Japan sending its vaccine to other South Asian Countries

A woman receives a vaccine dose at a center administering AstraZeneca COVID-19 shots donated by Japan, in Taipei on Tuesday.   | BLOOMBERG

Japan is sending vaccine shots to other countries to boost its COVID-19 vaccine diplomacy. It has already sent its vaccine to Taiwan and Vietnam. Japan is taking such steps to counter Beijing’s move to strengthen its influence by supplying Chinese-made vaccines to developing countries. Japanese government plans to provide vaccine doses to more member states of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

“We emphasize speediness in sending (vaccine doses) directly to countries where the pandemic situation is very severe,” Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi told a news conference on Tuesday.

Asked about the government’s plan to provide vaccine doses to ASEAN countries, Motegi said, “They are very important countries for our initiative to realize a free and open Indo-Pacific region.”

Japan offers bilateral vaccination support to countries and regions with close ties in addition to its support for developing countries under the COVAX vaccine program.

The government plans to domestically produce a total of 30 million doses of AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine and supply doses to other countries and territories.

The government is preparing to ship doses to Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines and Malaysia as soon as early July.

Meanwhile, Japan and Australia agreed in their foreign ministers’ telephone talks on June 9 to cooperate in providing vaccines to developing countries.

Under the agreement, Japan will prioritize vaccination support for Asian economies, while Australia, as well as France, is strengthening its support for Pacific island nations.

“We take charge of different regions” to efficiently counter China’s vaccine diplomacy, a Japanese government source said.

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