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Saturday, March 9, 2024

Kyoto Implementing More Tourist Rules

Above, a Gion street near Kiyomizu-dera in Kyoto still allowing tourists. Photo by Armand Vaquer.

Kyoto has been putting up with overcrowding and misbehaving tourists for some time. Now they are starting to crack down.

The city is implementing more rules for tourists. They include bans on tourists entering the Gion geisha private alleys not far from Kiyomizu-dera.

Travel + Leisure reported:

The Japanese city of Kyoto is banning tourists from some private alleys in its geisha district.

The city will place signs in both English and Japanese around the area, called Gion, warning tourists to stay clear as well as fine anyone who doesn’t listen, The Associated Press reported. The fine will amount to 10,000 yen ($67.97). 

The public streets in Gion will remain open.

“We are going to put up signs in April that tell tourists to stay out of our private streets,” local district official Isokazu Ota told the wire service.

The decision to ban visitors from these blocks comes as the city has dealt with overcrowding and misbehaving tourists, the AP noted.

This isn’t the first time Kyoto has tried to protect geisha, the women who dress up in traditional kimonos and makeup and perform for customers while they dine. In 2015, the city handed out pamphlets warning against “nuisance activities,” which included taking photos of geisha, CNN reported. And in 2019, Gion again put up signs prohibiting photography and warning of potential fines.

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1 comment:

J.D. Lees said...

They are missing a very important language on the signs they're putting up: Chinese/Mandarin. We have noticed a real downturn in behavior of people in Japan and realized it is the presence of Chinese tourists. They are rude, pushy, and demanding, probably because this is early days in terms of the ability of many Chinese citizens to travel and they don't know how to behave in "polite company." Because many gaijin don't easily distinguish between a Japanese person and Chinese from appearance alone, these rude Chinese tourists are giving visitors a bad impression of the native Japanese. If any group needs to be told to "back off" it's the Chinese.

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