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Datum objave: 17.08.2020
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Japanese Premier Abe Visits Hospital Amid Health Questions

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe visited a Tokyo hospital on Monday after his avoidance of extended public appearances sparked speculation about the health of the country’s longest-serving premier.

Japanese Premier Abe Visits Hospital Amid Health Questions


https://www.msn.com/en-xl/news/world/japanese-premier-abe-visits-hospital-amid-health-questions/ar-BB1824Pu?ocid=msedgdhp


Isabel Reynolds


(Bloomberg) -- Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe visited a Tokyo hospital on Monday after his avoidance of extended public appearances sparked speculation about the health of the country’s longest-serving premier.


Abe, 65, was seen arriving by car at Keio University Hospital in Tokyo, in video broadcast by Japanese television networks. He was going to undergo a one-day health checkup, Kyodo News cited an aide as saying, while broadcaster TBS said he had undergone a full health examination as recently as June. Rival news network FNN said there was no plan for him to be admitted to the hospital.


The Prime Minister’s Office has not put out an official statement on the matter.


Abe hasn’t held a full-length news conference since mid-June, and has rebuffed opposition calls for a new session of parliament to debate policies for controlling the coronavirus and its economic fallout.


Japan’s Economy Shrinks by Record as Virus Wreaks Havoc: Chart


Domestic media have kept a close eye on Abe’s movements, noting that he paid his first visit in months to a gym on Aug. 10. Broadcaster TBS even took to timing his daily walk across the foyer of his residence in a bid to gauge the state of his health.


Abe resigned in 2007 after an abbreviated first term in office, citing a worsening of chronic ulcerative colitis. When he made a comeback in 2012 that started his current run as prime minister, aides said the introduction of a new drug had enabled him to bring the condition under control.


Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga, who works closely with Abe on a daily basis, said on Aug. 4 he didn’t believe there was any problem with the premier’s health.


Abe has had little time away from work as the coronavirus continues to spread throughout Japan, triggering the worst economic contraction on record in the April-June quarter. As virus numbers have increased in recent weeks, Abe’s approval slid to a record low of 35.4% in a poll published by JNN earlier this month.


Virus Cases Are Surging in Japan, And Abe May Be Bowing Out


The prime minister’s usual August trip to a second home outside the capital may have been called off after Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike urged residents to avoid travel so as not to further spread the virus.



Shinzo Abe: concern in Japan after second hospital visit in a week



https://www.msn.com/en-xl/asia/top-stories/shinzo-abe-concern-in-japan-after-second-hospital-visit-in-a-week/ar-BB18izrb



Japan’s prime minister, Shinzo Abe, has made his second trip to hospital in a week, prompting renewed concern over his health.


Abe, who marked 2,799 consecutive days as prime minister on Monday – beating the record set by his great uncle, Eisaku Sato – refused to discuss details of his visit to Keio university hospital.


“Today, I received detailed explanations about the results of the tests from last week, and I had additional tests. I’m making sure I’m in good health, and I plan to keep working hard,” he told reporters, adding that he would provide more information about his health at a later date.


The nature of the ailment is not clear, but Abe suffers from ulcerative colitis, an inflammatory bowel condition that was partly blamed for cutting short his troubled first term in office, which ended with his resignation in September 2007 after a year.


When he became prime minister for a second time in late 2012, Abe, who turns 66 next month, said he was managing the illness with newly available drugs.


But his recent hospital visits and refusal to discuss details of his health have fuelled speculation that he may not be able to continue until his term as prime minister and Liberal Democratic party president ends in September 2021.


The government’s spokesman, Yoshihide Suga, attempted to calm speculation about Abe’s health. “I see him every day and I haven’t noticed anything different,” he said. When asked if Abe would be able to serve out his term, Suga said: “The additional tests are being done to achieve that end.”


The Nippon TV network disputed claims that Abe’s second hospital visit was for a check-up, citing multiple unidentified government sources saying that he was receiving treatment for a “chronic illness”.


Speculation about Abe’s health has been building since a magazine reported he had vomited blood in July, while political journalists noted he had looked tired in recent weeks and was moving more slowly that usual.


In the past week he has spent only a few hours a day in his office, and only in the afternoon. Earlier this month, he was criticised for not holding a press conference on the government’s response to the coronavirus pandemic for several weeks.


In the event that Abe is incapacitated, his deputy, the gaffe-prone finance minister, Taro Aso, would take over as acting prime minister.


Tobias Harris, a Japan specialist at Teneo consultancy and the author of a new book on Abe, expected the government to come under pressure to explain his health issues.


“It seems as if the government hoped that with a pause Abe might recover and therefore his condition would not become a political issue,” Harris told Agence France-Presse. “After his second unexpected hospital visit in as many weeks, I think that approach has run its course … it will be increasingly difficult for the government to avoid providing a more transparent account of Abe’s condition.”

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