Dubai Telegraph - Japan eases mask guidelines, but few are keen to change

EUR -
AED 4.247189
AFN 72.858689
ALL 95.99011
AMD 433.071192
ANG 2.070203
AOA 1060.49635
ARS 1613.267588
AUD 1.633337
AWG 2.084563
AZN 1.965276
BAM 1.956873
BBD 2.313549
BDT 140.937288
BGN 1.976789
BHD 0.436856
BIF 3411.136078
BMD 1.156484
BND 1.473723
BOB 7.937971
BRL 6.042405
BSD 1.148719
BTN 107.018553
BWP 15.674816
BYN 3.551924
BYR 22667.090293
BZD 2.310247
CAD 1.58654
CDF 2631.001768
CHF 0.912009
CLF 0.026744
CLP 1055.981927
CNY 7.980262
CNH 7.965152
COP 4271.474388
CRC 537.436547
CUC 1.156484
CUP 30.646831
CVE 110.334092
CZK 24.49248
DJF 204.558096
DKK 7.471224
DOP 69.453492
DZD 152.636765
EGP 60.542435
ERN 17.347263
ETB 179.35041
FJD 2.553575
FKP 0.866274
GBP 0.862356
GEL 3.139824
GGP 0.866274
GHS 12.538852
GIP 0.866274
GMD 85.579791
GNF 10067.304217
GTQ 8.787503
GYD 240.32049
HKD 9.06424
HNL 30.40504
HRK 7.531259
HTG 150.674353
HUF 392.068996
IDR 19583.903419
ILS 3.589062
IMP 0.866274
INR 108.147983
IQD 1504.625114
IRR 1520921.281577
ISK 143.796761
JEP 0.866274
JMD 180.473013
JOD 0.819956
JPY 183.353052
KES 148.978194
KGS 101.132115
KHR 4604.883611
KMF 494.974982
KPW 1040.778932
KRW 1733.511948
KWD 0.354277
KYD 0.957225
KZT 552.415927
LAK 24644.432518
LBP 102870.418186
LKR 358.054216
LRD 210.210727
LSL 19.35512
LTL 3.414797
LVL 0.699546
LYD 7.356607
MAD 10.793459
MDL 20.130606
MGA 4779.993266
MKD 61.609653
MMK 2428.354354
MNT 4128.272517
MOP 9.267482
MRU 45.84671
MUR 53.730106
MVR 17.868079
MWK 1991.947372
MXN 20.544653
MYR 4.555371
MZN 73.902927
NAD 19.35512
NGN 1566.978056
NIO 42.276474
NOK 11.010655
NPR 171.230226
NZD 1.967625
OMR 0.444679
PAB 1.14863
PEN 3.95637
PGK 4.958105
PHP 69.101079
PKR 320.801588
PLN 4.272608
PYG 7464.674432
QAR 4.189123
RON 5.0943
RSD 117.451376
RUB 97.343241
RWF 1676.950118
SAR 4.342181
SBD 9.308059
SCR 15.868139
SDG 695.047579
SEK 10.743623
SGD 1.479334
SHP 0.867663
SLE 28.507302
SLL 24250.907922
SOS 655.31036
SRD 43.370502
STD 23936.887979
STN 24.515352
SVC 10.050512
SYP 128.098343
SZL 19.360123
THB 37.821642
TJS 10.997931
TMT 4.047695
TND 3.392725
TOP 2.784536
TRY 51.191062
TTD 7.785876
TWD 36.975692
TZS 2994.327224
UAH 50.515033
UGX 4341.718815
USD 1.156484
UYU 46.529137
UZS 14001.678311
VES 525.836746
VND 30414.956181
VUV 137.663642
WST 3.173584
XAF 656.368022
XAG 0.015839
XAU 0.000246
XCD 3.125456
XCG 2.070035
XDR 0.816311
XOF 656.368022
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.87924
ZAR 19.463395
ZMK 10409.74433
ZMW 22.486081
ZWL 372.38744
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    22.85

    +0.09%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    14.42

    +0.35%

  • AZN

    0.5100

    188.93

    +0.27%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5900

    16.01

    -3.69%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    52.37

    +0.59%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    33.82

    -0.12%

  • NGG

    -1.8700

    85.53

    -2.19%

  • RIO

    -2.0700

    85.65

    -2.42%

  • BTI

    0.6300

    58.72

    +1.07%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    25.73

    -0.08%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.9

    +0.04%

  • BP

    1.2500

    45.86

    +2.73%

  • BCC

    -1.9800

    69.86

    -2.83%

  • JRI

    -0.1630

    12.16

    -1.34%

Japan eases mask guidelines, but few are keen to change
Japan eases mask guidelines, but few are keen to change / Photo: Richard A. Brooks - AFP/File

Japan eases mask guidelines, but few are keen to change

Japan's government eased its mask guidelines on Monday, recommending them only on crowded trains and in hospitals or care homes, but there was little sign residents were keen to unmask.

Text size:

Japan has never had a mask mandate, but residents have adhered to guidelines to wear them indoors and outside from the early days of the pandemic, and masks were common even pre-Covid during cold and hayfever seasons.

The country is one of the last places in Asia to end nationwide masking recommendations, and on Monday morning most commuters kept their faces covered, on trains and outdoors.

"I think I'll keep wearing a mask for the moment," 46-year-old Tatsuhiko Ohashi told AFP on his way to work, outside Tokyo's busy Shinagawa station.

He still had "a bit of fear" of Covid and worried that getting infected unknowingly would "risk inconveniencing people around me".

Japan avoided lockdowns and other harsh restrictions during the pandemic but still fared better than many countries, with 73,199 deaths in a population of more than 125 million.

Some observers have credited masks and other voluntary measures, along with strict border closures, with that relative success.

But the government has been keen to gradually return to normal, reopening the borders and seeking to stimulate the economy.

There were just over 7,000 Covid cases reported nationwide on Sunday, and businesses have largely said they will leave it up to customers to decide whether to mask -- though staff will continue to wear them.

- 'Bit by bit' -

Hajime Yamaguchi, a professor of psychology at J.F. Oberlin University in Tokyo, said it was unlikely many Japanese would unmask quickly.

"The Japanese worry a lot about what other people think and fear being judged if they're the first to take off their masks," he told AFP.

"They will watch to see what other people do and unmask bit by bit," he added, noting that this year's particularly bad pollen season made it likely masks would be around until at least May.

Half of the people surveyed in February by national broadcaster NHK said they would continue to wear a mask even after the recommendations eased, while 38 percent said they expected to remove them more often.

"A lot of people have started to feel more comfortable behind a mask, realising how reassuring it is to communicate without revealing your face," said Yamaguchi.

Still, there were a handful of commuters embracing the new rules, including 49-year-old Hiromi Mitsui.

"If it's not an obligation, then there's no problem in taking off the mask, it's freedom of the individual," he said.

"Those who want to wear it can do so, and others don't have to. If we respect one another, there's no problem."

Prime Minister Fumio Kishida also arrived at work on Monday morning without a mask for the first time.

His government plans to downgrade the classification of Covid to the same level as the flu from early May.

B.Krishnan--DT