- Singapore took second place after Japan鈥檚 capital while another Japanese metropolis, Osaka, came third
- Two European cities made it into the top 10, with the Dutch capital Amsterdam in fourth place while Denmark鈥檚 Copenhagen came eighth
LONDON: Tokyo was named the world鈥檚 safest city on Thursday by the Economist Intelligence Unit, in an index ranking cities鈥� ability to handle everything from climate disasters to cyberattacks.
Singapore took second place after Japan鈥檚 capital while another Japanese metropolis, Osaka, came third 鈥� the same top three as the two previous Safe Cities Indexes of 2015 and 2017.
This year the index of 60 cities aimed to capture the concept of 鈥渦rban resilience,鈥� which is the ability of cities to absorb and bounce back from shocks, researchers said.
This concept has increasingly steered urban safety planning during the last decade, as policymakers worry about the impacts of climate change, including heat stress and flooding.
The index assessed four types of safety: digital, infrastructure, health and personal security.
Asia-Pacific dominated the top 10, as in previous years, with six cities, including Australia鈥檚 Sydney in fifth place, South Korea鈥檚 Seoul in eighth and Australia鈥檚 Melbourne in 10th.
Two European and two North American cities made it into the top 10, with the Dutch capital Amsterdam in fourth place while Denmark鈥檚 Copenhagen came eighth. Canada鈥檚 Toronto came sixth, and the US capital, Washington D.C., seventh.
The safest cities scored highly on access to high-quality health care, dedicated cyber-security teams, community-based police patrols and good disaster planning, researchers said.
鈥淭he research highlights how different types of safety are thoroughly intertwined,鈥� said Naka Kondo, the report鈥檚 Tokyo-based editor.
While European cities performed well in the area of health, they struggled with digital security, in terms of citizens鈥� ability to freely use the Internet and other digital channels without fear of privacy violations or identity theft.
Top-ranking cities for digital security scored high on citizen awareness of digital threats and dedicated cyber-security teams, leading to low levels of infection by computer viruses and malware.
鈥淟ondon is the only European city in the top 10 in this category,鈥� said Irene Mia, global editorial director of the Economist Intelligence Unit.
Nigeria鈥檚 Lagos, Venezuela鈥檚 Caracas, Myanmar鈥檚 Yangon, Pakistan鈥檚 Karachi and Bangladesh鈥檚 Dhaka were the world鈥檚 five least safe cities, according to the index.