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Japan’s had enough extreme tourism on famous volcano: ‘Mount Fuji is screaming’

  • Authorities say the number of hikers trekking up the once-peaceful site – night and day – is dangerous and an ecological embarrassment
  • Crowd control measures were considered to ensure the mountain doesn’t lose its Unesco designation, given for its religious importance and inspiration to artists

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Mount Fuji seen from Enoshima island, in Fujisawa, south of Tokyo, Japan. Photo: Reuters
Agence France-Presse

With its millions of visitors every year and the buses, supply trucks, noodle shops and fridge magnets, Japan’s Mount Fuji is no longer the peaceful pilgrimage site it once was.

Now authorities have had enough, saying the number of hikers trekking up the world-famous volcano – night and day – is dangerous and an ecological embarrassment.

“Mount Fuji is screaming,” the governor of the local region said last week.

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Hailing its religious importance and its inspiration to artists, in 2013 Unesco added the “internationally recognised icon of Japan” to its World Heritage List.

But as has happened in places such as Bruges in Belgium or Rio de Janeiro’s Sugarloaf Mountain, the designation has been both a blessing and a curse.

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Visitor numbers more than doubled between 2012 and 2019 to 5.1 million, and that’s just for Yamanashi prefecture, the main starting point.

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