CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: PROF. KHALID MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Default / Miscellaneous

Japan closes park as dengue mosquitoes seen

Published: 04 Sep 2014 - 10:10 pm | Last Updated: 26 Jan 2022 - 06:38 pm


TOKYO: Tokyo yesterday closed most of Yoyogi Park, a popular green spot in the Japanese metropolis, after dengue-carrying mosquitoes were found there, an official said.
The outbreak is the first in 70 years in Japan and has so far infected 55 people, including a young model who has posed for Japanese Playboy and had been sent to the park for a photo shoot.
The disease, also called “tropical ‘flu”, is spread by the tiger mosquito, a species endemic to Japan.
No one has so far died in Japan from the disease, which claims scores of lives every year in other, more infected parts of the world. But Japanese health officials, along with the public at large, tend to be cautious.
Last week teams sprayed pesticide in the park to try to kill off the insect colony.
They then set traps to catch the creatures and test them. Four of the 10 sites targeted found mosquitoes that were carrying the disease, indicating a large area was affected.
Dengue fever was stamped out in Japan at the end of World War II, even though its mosquito host remains endemic.                

AFP