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Not yet desperate, Japan, South Korea and Hong Kong plod towards Covid-19 vaccinations


TOKYO/SEOUL/HONG KONG (NYTIMES) - Japan s biggest cities are under a state of emergency as coronavirus deaths rise, even while the country tries to convince the world it can safely hold the Summer Olympics.
South Korea is prohibiting gatherings of five or more people to keep a recent surge in cases under control.
Hong Kong imposed stringent lockdowns on some of its poorest neighbourhoods to stop an uptick.
And yet none of these places have begun to carry out the only solution with any hope of putting the pandemic behind them: vaccinations.
While the United States and most nations in Europe as well as Asian behemoths China and India have begun inoculating their populations, Japan, South Korea and Hong Kong have stood out by proceeding much more slowly. ....

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Vaccination Uncertainty in Japan Casts Doubt Over Olympics


January 23, 2021
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Japan is publicly adamant that it will stage its postponed Olympics this summer. But to pull it off, many believe the vaccination of its 127 million citizens for the coronavirus is key.
It’s an immense undertaking in the best of circumstances and complicated now by an overly cautious decision-making process, bureaucratic roadblocks and a public that has long been deeply wary of vaccines.
Japan hopes to start COVID-19 vaccinations in late February, but uncertainty is growing that a nation ranked among the world’s lowest in vaccine confidence can pull off the massive, $14 billion project in time for the games in July, casting doubt on whether the Tokyo Olympics can happen. ....

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Japan vaccination uncertainty casts doubts over Olympic...


TOKYO (AP) Japan is publicly adamant that it will stage its postponed Olympics this summer. But to pull it off, many believe the vaccination of its 127 million citizens for the coronavirus is key.
It s an immense undertaking in the best of circumstances and complicated now by an overly cautious decision-making process, bureaucratic roadblocks and a public that has long been deeply wary of vaccines.
Japan hopes to start COVID-19 vaccinations in late February, but uncertainty is growing that a nation ranked among the world’s lowest in vaccine confidence can pull off the massive, $14 billion project in time for the games in July, casting doubt on whether the Tokyo Olympics can happen. ....

Japan General , Takashi Nakano , Tetsuo Nakayama , Yoshihide Suga , Hitoshi Iwase , Masayuki Imagawa , Kitasato Institute For Life Sciences , Kawasaki Medical School , Pfizer Inc , Takeda Pharmaceutical Co , Moderna Inc , Tokyo Olympics , Minister Yoshihide Suga , Takeda Pharmaceutical , Prime Minister Suga , Kitasato Institute , Mari Yamaguchi , ஜப்பான் ஜநரல் , தகாஷி நாகனொ , க்வாஸாகீ மருத்துவ பள்ளி , ஃபைசர் இன்க் , டாகேடா மருந்து இணை , மாடர்னா இன்க் , டோக்கியோ ஒலிம்பிக்ஸ் , டாகேடா மருந்து , ப்ரைம் அமைச்சர் சுகா ,

Japan confronts a history of vaccine mistrust


By SIMON DENYER AND AKIKO KASHIWAGI | The Washington Post | Published: December 19, 2020
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TOKYO Japanese long-distance runner Hitomi Niiya doesn t want to take a coronavirus vaccine ahead of the Summer Olympics in Tokyo.
She s worried about side effects and has faith in the precautions already underway. The 32-year-old elite athlete isn t alone.
Japan s government has preordered 290 million doses of the Pfizer, AstraZeneca and Moderna vaccines, more than enough to cover its population of 126 million, and says it aims to vaccinate everyone by the middle of next year - in time for the pandemic-delayed Olympics in July. ....

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