Asia-Pacific News

Japan to extend Covid-19 'state of emergency' lockdown through mid-September

Key Points
  • The Japanese government is set to extend its "state of emergency" soft lockdown in regions including Tokyo to the middle of September as well as adding several other regions.
  • A meeting of the four parties concerned with running the Tokyo Paralympics, due to start from Aug 24, is set to meet later on Monday to decide the issue of spectators.
  • Though the government has instituted repeated states of emergency, their effectiveness has been limited due to laws mandating that the government can only request cooperation.
Staff members of Tokyo Vaccination Center at Aoyama University look over the vaccination recovery area. (Photo by Stanislav Kogiku/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
Stanislav Kogiku | SOPA Images | LightRocket | Getty Images

The Japanese government is set to extend its "state of emergency" soft lockdown in regions including Tokyo to the middle of September as well as adding several other regions, the Sankei Shimbun daily reported on Monday.

The current state of emergency is due to expire on Aug. 31, but a continuing surge in coronavirus cases has spurred calls to extend it.

A meeting of the four parties concerned with running the Tokyo Paralympics, due to start from Aug 24, is set to meet later on Monday to decide how to handle the issue of spectators, NHK public television reported.

Organizers agreed last week to limit spectators at the Paralympic events, media reports said, due to the continuing state of emergency in Tokyo. The Olympics were held mostly without spectators.

Though the Japanese government has instituted repeated states of emergency, their effectiveness has been limited due to laws mandating that the government can only request cooperation.

Pandemic fatigue and summer vacations have also been blamed for contributing to the latest Covid-19 surge in a nation where only around 36 percent of people have been fully vaccinated.

Tokyo on Sunday recorded 4,295 new daily coronavirus cases.