Japan to relax Covid-19 travel rules on visitors from China
- The government plans to adopt a selective approach to testing arrivals and scrap a rule limiting departures and arrivals of direct flights from China to four major airports
- The rethink comes as the rate of positive Covid tests among Chinese visitors has stayed below 1 per cent since late January
In China, the number of coronavirus cases exploded after Beijing in December last year started drastically relaxing its stringent “zero-Covid” policy that had involved lockdowns and quarantines.
The Japanese government is likely to continue requiring tourists from China to show proof of a negative Covid-19 test taken within 72 hours of departure, according to the source.
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The Kishida administration, meanwhile, plans to scrap a rule limiting departures and arrivals of direct flights connecting Japan with mainland China to four major airports – Narita, Haneda, Kansai and Chubu.
The government will also allow airlines to increase the number of direct flights to and from China, the source said.
Japan tightened quarantine measures for arrivals from mainland China in late December.
Currently, all travellers from China, including those who have visited the country within seven days, are asked to take a PCR or high-sensitivity antigen test upon arrival in Japan. People who test positive must quarantine at a designated facility for up to seven days.
The rethink comes as the rate of positive Covid tests among travellers from China has stayed below 1 per cent since late January, with only a limited range of mutations found, the health ministry said.
After Japan bolstered Covid-19 steps against Chinese nationals, the Communist-led government suspended issuing visas for Japanese citizens in early January before resuming the service later in the month.