After the Golden Week holidays in Tokyo and Osaka, where emergency declarations were issued, people rushed to work from early morning in front of Shinbashi Station in Tokyo.

A 63-year-old man who works for an insurance company in Saitama said, "I'm not tired because I spent the holidays at home, but I'm not very refreshed. The trains are crowded and the number of people is not decreasing, so the first emergency I feel that it is difficult to control the spread of the infection unless people disappear from the city as in the case of the declaration. "

A 61-year-old man in Tachikawa, Tokyo, who says he works from home except for working at the construction company where he works five times a month, said, "Standing in a park or talking loudly on a train. I feel that there is no sense of crisis especially in the younger generation. I think it is necessary to stop the flow of people thoroughly rather than continuing to take measures lazily. "

A 30-year-old service woman living in Katsushika-ku, Tokyo said, "I wanted to go out on consecutive holidays, but I was scared when I saw the news about the number of infected people and refrained from doing it. I commute to work because teleworking is difficult. I'm worried about it, but I try not to go to places with a lot of traffic as much as possible. "