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Tourists a rare but welcome sight in quake-hit Japan

Leaders to pledge aid to complete Chernobyl shelter
Kiev (AFP) April 19, 2011 - International leaders were expected to pledge millions of dollars at a conference in Kiev on Tuesday to complete a permanent shelter to secure the ruins of Ukraine's exploded Chernobyl power station. European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said Monday that the European Union would pledge 110 million euros ($156 million) for a hi-tech shelter over the ruined reactor, shored up since the 1986 explosion with a temporary concrete structure. Officials representing more than 50 countries were to meet at the donors' conference in central Kiev on Tuesday starting 10:00 am (0700 GMT) ahead of the 25th anniversary of the disaster on April 26.

Ukraine is hoping for 740 million euros to complete a giant shelter that will slide on rails over the damaged reactor and its concrete cover, known as the sarcophagus, which was recently shored up after it became unstable. It also needs the money to fund a project to build safe storage facilities for spent nuclear fuel from the plant, which still contains radioactive magma and fuel rods after it exploded during a planned test by engineers. The projects are administered by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development and have jointly already raised more than 1.1 billion euros in international funding. On Monday, the Ukrainian minister of emergency situations told journalists touring the power station he expected delegates to offer "historic" contributions.

"We expect to collect the most part of this amount at tomorrow's conference," Viktor Baloga said at a news conference in comments made through a translator. "We hope each participant of this historic conference tomorrow will make a historic contribution." Ukraine did not issue a list of delegates, although French Prime Minister Francois Fillon was confirmed as coming. Organisers said Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev were also expected. On Tuesday afternoon, the leaders were to attend a summit on civil nuclear energy, expected to focus on fears over safety after the Fukushima Daiichi plant in Japan was crippled by the devastating March 11 earthquake and tsunami.
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) April 19, 2011
Foreign tourists remain a rare sight more than a month after Japan suffered the most powerful earthquake in its history, as the nation grapples with power cuts and radiation leaks from a nuclear power plant.

April should be peak tourist season for Tokyo, famous for the brief but spectacular blossoming of its cherry trees, which signals the start of spring.

But in Asakusa, one of the capital's oldest districts and home to the Senso-ji temple, a major tourist draw, there are no foreign faces to be seen.

"Before the earthquake, Asakusa was quite touristy and very well-known to foreigners," rickshaw driver Yoshiaki Suzuki told AFP.

"But since the quake, and the accident at the Fukushima nuclear plant, you no longer see them."

Japan suffered its largest ever decline in foreign visitors last month in the wake of the devastating earthquake and tsunami, which left around 28,000 people dead or missing and tens of thousands more homeless.

Foreign governments urged their citizens to stay away, some even chartering planes to fly people out of Tokyo as the crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant threatened to spiral out of control.

Around 560,000 hotel reservations have been cancelled nationwide, according to government figures, which do not include the worst-hit Iwate and Chiba prefectures.

But as travel warnings issued in the chaotic days that followed the March 11 disaster are eased, many people in Japan say they hope the tourists will soon return as a show of support for the disaster-stricken country.

"Foreigners think it is dangerous here, with the earthquake and the nuclear accident. Japan is safe. Tokyo is safe," said Uko Komatsuzaki, head of public relations for Tokyo's renowned Imperial Hotel.

"In the disaster zone in Tohoku, people are working together and are doing all they can to rebuild and recover. From my point of view, it would be nice if foreigners came back to Japan to show their solidarity."

Komatsuzaki said only around 40 percent of rooms at the Imperial Hotel, which famously survived the 1923 earthquake that destroyed much of Tokyo, were filled -- half the usual occupancy at this time of year.

Japan's tour guides have been particularly badly hit by the crisis -- so much so that they have launched a YouTube campaign to try to convince foreign visitors to return.

"At the moment I am living off my savings, but if this carries on, I won't be able to be a tour guide," said Tomoyuki Nagano, a professional tour guide of 10 years who has not had any work since March 11.

"I had six trips booked in 60 days. All of them have cancelled... We have to live with the crisis. But western Japan is unaffected so people can still come to Japan."

The few tourists who have decided to brave the threat from the many aftershocks that continue to shake the capital say they have been welcomed with open arms by the Japanese people.

"They're very positive towards us. They're very happy to see us. We've actually had people speaking to us more this time than when we travelled (to Japan) a year ago," said Krystyna Andrzejewski, visiting from Britain with her father.

Before the disaster struck, Japan set itself a target of attracting 11 million foreign visitors, hoping to offset a declining domestic market caused by a sluggish economy and a greying population.

That now looks impossible after official figures showing the number of foreign visitors halved last month.

But Kimu Yazawa, also a rickshaw driver in Asakusa, remains hopeful.

"There are fewer customers, but I'm not too worried," he said. "With the cherry blossom season they will return."



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