Japanese Health Ministry starts publishing COVID-shot death figures
For the first time, the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare is including the number of deaths attributed to the COVID shots among the statistics it publishes. The first year to include the data is 2023.
According to the ministry, 37 people died due to having received a COVID shot in 2023; these are all people whose death certificates state that they died due to the shot. An official from the ministry noted that the determination of causation “is based solely on the judgment of the doctor on the scene, and we are not in a position to evaluate whether the number of deaths is high or low.”
Ambulance data tell a far more alarming story
Among the thousands of comments on the article, one person notes that in 2023, the number of ambulance dispatches increased by over one million from 2022, when the number was itself the highest-ever in Japan's history.
He adds, “Why is no media reporting on this despite the explosion of deaths and sudden illnesses?”
While the media are silent, the people are making their voices heard
Meanwhile, on May 31st, a huge protest against the WHO was held in Tokyo, Japan's capital. Opening the protest was Kazuhiro Haraguchi, a former Minister of Internal Affairs and Communication and currently a member of Japan's Parliament.
Not only did Haraguchi accept the act that the COVID shots have caused tremendous harm, he also accepted responsibility and apologized:
I apologize to all of you. So many have died, and they shouldn't have…
To those who tragically lost their lives to this biological, infernal thing, I want to offer my most heartfelt condolences…
As a member of the National Diet of Japan, I apologize to all of you.
Hospitalized but still scared to speak out
Haraguchi, like many others who changed their views on the shots over time, suffered an injury from the shots: cancer.
This time last year, I had neither eyebrows nor hair. Two out of the three supposed vaccines I received were lethal batches.
However, he noted that not everyone dares to speak out even after suffering personally, describing parliamentary colleagues, some of whom have been hospitalized, but “don't speak up.”
He also described meeting others who have been harmed by the shots:
When I travel around different areas, I see people who can't stand, can't walk, can't go to school, or their workplaces.
‘They are trying to block our freedom’
Haraguchi recently attempted to speak on Japan's Channel 3 but was banned.
The other day, I spoke with the President of Channel 3, and I was banned. They are trying to silence our voices. They are trying to block our freedom, our resistance, our power. But we will never lose.
Haraguchi also decried the attempts to prevent the public from gaining access to ivermectin:
We tried to respond with Japan's medicine when biological weapons like corona spread. That was ivermectin … We tried to bring this case … but they were crushed. Why? Because [this drug] is cheap…
Kyoto professor discovers Omicron was ‘manufactured’
Haraguchi is the latest of a number of prominent figures in Japan to speak out against the COVID shots. Last year, Dr. Takayuki Miyazawa, a professor at Kyoto University, resigned his position and began publicizing his findings about the Omicron strain, calling it an artificial construct.
His initial attempts were aimed at medical journals which refused to publish his research. He then took to the streets to reach people, and published a speech on X which has garnered over 11 million views so far.
Prof. Miyazawa stresses in his speeches that he is “not anti-vaccine.”
By no means am I anti-vaccine. It is clear from history that vaccines have made a significant contribution to overcoming infectious diseases. However, the safety of mRNA vaccines is clearly insufficient, and we oppose their use against the new coronavirus. We request that it be stopped immediately.
‘Is it okay for Japan to die out in 100 years?’
With regard to the COVID shots in particular, however, he is insistent that they do not fall into the category of legitimate medical interventions — in fact, he calls them a “crime”:
I think there are many mistakes when it comes to conspiracy theories. In this case, we believe that there was not an actual conspiracy, but rather a crime under international law. Since the rumors have been around for a while, it may be the execution of a conspiracy, but I believe it is a crime…
At first, I thought that there was no way they would do something that bad, but after analyzing the data, I quickly understood
He goes on to describe his fears for his country's future:
Is it okay for Japan to die in 100 years? … I think I have no choice but to take risks to save the country. Wrong intentions are being spread … My wish is for Japanese people to live peacefully and happily. If things continue as they are now, a tragic outcome awaits.