(8th LD) S. Korea hits back with countermeasures in response to Tokyo's entry restrictions
(ATTN: RECASTS paras 5, 7; ADDS more info in 8th para; TRIMS)
By Song Sang-ho
SEOUL, March 6 (Yonhap) -- South Korea said Friday it will halt a visa-free entry program for Japan and take other countermeasures in response to Tokyo's decision to impose new restrictions for South Korean visitors over coronavirus fears.
First Vice Foreign Minister Cho Sei-young announced the measures, hours after the foreign ministry voiced "extreme regrets" over Japan's immigration control plan, which it chastised as "unreasonable, unscientific and unfriendly."
"Our government once again expresses our deep regrets over Japan's measures that it unilaterally announced without prior consultations or notification," Cho told a press conference.
"It is difficult to accept the fact that Japan, which has shown opaque, passive quarantine moves, has unilaterally taken stronger entry restrictions against our citizens," he added.

First Vice Foreign Minister Cho Sei-young speaks during a press conference at the foreign ministry in Seoul on March 6, 2020. (Yonha)
Cho went on to stress that Japan's measures appear to have stemmed from a "lack of understanding" over South Korea's "advanced, outstanding" quarantine system.
Korea's countermeasures include the plan to suspend the 90-day visa-fee entry program for Japanese visitors and invalidate already issued visas from midnight Monday.
Seoul also plans to apply special entry procedures for all foreigners travelling from Japan, starting on Monday.
In addition, Seoul warned of "reciprocal" measures in response to Japan's decision to allow flights from South Korea to land only in Narita Airport near Tokyo and Osaka's Kansai Airport. It is considering choosing Korean airports in Incheon, Seoul, Gimhae or Jeju to impose its own restrictions for flights from Japan.
The government also plans to raise its travel advisory for the entirety of Japan to Level 2, which calls for citizens to refrain from travelling to Japan. This measure follows Japan's elevation of its travel alert for all of Korea.
Tokyo has announced that from Monday through the end of this month, visitors from South Korea and China will be asked to stay at designated facilities for two weeks and refrain from using public transportation. It also plans to suspend the 90-day visa-free entry program for South Koreans on Monday.
Japan has already banned the entry of people who have visited the southeastern city of Daegu and adjacent Cheongdo County, where the bulk of the country's COVID-19 infections have taken place.
To protest Japan's measures, Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha called in Japanese Ambassador Koji Tomita.
It is unusual for the minister to hold such a meeting with a foreign envoy to file a complaint, illustrating the seriousness South Korea attaches to the issue. Initially, Vice Foreign Minister Cho was to meet Tomita.

Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha (R) talks with Japanese Ambassador to South Korea Koji Tomita at the foreign ministry in Seoul on March 6, 2020. (Yonhap)
"I express deep regrets over the fact that the Japanese government has taken such unreasonable steps although our government has been strictly controlling and managing the COVID-19 through an excellent quarantine system recognized by the world," Kang said.
"We cannot help but deplore the measure that Japan has pressed ahead without prior notification as well as sufficient consultations despite our repeated calls to refrain from additional measures," she added.
The minister raised doubts over the motivations behind Japan's latest restrictions, stressing that the measures came when South Korea's containment efforts are yielding progress.
"Japan's measures this time are not only unfriendly but also unscientific, and I strongly urge Japan to promptly retract them while facing the objective facts and situations," Kang said.
The minister also stressed that Korea's "objective" data, including the high number of COVID-19 tests, underscores the country's "active and preemptive" quarantine efforts rather than any failure to contain the virus.
"Rather, our government is watching Japan's response to COVID-19 with concern," Kang was quoted by her ministry as saying.
Tomita said in response that he would relay Kang's remarks to the Japanese foreign ministry.
"As you might be well aware of the situation in Japan regarding the new coronavirus, the next one or two weeks is a critical juncture that could determine whether the virus outbreaks can end," he said.
In the morning, the foreign ministry issued a strongly-worded statement, voicing "extreme regret" and raising doubts over Japan's intentions behind the restrictive measures.
"Given that this measure came when signs of progress in our containment efforts appear to have emerged, we cannot help but doubt whether Japan has other intentions than its considerations of the quarantine aspect," the ministry said.
Japan's latest restrictions angered South Korea in particular because Seoul has refrained from such extraordinary steps against Japanese nationals even at the onset of the outbreak on a virus-hit cruise ship off its coast.
Critics raised speculation that Tokyo might have decided to tighten restrictions on the entry of Koreans to help circumvent domestic criticism of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's handling of the virus outbreaks.
South Korea has so far reported 6,593 confirmed cases of the novel virus and 42 deaths. As of 3 p.m. Friday, 102 countries and territories planned to enforce or were imposing entry restrictions or stricter quarantine programs for people from South Korea.
sshluck@yna.co.kr
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