TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan expanded a state of emergency to cover the southern island of Okinawa on Friday, as authorities approved two more coronavirus vaccines to speed a lagging inoculation campaign.
The newly approved vaccines, from Moderna Inc and AstraZeneca PLC, will join the one co-developed by Pfizer Inc and BioNTech SE in a vaccination drive that began in mid-February.
AstraZeneca’s vaccine will not be used for the time being, the company said. Earlier media said the government would hold off on its use because of concerns over blood clots and bleeding in some.
“We’ll do our utmost in working to ensure that all elderly people who seek vaccinations can get their two shots by the end of July,” Economy Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura, who is leading the coronavirus response effort, told reporters.
Japan has vaccinated just 4.1% of its population, according to Reuters’ global tracker tmsnrt.rs/3vbj5CE, the slowest rate among the world’s larger, rich countries.
In contrast to some other Group of Seven (G7) nations that are beginning to end pandemic-busting lockdown measures, much of Japan remains under emergency curbs amid a fourth wave of infections.
On Friday, the government added Okinawa to its list of nine prefectures placed under the strictest emergency measures. They include Tokyo, where the Olympic Games are due to start in about two months.
JAPAN INC, PUBLIC FEARS OVER OLYMPICS
Fears that the Olympics would turn into a super-spreader event have persisted, ensuring opposition by the majority of the public to holding the Games this year.
A Reuters corporate survey here published on Friday showed nearly 70% of Japanese firms also want the Games either cancelled or postponed.
The state of emergency for Okinawa would run for about a month, from Sunday through June 20, Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said, beyond the May 31 end-point of the other nine.
It is the third consecutive week that Japan is expanding the state of emergency. With about 695,000 infections and 12,000 deaths, Japan is finding its medical system increasingly strained by a spike in more infectious variants.
With the Olympics starting on July 23, Tokyo is under particular pressure to cut infections and the strain on the medical system and emerge from the emergency on schedule this month.
After a 30-minute meeting with Suga on Friday, Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike said she sought vaccine supplies for the capital, which begins mass vaccinations next week.
The two agreed to work towards a “safe and secure” Olympics this summer, they later told reporters.
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