The widening fallout of the virus outbreak, which began in China in
December and has already killed over 1,700 people, is damaging
output and tourism in Japan, which is preparing to host the Olympic
Games from late July.
A further spread of the virus in Japan, which last week reported its
first fatality from the disease, could undermine growth and
potentially push the country into recession, analysts say.
Citing "circumstances", the Imperial Household Agency said it would
cancel Emperor Naruhito's public birthday address on Feb. 23, his
first since his coronation last year. The event regularly attracts
tens of thousands of people to the inner grounds of the Imperial
Palace in the heart of Tokyo.
The last time the emperor's birthday celebration was canceled was
1996, amid a hostage crisis at the Japanese embassy in Peru.
Organizers of the Tokyo Marathon, one of the world's biggest such
races, said the 38,000 general participants who signed up for the
March 1 race will not be allowed to compete.
"We cannot continue to launch the event within the scale we
originally anticipated," the organizers said in a statement.
Instead, the event will be limited to top-level competitors. A total
of 176 elite runners and 30 elite wheelchair athletes are registered
for the race.
Shares of some of the marathon's sponsors fell. Seiko Holdings
<8050.T>, the maker of watches and clocks, slid 3.5%, as did shoe
and sportswear maker ASICS Corp <7936.T>. The broader Tokyo market
<.TOPX> was little changed.
The marathon is not the only international sporting event in Japan
the virus has affected: The FIBA Asia Cup 2021 postponed a
qualifying basketball game between Japan and China, originally
scheduled to be held near Tokyo this week.
INFECTIONS SPREAD
An additional 99 people on a cruise ship docked in the Japanese port
of Yokohama were confirmed on Monday to be infected with the virus,
a day after 70 were confirmed to have the virus, bringing the total
number of infections aboard the Diamond Princess to 454.
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The United States evacuated hundreds of citizens from the ship early
on Monday, with other countries preparing to do the same for their
citizens on the luxury cruise, which was struck by the virus earlier
this month.
A Japanese health ministry staff member helping to test passengers
has also contracted the virus, the ministry said.
Infections have also been spreading on land, where 59 cases have
been confirmed including one woman who died last week.
A hospital outside Tokyo said it would stop admitting new patients
after one of its staff tested positive for the virus.
The hospital in Sagamihara, 50km (31 miles) west of Tokyo, said a
nurse was infected after treating an inpatient who died of the
disease this month.
On Monday morning, a fifth government-chartered flight carrying 65
Japanese arrived in Tokyo from Wuhan, China, the epicenter of the
outbreak, bringing the total number repatriated to Japan from the
city to 763, NHK said.
Companies are stepping up measures to prevent the spread of the
virus as a growing number of cases have been reported in people who
have neither visited China nor have had direct contact with people
arriving from there.
Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp <9432.T>, one of Japan's biggest
companies, said it was urging its roughly 200,000 group-wide
employees to work from home or stagger their commutes.
On Friday, NTT Data Corp <9613.T> said a contract employee who
worked at one of its buildings was confirmed as infected. The
company has ordered 14 workers who were in close contact with that
person to work at home, it said.
(Reporting by Naomi Tajitsu and Ritsuko Ando, additional reporting
by Noriyuki Hirata, Chang-Ran Kim and David Dolan; Editing by
Lincoln Feast/Gerry Doyle/Susan Fenton)
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