Friday, July 10, 2020

Mount Fuji Closed This Year Due To COVID 19?


Given that it is one of the few UNESCO world Heritage Sites not in a war zone, does the closure of the 2020 Mount Fuji climbing season due to COVID 19 represent a serious blow to tourism?  

By: Ringo Bones

In our “Post 9/11 World”, a growing number of tourist spots that had been granted UNESCO World Heritage status had since been off limits to the casual budget-conscious tourist because they have become “conflict zones”. And add to that Israel Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu’s recent flirtation with Trumpism had also complicated everyone’s plan to visit the “Holy Land”. And sadder still, COVID 19 has since placed a damper on everyone’s summer vacation plans this 2020.

Almost two decades after 9/11, Japan had earned the good fortune of one of the safest places to vacation due to the absence of ongoing armed conflict perpetrated by religious extremists. Sadly, the COVID 19 pandemic has since made visiting Japanese tourist spots a very contentious issue. This includes Mt. Fuji which will be closed during the 2020 summer climbing season to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

The decision comes after nearby Yamanashi prefecture said it will close the Yoshida trail, the most popular hiking path of the four. According to Japan’s Ministry of the Environment data, the Yoshida Trail accounted for 64-percent of the 236,000 climbers in the 2019 Mount Fuji climbing season, with the Fujinomiya Trail accounting for around 23-percent. The Mountain is a UNESCO World Cultural Heritage site and is located just 100 kilometers, or 60 miles, from Tokyo and is clearly visible from the Japanese capital.