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Coronavirus: Infection spreads in Japan

Mar 04 (NHK) - Seven new cases of the coronavirus have been reported in Japan on Tuesday, bringing the total to 987. That includes more than 700 from a quarantined cruise ship docked near Tokyo.

Cases are surging in Hokkaido. The governor of the northern prefecture declared a state of emergency last week.

To address the nationwide shortage of face masks,the central government plans to instruct manufacturers to sell their products to the state at set prices.

The measure is the first of its kind in Japan. It's based on a law enacted in 1973, following a period of panic buying due to an oil crisis.

Hokkaido is the top priority. 3.2 million masks will be given to 80,000 households in areas where infections are spreading rapidly.

In Chiba Prefecture, near Tokyo, this elderly care home is likely to run out of masks in about a month.

A survey shows nearly 20 percent of care facility operators already have none left.

Production lines are running at full speed. One of the makers, Iris Ohyama says it is shipping out 5 times as many as usual.

The government has decided to provide subsidies to three mask makers. The move is aimed at boosting domestic production to provide 600 million units per month by the end of March.

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Ishiba Shigeru has been elected leader of Japan's main ruling Liberal Democratic Party. The former LDP Secretary-General is now virtually assured of becoming the next prime minister. (NHK)

The Hakamada case, a decades-long legal struggle, ended with an acquittal for Iwao Hakamada (88), who, along with his sister Hideko, fought for 58 years. Hakamada was suspected of the 1966 murder of a miso company executive’s family.

A Japanese government information-gathering satellite has successfully been put into a planned orbit around Earth. (NHK)

Japan's National Police Agency is introducing new patrol cars equipped with red lights designed to assist people with hearing impairments, flashing differently depending on whether the vehicle is on an emergency run or a routine patrol.

Yamagata University, which has been conducting research on the Nazca geoglyphs in Peru, announced the discovery of over 300 new geoglyphs, depicting a variety of subjects, including humans and animals.

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Four Japanese men have been caught at an Australian airport on suspicion of trying to smuggle a large amount of cigarettes into the country. (NHK)

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A group of Humboldt penguins at Tokuyama Zoo in Yamaguchi Prefecture has captured people's hearts, as they chase a butterfly that had accidentally flown into their pool enclosure.