Japan May Ease Border Controls for China Visitors by End of Feb.
13:05 JST, February 9, 2023
The government plans to ease COVID-19-related border control measures for visitors from China as early as late February, it has been learned.
Since late December, people entering Japan directly from mainland China have been required to test for the novel coronavirus. With the easing of the rules, however, blanket testing will be abandoned, and passengers will be randomly selected to take a test. The government will also lift a restriction on arrivals — currently limited to Narita, Haneda, Kansai International and Chubu Centrair International airports — and allow more flights from China.
To date, no unknown coronavirus variants have been detected in passengers entering Japan from China, leading the government to deem that testing all arrivals was no longer a high priority. Nevertheless, passengers will still be required to submit a certificate showing a negative test result obtained within 72 hours of departure.
Presently, passengers who fly directly from Macao or transit through a third country after having been on the Chinese mainland in the seven days prior to entering Japan are also tested for coronavirus when entering Japan. However, with the relaxation of the measures, tests — including random tests — will no longer be carried out on such people.
The Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry said the test positivity rate for those entering from mainland China has remained below 1% since late January. The only new variant detected in genome analyses was the omicron variant, which already exists in Japan.
"Society" POPULAR ARTICLE
-
M6.0 Earthquake Hits Japan’s Tohoku Region; Fukushima, Iwate, Miyagi Prefectures Observe 4 on Japanese Scale With No Risk of Tsunami
-
Shinkansen Services Suspended After Man ‘Searches for Phone’ on Tracks; Disruption Affects About 14,000 Passengers
-
Whaling Mother Ship Built in Japan for 1st Time in 73 Years
-
Tsunami Advisory for Okinawa Lifted at Noon (UPDATE 2)
-
Strong Earthquake Rocks Southern Part of Kyushu; No Risk of a Tsunami
JN ACCESS RANKING
- Japan Lags in Efforts to Gain Value from Human Resources; Govt Working to Increase Usage
- M6.0 Earthquake Hits Japan’s Tohoku Region; Fukushima, Iwate, Miyagi Prefectures Observe 4 on Japanese Scale With No Risk of Tsunami
- Cherry Blossoms Draw Crowd to Tokyo’s Ueno Park; Viewing Season Kicks Off to Slow Start
- Shohei Ohtani’s Former Interpreter Ippei Mizuhara Appears in School Textbook; Publisher Considers Replacing Content
- Shinkansen Services Suspended After Man ‘Searches for Phone’ on Tracks; Disruption Affects About 14,000 Passengers