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HE leaders question Japan鈥檚 ban on returning foreigners

Continuation of policy stokes fears that entry rules could damage internationalisation efforts

Published on
July 24, 2020
Last updated
July 24, 2020
Source: iStock

Japan鈥檚 prime minister, Shinzo Abe, has responded to criticism of the nation鈥檚 entry ban on foreign residents, which some in higher education fear will hit internationalisation efforts, by announcing that restrictions will be loosened at a later date.

University leaders have said that the ban goes against the country鈥檚 stated goal of opening doors to global scholars. The nation is home to more than 300,000 international students and 8,000 foreign faculty.

Since April, only Japanese citizens have been able to re-enter the country freely, with some exceptions made on humanitarian grounds. Foreign residents currently abroad are blocked from returning, while those in Japan face a tough decision if they need to return to their birth country for personal reasons. Some critics have called the practice discriminatory because all entrants to Japan must equally undergo Covid-19 testing and 14 days of self-quarantine.

The Japanese Association of National Universities has sent a to the Education Ministry asking it to ease restrictions.

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The foreign minister, Toshimitsu Motegi, was grilled on the issue during a , when a Radio France journalist said that barring residents who 鈥減ay tax, health insurance and rent鈥 was 鈥渁bnormal鈥. Mr Motegi replied that Japan would 鈥渃onsider鈥 easing regulations 鈥渋n phases鈥, with priority given first to businesspeople, then students, then general tourists.

Japan, which has recorded fewer than 1,000 Covid-19 deaths, has just announced travel advisories and planned entry bans on 17 more territories.

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Carolin Funck, a vice-president at Hiroshima University, said at a that her university had 鈥渕any new professors鈥, two current professors and more than 100 current and new students unable to access campus because of the ban, as well as 91聽international students who have opted for postponement. She predicted that, if unresolved, the situation would get worse in the autumn, when the country normally sees more international students arrive.

鈥淲e are very much affected by this problem,鈥 Professor Funck said. Students stuck overseas might not be able to finish the research or classwork needed to graduate, while still paying rent on Japanese apartments they cannot access. 鈥淪ome may give up studying in Japan,鈥 she said.

Hiroshima University has pushed internationalisation in recent years, doubling its number of foreign professors between 2013 and 2020. 鈥淯niversities are really at the vanguard of creating an internationally open society,鈥 Professor Funck said.

Futao Huang, a professor at Hiroshima University鈥檚 Research Institute for Higher Education, who is originally from China, told 探花视频 that the rules would have relatively less impact on foreign professors already in Japan because the government had communicated Covid-19 strategies to institutions as early as February.

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However, he said, the rules 鈥渆specially affected newly recruited foreign professors or students who have not come to Japan鈥.

Rochelle Kopp, an American management consultant who teaches at The University of Kitakyushu and has written more than 30 books in Japanese, told THE that she had 鈥渘o idea鈥 when she would be able to go home to the US, for fear that she would be unable to re-enter Japan if she did.

鈥淭he ban definitely has implications for higher education,鈥 she said. 鈥淚聽do think that it is going to cause some people to think twice. It鈥檚 also possible that some academics currently here will decide to leave as a result of the situation.

鈥淚t undermines Japan鈥檚 stated goals of internationalising higher education, research and the workforce,鈥 she added. 鈥淎nd, sadly, I聽don鈥檛 think that the government realises how damaging this聽is.鈥

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Ms Kopp added that 鈥渕any of these students are in terrible situations, and one can be assured that they will tell others that Japan is not someplace they should consider studying. It鈥檚 a big blow to Japan鈥檚 reputation.鈥

While Japan is alone in the G7 on this issue, it is not the only Asian nation to make such a move. In March, mainland China banned all foreign residents from returning, a step that has affected professors and students who left over the Lunar New Year holiday.

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However, there are signs that the region鈥檚 iron-clad border controls are cracking open. Taiwan has loosened rules on foreign students; overseas students and work-visa holders can now enter Singapore after applying for permission; and Hong Kong has been open to legal residents all along, albeit with testing and quarantine regulations.

joyce.lau@timeshighereducation.com

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