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Japan's PM may further restrict tourism campaign to fight virus as approval rating plummet

Suga may temporarily halt the travel campaign, aimed at boosting the economy, to the capital Tokyo and the city of Nagoya, the large industrial hub of Aichi prefecture, said the prime minister's office.

Ju-min Park (Reuters)
Tokyo
Mon, December 14, 2020

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Japan's PM may further restrict tourism campaign to fight virus as approval rating plummet Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga speaks during a news conference in Tokyo, Japan Dec.4, 2020. (Reuters/Hiro Komae)

J

apanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga will chair a coronavirus meeting on Monday and could further restrict a travel subsidy program in an effort to contain mounting infections, as his approval rating plummets over the handling of the pandemic.

Suga may temporarily halt the travel campaign, aimed at boosting the economy, to the capital Tokyo and the city of Nagoya, the large industrial hub of Aichi prefecture, said the prime minister's office.

Local media on Sunday flagged cuts to the travel campaign, while Osaka Governor Hirofumi Yoshimura on Saturday said he had asked the government to extend the suspension of the tourism program imposed on the Osaka region.

While Japan has not seen the kind of massive outbreaks that have hit the United States and parts of Europe, infections have worsened as winter has set in, particularly in regions such as the northern island of Hokkaido and the city of Osaka.

The country saw more than 3,000 new infections for the first time in one day on Saturday and Tokyo, Japan's capital and largest city, confirmed 621 new cases.

Despite concerns by experts that a travel campaign aimed at boosting the economy may in fact help spread the virus, Suga has insisted an immediate halt to the entire travel campaign is not under consideration. The government has paused the campaign only in two hardest-hit areas.

"If economy is destroyed, then it can become a serious trouble," Suga said during an online town hall on Friday.

Over the weekend polls found public support for the prime minister has eroded over his handling of the pandemic. A Mainichi newspaper poll on Saturday had his approval rating down to 40%, a 17% point fall from last month.

Only three months in office after his predecessor Shinzo Abe abruptly resigned due to ill health, Suga has also come under pressure because of other controversies, including his rejection of scholars on a science advisory panel.

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