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Shame game: Japan names pachinko parlours bucking closure call

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Japanese governors are turning to an old-fashioned weapon in a bid to get the country's pachinko gambling parlours to close during the coronavirus pandemic: naming and shaming.

The country is under a month-long state of emergency and officials have asked non-essential businesses to shut their doors.

But Japanese law does not allow the government to force closures, or punish those who stay open, leaving officials turning to a bit of public shaming in the hopes of obtaining compliance.

Spearheading the effort is Osaka governor Hirofumi Yoshimura, who has fended off critics who accuse him of unfairly pressuring businesses.

"It is very possible that infections spread at these places," he told reporters Tuesday.

Pachinko is an enormously popular form of gambling in Japan  involving a variety of machines that ra...
Pachinko is an enormously popular form of gambling in Japan, involving a variety of machines that range from pinball types to some similar to slot machines
CHARLY TRIBALLEAU, AFP

"I am not doing this to make examples out of them or to apply pressure. This is being done to ask Osaka residents not to go there."

Pachinko is an enormously popular form of gambling in Japan, involving a variety of machines that range from pinball types to some similar to slot machines.

Across the nation, roughly 10,000 establishments operate rows of colourful gaming machines often in large, windowless halls that blare loud music and electronic beeps with players given just enough space to sit next to one another to play.

Infection experts have regularly cited them among locations that risk transmitting the virus, along with gyms and bars.

Many parlours have heeded the call to close, with hundreds shutting down after the state of emergency was announced.

But in Osaka, roughly 30 establishments were still open as of last Friday, when Yoshimura began publicly calling them out.

So far he has named nine establishments bucking the call, several of which have now closed their doors.

A man walks past a shuttered pachinko gaming parlour in Tokyo. While life is returning to normal in ...
A man walks past a shuttered pachinko gaming parlour in Tokyo. While life is returning to normal in Japan, the head of the Olympic organising committee said the games would be cancelled if the pandemic wasn't over by next year
CHARLY TRIBALLEAU, AFP

The governor of the neighbouring Hyogo region on Monday also published the names of six pachinko parlours still operating locally.

And in Tokyo, officials pressed on Sunday for 156 locations still open to shut down, with Governor Yuriko Koike saying Tuesday that all parlours in the city were now closed.

Some of those staying open have defended their decision, with Osaka-based operator Okada Enterprise telling Japanese media it was trying to protect the jobs of more than 600 employees.

"If we suspend our operations now, we will go bankrupt and will have to abandon our responsibility to our employees and business partners," the group said in a statement, according to the Nikkei business newspaper.

And while the name-and-shame strategy has had some success, there have been reports of it backfiring in some cases.

Some parlours that have stayed open have found themselves apparently benefitting from the publicity, attracting players whose local outlets have shut their doors.

Japanese governors are turning to an old-fashioned weapon in a bid to get the country’s pachinko gambling parlours to close during the coronavirus pandemic: naming and shaming.

The country is under a month-long state of emergency and officials have asked non-essential businesses to shut their doors.

But Japanese law does not allow the government to force closures, or punish those who stay open, leaving officials turning to a bit of public shaming in the hopes of obtaining compliance.

Spearheading the effort is Osaka governor Hirofumi Yoshimura, who has fended off critics who accuse him of unfairly pressuring businesses.

“It is very possible that infections spread at these places,” he told reporters Tuesday.

Pachinko is an enormously popular form of gambling in Japan  involving a variety of machines that ra...

Pachinko is an enormously popular form of gambling in Japan, involving a variety of machines that range from pinball types to some similar to slot machines
CHARLY TRIBALLEAU, AFP

“I am not doing this to make examples out of them or to apply pressure. This is being done to ask Osaka residents not to go there.”

Pachinko is an enormously popular form of gambling in Japan, involving a variety of machines that range from pinball types to some similar to slot machines.

Across the nation, roughly 10,000 establishments operate rows of colourful gaming machines often in large, windowless halls that blare loud music and electronic beeps with players given just enough space to sit next to one another to play.

Infection experts have regularly cited them among locations that risk transmitting the virus, along with gyms and bars.

Many parlours have heeded the call to close, with hundreds shutting down after the state of emergency was announced.

But in Osaka, roughly 30 establishments were still open as of last Friday, when Yoshimura began publicly calling them out.

So far he has named nine establishments bucking the call, several of which have now closed their doors.

A man walks past a shuttered pachinko gaming parlour in Tokyo. While life is returning to normal in ...

A man walks past a shuttered pachinko gaming parlour in Tokyo. While life is returning to normal in Japan, the head of the Olympic organising committee said the games would be cancelled if the pandemic wasn't over by next year
CHARLY TRIBALLEAU, AFP

The governor of the neighbouring Hyogo region on Monday also published the names of six pachinko parlours still operating locally.

And in Tokyo, officials pressed on Sunday for 156 locations still open to shut down, with Governor Yuriko Koike saying Tuesday that all parlours in the city were now closed.

Some of those staying open have defended their decision, with Osaka-based operator Okada Enterprise telling Japanese media it was trying to protect the jobs of more than 600 employees.

“If we suspend our operations now, we will go bankrupt and will have to abandon our responsibility to our employees and business partners,” the group said in a statement, according to the Nikkei business newspaper.

And while the name-and-shame strategy has had some success, there have been reports of it backfiring in some cases.

Some parlours that have stayed open have found themselves apparently benefitting from the publicity, attracting players whose local outlets have shut their doors.

AFP
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