一些居民不能接受剪除玫瑰的举动。“玫瑰盛开的景色每年都值得一看,”一位经常逛Yono公园的76岁男性告诉《每日资讯》说,“我觉得这是浪费,但我们没有选择。”
Stalks of tulips lie on the ground in the Sakura Furusato Square after over 100,000 tulips were cut off to avoid people visiting, following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Sakura, Chiba prefecture in Japan, April 22, 2020. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
In Sakura, a town 50km east of Tokyo, officials razed more than 100,000 tulip stems and cancelled its annual festival after crowds defied social distancing guidelines during the coronavirus emergency.
在东京以东50千米处的佐仓市,官员们剪掉了10万多株郁金香的花朵,并取消了一年一度的郁金香节。此前有许多人去观赏郁金香,不把新冠疫情危机期间的社交隔离指导意见放在眼里。
“Many visitors came at the weekend when the flowers were in full bloom,” Sakiho Kusano, a local tourism official, told Reuters. “It became a mass gathering, so we had no choice but to make the decision to cut the flowers.”
当地旅游官员草野咲穗告诉路透社说:“郁金香盛开时,周末有许多游客前来。这造成了人员大量聚集,所以我们别无选择,只能决定剪掉郁金香。”
Flower lovers will have to wait until next year to see the pink and red tulips carpeting the 7,000-square-metre Sakura Furusato Hiroba venue.
【为防止民众聚集 日本城镇忍痛剪光玫瑰和郁金香】相关文章:
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