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Thursday, April 18, 2024

Japan’s Mount Fuji ‘screaming’ from too many tourists

Hailing its religious importance and its inspiration to artists, in 2013 UNESCO added the "internationally recognized icon of Japan" to its World Heritage List.

With its millions of visitors every year and the buses, supply trucks, noodle shops and fridge magnets, Japan’s Mount Fuji is no longer the peaceful pilgrimage site it once was.

Now authorities have had enough, saying the number of hikers trekking up the world-famous volcano — night and day — is dangerous and an ecological embarrassment.

“Mount Fuji is screaming,” the governor of the local region said last week.

Hailing its religious importance and its inspiration to artists, in 2013 UNESCO added the “internationally recognized icon of Japan” to its World Heritage List.

But as has happened in places such as Bruges in Belgium or Rio de Janeiro’s Sugarloaf Mountain, the designation has been both a blessing and a curse.

Visitor numbers more than doubled between 2012 and 2019 to 5.1 million, and that’s just for Yamanashi prefecture, the main starting point.

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– Day and night –

It’s not just during the day that a stream of people trudges through the black volcanic grit on their way up the 3,776-metre (12,388-foot) mountain.

At night, long lines of people — on their way up to see the sun rise in the morning — trek upwards with torches on their heads.

The main starting-off point is a car park that can only be reached by taxi or buses that take a couple of hours from Tokyo, around 100 kilometres (60 miles) away.

Greeting visitors is a complex of restaurants and shops selling souvenirs as well as snacks and drinks for walkers before they set off.

They are powered by diesel generators and the thousands of litres of water they use has to be brought up in lorries. Trucks also take all the rubbish down.

“I saw a lot of food waste and empty bottles of drinks lying around the hand-washing area of the toilet,” complained Japanese hiker Yuzuki Uemura, 28.

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– Dangers –

Masatake Izumi, a local official, said the high numbers of people increased the risk of accidents.

Some people who climb at night “get hypothermia and have to be taken back to first aid stations”, he told AFP.

At least one person has died so far this season.

For an optional access fee of 1,000 yen ($6.80), visitors get a booklet in Japanese — there is a QR code for the English version — with some dos and don’ts.

But some don’t realise how tough the five-to-six-hour climb is to the top, where oxygen levels are lower and where the weather can change quickly.

“It’s almost winter up there, it’s really cold,” Rasyidah Hanan, a 30-year-old hiker from Malaysia, told AFP on her way down.

“People should be filtered a little bit because some people were not ready to climb Mount Fuji. They were like in really light clothes… Some of them really looked sick.”