Japan: 73% of citizens dissatisfied with the rate of dosing

The vast majority of Japanese believe that booster doses of COVID-19 vaccine are given at a very slow pace and have a ambiguous view of how Prime Minister Fumio Kishida handles the new coronavirus pandemic, especially for their decision to relax. border restrictions, a poll suggested.

Citizens’ anger over the way the pandemic was handled helped to overthrow the government of Mr. Kishida’s predecessor, Yoshihide Suga. The current prime minister has a crucial electoral contest ahead of him for the upper house in July.

About 73% of respondents to a poll conducted by the Kyodo news agency believe that booster doses are given too slowly. However, 54.1% approve of how they deal with the health crisis as a whole.

By Friday, only 12% of the population had received a booster dose, despite the fact that almost 30% of Japanese citizens are over 65 years old and therefore at a higher risk of becoming seriously ill if they do not take it. This is despite the fact that the Prime Minister has repeatedly promised to speed up the program.

Mr Kissinda, 64, told a news conference last week that he had not received a booster dose either, which is expected to happen in March.

Nearly half of those polled in a two-day telephone interview said it was “too early” to ease border controls, which were among the toughest in the world, but would begin to ease on March 1.

About 45.7% expressed this opinion, 34.9% on the contrary described the decision as “correct” and 16.3% considered that it was announced late.

Overall, Prime Minister Kishinda’s popularity rose slightly to 56.6%, but the percentage of those who disapprove of his government also rose 2.2 points to 27.4%.

SOURCE: AMPE

Source: Capital

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