the coronavirus, which effectively includes all countries and territories around the world, will be eligible to enter the country under the new rules, the Foreign Ministry said. New entries of foreign nationals are effectively banned due to COVID-19 border restrictions.

“The length of period when they are required to self-quarantine in places such as their own residence or accommodations after their entry into Japan, to follow-up checks conducted by the Health Monitoring Center for Overseas Entrants and to refrain from using public transportation is changed from 14 days to 10 days,” the Foreign Ministry said.

The period had been at least three days, but it was extended to 14 days in late November as the government tightened border controls following the emergence of omicron.

The move comes after the government shortened the quarantine period for close contacts of COVID-19 patients from 14 days to 10.

The incubation period for the omicron variant is around three days, shorter than those of other variants, and 99% of symptomatic patients developed symptoms within 10 days after infection, according to the National Institute of Infectious Diseases.

With the policy changes, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s administration is striving to minimize social disruption and prevent further strain to the medical system.

Earlier Friday, health minister Shigeyuki Goto said the government informed local authorities they would be able to cut the isolation period at their own discretion for essential workers such as police officers and child and nursing care workers to six days at the shortest.

As for doctors and nurses who have had close contact with those infected with the coronavirus, the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare has already notified prefectural and local governments they will be able to continue working if they test negative each day.

But the latest decisions could fuel public concern about the recent alarming rise in the number of infections in the country, which has been experiencing a sixth wave of the pandemic.

Japan’s daily coronavirus cases topped 20,000 on Friday for the first time since Sept. 1, taking only two days to reach the current level after surpassing 10,000, according to a tally based on reports by prefectural governments.

In Tokyo, 4,051 new cases were reported, topping 4,000 for the first time since late August. Osaka Prefecture marked 2,826 cases, while Okinawa Prefecture, which has been under a quasi-state of emergency since last Sunday, reported 1,596 infections.

Osaka Gov. Hirofumi Yoshimura told reporters he is considering asking the central government to declare a quasi-state of emergency in the western prefecture if the occupancy rate of hospital beds for COVID-19 patients reaches 35% there. The rate stood at 21.5% as of Friday.

Quasi-emergency measures include enabling governors to request that dining establishments cut business hours and stop serving alcohol.