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Sunday, April 5, 2020

Coronavirus Leaves Japan's Tourism Industry Gutted

Above, normally, places like Kiyomizu-dera in Kyoto would be crowded with tourists. Photo by Armand Vaquer.

Now would be a good time to visit Japan. The temperatures are comfortable and the cherry blossoms are beginning to bloom.

Except, Japan has been hit hard by the coronavirus, thereby gutting the Japanese tourism industry.

According to Japan Today:
NARA - Cherry blossoms are in season and the ancient Japanese capital of Nara, with its majestic Todaiji Big Buddha temple and its herds of deer, would normally be packed. 
This year, it's almost deserted, as are most other tourist attractions in Japan as foreign visitors stay away and locals heed warnings to stay home to try to contain the spread of the coronavirus. 
The tourism industry, heavily reliant on foreign travelers, has taken a beating since Beijing banned group tours in late January. But there's a silver lining for some Japanese living in popular locations like Kyoto who were getting fed up with the crowds and disruptions from legions of visitors. 
Tadayuki Takiguchi's souvenir shop was the only one open on a recent weekday on a street near Nara's famous deer park, where tourists usually stop to take photos and feed the animals.
“Sometimes I don't see anyone on the street,” Takiguchi said. “I've never seen anything like this.”
Nara was among the first Japanese towns to be hit by the virus outbreak when a local bus driver tested positive for the virus in late January after carrying tourists from Wuhan, the epicenter of the pandemic. Around the same time, China's government banned group tours and sales of overseas travel packages.
Chinese tourists quickly disappeared, followed by visitors from the U.S. and Europe, Takiguchi said. These days, most shops don't bother to open, some perhaps wary of customers who might spread the virus.
To read more, go here

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