Tokyo vaccination centre to offer shots to younger people as Olympics
loom
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[June 10, 2021]
TOKYO (Reuters) - The main
coronavirus vaccination centre in the Japanese capital of Tokyo will
begin booking shots for people under 65 from Saturday, media
reported on Thursday, as it ramps up inoculation efforts before the
2020 Olympics open next month.
Japan began vaccinating front-line health workers and elderly people
in February, but the slow pace compared with other major
industrialised nations has spurred calls for the Tokyo Games to be
delayed again or cancelled.
Opening up vaccinations to most citizens may help the government
ease concern the country is unprepared to host tens of thousands of
foreign athletes and Olympic officials as its healthcare system
struggles with a fourth wave of infections.
Vaccinations have mostly been left to local health authorities to
carry out with some cities and towns vaccinating residents faster
than others.
The Tokyo vaccination centre will also begin taking appointments by
telephone for the first time from Saturday, in addition to online
bookings in a bid to encourage more people to get shots, the Sankei
newspaper reported.
A spokeswoman at the Ministry of Defence, which operates the site,
declined to comment on the telephone and did not immediately respond
to an email.
Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said on Wednesday Japan aims to finish
vaccinating everyone who wants a shot by October-November. That may
require about 1 million injections a day.
"I want to explain to the G7 about our measures to tackle infections
and our intention to hold a safe and secure games and win their
understanding," Suga told reporters as he left his residence in
Tokyo for a G7 meeting in Britain.
POLITICS AND MONEY
With less than 50 days before the Olympics open, Japan has vaccinated
just over a tenth of its population with at least one dose.
Organisers will this month decide whether to allow people in Japan to
attend events. Spectators from abroad are not allowed.
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The giant Olympic rings are seen through
a tree at the waterfront area of Odaiba Marine Park, 50 days before
the opening ceremony of the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games, that have been
postponed to 2021 due to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
outbreak, in Tokyo, Japan June 3, 2021. REUTERS/Issei Kato/File
photo
The Games have become a big political
issue for the government given widespread public opposition to
holding them during the pandemic.
The financial stakes are also huge.
The organiser estimates that the cost of the Olympics, including $3
billion resulting from last year's delay, will be more than $18
billion.
In a sign of continued concern about the risk of more infections
during the Games, however, the governor of Chiba prefecture on
Thursday cancelled plans for an outdoor Olympic viewing site in a
park that would have drawn thousands of people.
"We have decided to cancel plans for the live site," Toshihito
Kumagai told a press briefing.
Near Tokyo, Chiba is due to host four Olympic events - surfing,
fencing, wrestling and taekwondo - and four Paralympic events. On
Wednesday, the prefecture recorded 106 new COVID-19 cases compared
with 440 in Tokyo.
(Reporting by Tim Kelly; Editing by Lincoln Feast, Robert Birsel)
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