Many including WHO, call G7 chair Japan to focus on issues other than Ukraine
Mar 21, 2023
Tokyo [Japan], March 21 : Japan, the current G7 chair, faces growing expectations from other members and international organizations to increase focus on other global issues by leveraging its strengths in non-military areas, Kyodo News reported.
Japan should contribute toward promoting universal health care coverage to other countries by offering expertise on its own system, as it has provided public medical insurance for all its citizens since 1961, analysts said as reported by Kyodo News.
World Health Organization (WHO) called on the G7 to phase out their reliance on fossil fuels to curtail global warming and pollution, Japan could also play a leading role in the international community by advocating and investing in decarbonization technology, WHO added.
Japan, meanwhile, has been urged to explain to its G7 counterparts its plan to discharge treated water from its crippled nuclear power plant in Fukushima Prefecture into the Pacific Ocean, a decision which has been met with strong resistance from some neighbouring nations.
Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, who represents a constituency in Hiroshima as a lawmaker, is scheduled to host the in-person G7 summit for three days from May 19 in Hiroshima.
Kishida has been "keen to pitch his vision of a world without nuclear weapons" amid mounting fears that Russia may deploy one in its war against Ukraine, but there are "many other issues that should also be discussed at the G7 summit," a source close to him said as per the report by Japan's leading news agency, Kyodo News.
"In thinking seriously about what Japan can and should do for the international community as the G7 presidency, the prime minister needs to take the initiative and combat global challenges this year," said the source.
On Friday, the G7 leaders held a video meeting for the first summit presided over by Kishida, in an effort to strengthen the unity of the group and demonstrate its unwavering solidarity with Ukraine. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy attended the gathering.
The G7 members "called on Russia to stop its ongoing aggression and to immediately, completely and unconditionally withdraw its troops" from Ukraine, warning in their joint statement that Moscow's "irresponsible nuclear rhetoric is unacceptable."
The statement suggested that the leaders of the G7, which consists of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States plus the European Union, devoted most of their time to discussing Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Kyodo reported.
Kishida should "try to bolster his influence in the G7 by pledging to utilize Japan's state-of-the-art technologies and experience in fields such as medicine and environmental science to help solve global problems," Kyodo News wrote quoting a source.
In medicine and health care, Japan has accumulated knowledge of universal health coverage for more than 60 years.
Since the United Nations adopted its Sustainable Development Goals in 2015, the G7 has pursued the realization of universal health coverage to ensure people have access to basic medical services without financial hardship.
In many emerging countries, it is difficult to expand health care infrastructure, meaning Japan could offer its expertise by providing insurance-based services, Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Asset Management Co. said in a report.
"Japan's universal health insurance system has helped improve the life expectancy of its citizens" and buoy economic growth "through disease control," the investment firm said, adding Tokyo should cooperate with other G7 members in the area.
Moreover, the WHO has recently emphasized the importance of achieving "planetary health," a concept that links human health with the earth's natural ecosystems, requesting that the G7 work with them to sharply reduce fossil fuel use.
Japan has promised to become carbon neutral through its plan to produce net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, accelerating research and development in renewable energy technologies and other resource sectors.
As per the report by Kyodo News, the Health and Global Policy Institute, a Japanese private think tank, said it hopes that the Kishida administration will lead the discussion on how to attain the goal of improving planetary health as the G7 presidency.
The G7 health ministerial meeting is slated to be held in May in the southwestern city of Nagasaki.
At a planned gathering in April for energy ministers in Sapporo, northern Japan, the government is expected to seek the endorsement of the G7 for the disposal of treated water from the Fukushima plant, apparently brushing aside concerns raised by China and South Korea.