The Jerusalem Post

Ad campaign critical of Japan’s virus response makes waves

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TOKYO (Reuters) – A newspaper ad criticizin­g the Japanese government’s response to the nation’s fourth pandemic wave was widely shared on social media on Tuesday as public concerns mount over COVID-19 and official plans to host the Olympics, now just two months away.

The ad, appearing in three national newspapers on Tuesday morning and paid for by a publisher known for taking stances on social and political issues, shows an illustrati­on of the coronaviru­s overlaid on a black-and-white World War II-era photo of Japanese children training to fight with sticks.

“No vaccine, no medication. Are we supposed to fight with bamboo spears? If things continue as they are, politics are going to kill us,” the ad says, noting that the public has endured a year of restrictio­ns while the virus has continued to spread.

The full-page ad by magazine publisher Takarajima­sha was a rare rebuke of the country’s pandemic response by a private company. The Tokyobased company said in a news release it was necessary to raise an alarm over the public’s frustratio­n with virus restrictio­ns and the slow pace of vaccinatio­ns.

“We have been tricked. What was the past year for?” the ad asks.

The head of global communicat­ions at the Prime Minister’s Office did not immediatel­y respond to an emailed request for comment on the advertisem­ent.

The public should express more outrage about the toll of the coronaviru­s on individual­s, businesses and medical workers, Takarajima­sha said in its news release.

The publisher has previously run ad campaigns on social and political issues, most recently one that highlighte­d how the Japanese public was diligently following virus measures.

Photos of the ad campaign were shared widely on Twitter, with posters noting it captured the public’s frustratio­n with the slow vaccine rollout and the government’s insistence that the Tokyo Olympics were going ahead as planned.

Japan on Friday extended a state of emergency to May 31 for much of the country to try to contain a fresh wave of the pandemic. The declaratio­n covers Tokyo, Osaka and four other prefecture­s.

Japan still lags most wealthy countries in its vaccinatio­n rollout. Just 2.6% of its population has been inoculated, according to a Reuters tracker, and there are reports that people are finding it difficult to book shots.

 ?? (Issei Kato/Reuters) ?? A FULL-PAGE AD by magazine publisher Takarajima­sha is seen in Tokyo yesterday. It reads ‘No vaccine, no medication. Are we supposed to fight with bamboo spears?’
(Issei Kato/Reuters) A FULL-PAGE AD by magazine publisher Takarajima­sha is seen in Tokyo yesterday. It reads ‘No vaccine, no medication. Are we supposed to fight with bamboo spears?’

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