At a New Year’s press conference on Monday, Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said an emergency declaration is under consideration, which would apply to Tokyo and the three neighboring prefectures of Chiba, Saitama and Kanagawa. The governors of all four regions have all urged Suga to do so now as things grow.
“If necessary, we will not hesitate to send the Self Defense Force medical staff,” Suga added, saying the government will support medical facilities to ensure they are not overwhelmed.
Suga did not say when the government would make a decision or what restrictions could be imposed. Japan’s first state of emergency, declared relatively early in the pandemic last spring, lasted more than a month and saw schools and non-essential businesses shut down.
On Sunday, Japan registered 3,150 new cases and 51 deaths, bringing the national total to 244,559, with more than 3,612 dead. The greater Tokyo region was among the hardest hit, with 816 new cases Sunday after recording a new one-day high of 1,337 last Thursday.
Japan was one of the first countries to be hit by the pandemic, but the government was able to keep things at bay by enforcing strict border controls, making efforts to track down contacts and encouraging its citizens to distance themselves socially. The efforts had been largely successful, with Japan able to avoid the kind of strict lockdowns practiced in other parts of the world.
Japanese health officials have consistently urged citizens to reduce their daily activities, stay vigilant and eat out only in small numbers, but that no longer seems to be enough to stop the spread of the pandemic.
“Japan’s response is too slow and confusing, reflecting the lack of leadership and strategy. On the one hand, they encouraged domestic travel and eating out, on the other, they asked people to be careful,” said Kenji Shibuya. , director of the Institute for Population Health at King’s College London. “The government is actually asking people voluntarily to behave properly, but it doesn’t do more than that.”
Whether and how many foreign spectators will attend the Olympic Games must be determined in the spring.
Suga has pledged to “take the initiative” on vaccination, saying on Monday that a successful Olympics would serve as “evidence that humans have overcome the coronavirus.”
Junko Ogura reported from Tokyo, Japan, James Griffiths reported from Hong Kong. CNN’s Joshua Berlinger and Selina Wang contributed to the reporting.