In Japan, online toffees or manga tiles are not the only places where people have access to the internet and read comics. Due to low prices, they have become homes for some.
Due to the novel coronavirus epidemic, this establishment is temporarily closed in major Japanese cities. In accordance with AP, about 4,000 people live in Tokyo internet and manga cafes. Their closure takes residents out of the street.
Back in 2004, I first wrote about it manga kissa (kiss toffees) of Wire Magazine. These were not originally intended as residential areas, but were designed for crash zones where trains stopped running or a place to rest and read lies. But ever since they offer showers, a crash site, free soft drinks, the internet and endless lies, they have become the home of low-income people in major cities all over Japan. As AP he explains, they cost about 2,000 yen ($ 18.60) per night.
That works out to about 60,000 yen ($ 558 dollars), which would be more than just the expensive tax in Tokyo. But figuring out how to include extras like the internet and free soft drinks, staying at an online cafe or manga kissa would be a lot better than a standard apartment. Also, renters often need to pay a big down payment and need someone to stand up to them before they can even enter.
For example, i net cafe you live in more photo make 100,000 yen ($ 931) per month She had been living in a cafe cet for two months.
Here's another cafe citizen who was asked where his home was. He replied, "I'm homeless." She has been living in a cafe net for about six to seven years.
She does not have a job, she said. (He previously worked at the Mahjong parlor.)
But with the epidemic, these sectors are particularly vulnerable, with people living in close proximity and separated by appropriate distances. In the picture below, you can see how close the rooms are to the dining room table.
"I used to go to coffee jobs … now sometimes I get a job, sometimes not, because of a coronavirus," said the 58-year-old man. AP. "There is nowhere I can go, I know who I know."
To help assist the runaway cafe refugees, as well as the homeless, there are still free shelters, but so far, there are not enough places to accommodate about 2,000 homeless and some 4,000 cafe refugees in Tokyo alone.
If they end up living on the streets of Tokyo, some may move into smaller cities. Tsuyoshi Inaba, a lawyer for the homeless, tells them AP, "Some people can move to cities in the provinces even though they may be infected."