Entry of all non-resident foreign nationals into Japan country will be suspended as part of a coordinated effort to curb coronavirus spread, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said on Wednesday.
The majority of entries were suspended in December, although travelers arriving on business and associated with some student programs from certain countries had been exempt from the tightening restrictions.
The essential shutdown of Japan’s borders to all non-resident foreigners will be kept in place until February 7, when a state of emergency declared in the Greater Tokyo and other areas in Japan will be lifted, the Japanese Prime Minister revealed.
The move, however, is a detraction from the prime minister’s previous stance.
He had remarked on a TV show recently that Japan would keep its doors open for business people from certain countries, provided that doing so did not lead to an influx of the new, highly transmissible coronavirus variant previously found in Britain and South Africa.
Within the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), however, lawmakers refused to simply roll-over to the new idea, with some of them calling for the exemption to be suspended.
They argued that it was contradictory to ask Japanese people to stay home under the state of emergency while still allowing non-resident foreign nationals into the country.