All the below tweets are in English.
日本関連ツイートを拾うことは通常どおり特にしない予定でしたが、Reuters社を中心に以前よりは数が増えている感触があるので、前回投稿分以降の日付のものを中心にざぁっとですが拾ってみました。3回に分けて投稿します。
While I have not intended to collect news articles mainly on Japan’s new cabinet, I have come to confirm that there are more articles – mainly by Reuters – related to such issues than before as I have thought. That is why I collected roughly and posted here mainly tweets after the last post (Sep 8). This is the first of the three posts this time.
Hitachi to pull plug on north Wales nuclear power station https://t.co/9UiBT8ivbX
— The Guardian (@guardian) September 15, 2020
A Japan trade deal is little consolation if Britain is locked out of the EU https://t.co/VFXzXABLgg
— The Guardian (@guardian) September 13, 2020
Japan trade deal is small beer – but a welcome distraction https://t.co/PYes0nZkXr
— The Guardian (@guardian) September 11, 2020
UK government hails 'historic' trade deal with Japan https://t.co/tCu1vE1VHZ
— The Guardian (@guardian) September 11, 2020
Tokyo Olympics must be held at 'any cost', says Japanese minister https://t.co/s3iKj7upPC
— The Guardian (@guardian) September 8, 2020
Yoshihide Suga emerging as favourite to become Japan's prime minister https://t.co/kvdxwSftOD
— The Guardian (@guardian) September 1, 2020
#FPCJ #japannews @guardian
Yoshihide Suga to be Japan's prime minister after winning party vote https://t.co/NvynYefFBG— Foreign Press Center Japan/フォーリン・プレスセンター (@fpcjpn) September 15, 2020
#FPCJ #japannews @guardian
Yoshihide Suga: the farmer's son set to be Japan's next PM https://t.co/LNojbwYdMz— Foreign Press Center Japan/フォーリン・プレスセンター (@fpcjpn) September 14, 2020
Yoshihide Suga was elected Japan’s new prime minister in a parliamentary vote, following the resignation of Shinzo Abe https://t.co/3topdlCjap
— The Telegraph (@Telegraph) September 16, 2020
Who is Yoshihide Suga, the new Prime Minister of Japan? https://t.co/s885naHuXp
— The Independent (@Independent) September 16, 2020
Yoshihide Suga formally elected as Japan’s new prime minister https://t.co/3JhhviQCOW
— The Independent (@Independent) September 16, 2020
Yoshihide Suga: The unexpected rise of Japan’s new prime minister https://t.co/VbOcBegU78
— BBC News (World) (@BBCWorld) September 16, 2020
Yoshihide Suga elected Japan's new prime minster succeeding Shinzo Abe https://t.co/ifNL6ETIOn
— BBC News (World) (@BBCWorld) September 16, 2020
Yoshihide Suga: The strawberry farmer's son on track to be Japan's PM https://t.co/QrvbOikYnt
— BBC News (World) (@BBCWorld) September 14, 2020
#FPCJ #japannews @BBCWorld
BBC News – Yoshihide Suga: The strawberry farmer's son on track to be Japan's PM https://t.co/t8t07LBXBr— Foreign Press Center Japan/フォーリン・プレスセンター (@fpcjpn) September 15, 2020
Japan's new prime minister Yoshihide Suga promises to turn round economy after succeeding Shinzo Abe https://t.co/GR4b8Dk1tf
— SkyNews (@SkyNews) September 16, 2020
Yoshihide Suga is set to become Japan's new prime minister, following the resignation of Shinzo Abe https://t.co/iWjgw5zvB7
— SkyNews (@SkyNews) September 14, 2020
Each year, the Japanese drink enough ready-to-drink coffee to fill Tokyo’s new Olympic Stadium almost to the brim https://t.co/rz81kHc1J0
— The Economist (@TheEconomist) September 16, 2020
Japan's shrinking and ageing population is stoking the demise of rural railway lines https://t.co/pXlPOztwDu
— The Economist (@TheEconomist) September 16, 2020
Suga Yoshihide secured the support of Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party by pledging continuity and stability at a time of crisis https://t.co/pPcvZVPBXe
— The Economist (@TheEconomist) September 15, 2020
Today on “The Intelligence”: Japan’s new prime minister, the state of the World Health Organisation and the great canine schism among Egypt’s clerics https://t.co/xDPKcE3gSE
— The Economist (@TheEconomist) September 15, 2020
If Japan's next prime minister succeeds, it will be thanks in large part to the groundwork laid by Abe Shinzo https://t.co/SALMLrrYPp
— The Economist (@TheEconomist) September 6, 2020
Many have cast Abe Shinzo's resignation as an admission of defeat. But Japan's outgoing prime minister has done a far better job than is commonly acknowledged. Our cover in Asia this week https://t.co/epAEDInipU pic.twitter.com/PnzNEhbBHR
— The Economist (@TheEconomist) September 3, 2020
“It says: ‘Please attack us’,” complains a campaigner against a proposed military base in Japan https://t.co/abFed4jNNm
— The Economist (@TheEconomist) August 15, 2020
#lockdown giving you itchy feet? Over on our #blog, Dr Sonia Favi discusses how in the Tokugawa era, #maps provided a 'virtual' means of exploring and domesticating the Japanese territory, even when physical travel wasn’t possible https://t.co/5Aw3iZidtC @TheJohnRylands @UoMSALC pic.twitter.com/VMnnLZANu8
— JRRI (@JRRIManchester) July 6, 2020
Yoshihide Suga is not your typical Japanese politician and yet the 71-year-old son of a strawberry farmer is about to become Japan's next prime minister | @ErykBagshaw https://t.co/YdxLk4wGgn
— The Sydney Morning Herald (@smh) September 14, 2020
Shinzo Abe's chief cabinet secretary Yoshihide Suga is set to become Japan's next prime minister after winning a mandate to continue his predecessor's domestic and foreign policy | @ErykBagshaw https://t.co/L5ehz7jTpb
— The Sydney Morning Herald (@smh) September 14, 2020
Yoshihide Suga, Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary and a longtime loyal assistant of outgoing Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, has emerged as a favourite to succeed him in an upcoming internal party vote https://t.co/n1zNdzRRgy
— The Sydney Morning Herald (@smh) September 2, 2020
David Walton and Akimoto Daisuke: The decision by the Turnbull government in 2016 to select a French company to produce Australia’s next generation of submarines over Japan’s tender highlighted the limitations of networks and friendships.https://t.co/HRpQaOGhts
— The Lowy Institute (@LowyInstitute) September 4, 2020
"With Australia seeking ever-closer regional cooperation with Japan these days, it will be interesting to see whether the country’s investors will be unnerved by being caught in Australia’s trade row with China."@Greg__Earl writes for The Interpreter.https://t.co/NWqOT8rfcL
— The Lowy Institute (@LowyInstitute) August 31, 2020
Abe aimed to move mountains, setting Japan high goals for the future | Purnendra Jain https://t.co/vynrzxabC2
— The Lowy Institute (@LowyInstitute) August 30, 2020
With the Indo-Pacific increasingly a battleground for technological competition, it appears likely that US-China tensions will complicate Japan-ASEAN digital ties.
Elliot Silverberg and Patrick Madaj write for The Interpreter.https://t.co/lKvF8wR7P4
— The Lowy Institute (@LowyInstitute) August 16, 2020
"In a similar address to the Lowy Institute a year ago, @ScottMorrisonMP also praised India and Japan as countries with 'shared values' to Australia."@ConversationEDUhttps://t.co/iARwXSrBzA
— The Lowy Institute (@LowyInstitute) August 6, 2020
"In a commentary last year written for The Interpreter blog from Australia's Lowy Institute, Layton detailed just how far the Chinese flights stretch the JASDF, and how China has the resources to push Japan to limits it may not be able to reach."@cnnihttps://t.co/LnI3HSyOxu
— The Lowy Institute (@LowyInstitute) July 30, 2020
"An overwhelming 82 per cent of Australians said they expected Japan to act responsibly in the world. On the same question, the response regarding China was a dismal 23 per cent"
Nonresident Fellow @Rory_Medcalf on Lowy Institute Poll in @FinancialReviewhttps://t.co/0dAWDLfKCd
— The Lowy Institute (@LowyInstitute) July 13, 2020
Beyond Covid, the chance for a broader Australia-Japan relationship | Donna Weeks https://t.co/jWd4qbeuwC
— The Lowy Institute (@LowyInstitute) July 6, 2020
As China rises, does Australia, India, Japan, and the United States have any real prospect of rebalancing relationships in Asia?
Read the latest Lowy Institute Analysis on the Security Quadrilateral Dialogue by Dr Lavina Lee. https://t.co/3rHK0bjip3
— The Lowy Institute (@LowyInstitute) May 22, 2020
Japan: Article 9 conundrum rears its head again | David Walton https://t.co/g3erhFcktW
— The Lowy Institute (@LowyInstitute) February 24, 2020
Japan–South Korea tensions show little sign of easing | Kate Kalinova https://t.co/a5lWZFyghy
— The Lowy Institute (@LowyInstitute) February 17, 2020
#BREAKING Japanese Coastguard has reportedly made the decision to suspend its fulltime search for the 40 people still missing from the livestock ship. https://t.co/5kPFsNszQP pic.twitter.com/v3KPgjWKNA
— nzherald (@nzherald) September 10, 2020
#BREAKING Missing Kiwis: Japan to resume search for crew of livestock ship https://t.co/tAqQjJTgcc pic.twitter.com/YtKCeBkt2z
— nzherald (@nzherald) September 7, 2020
#BREAKING The second person rescued by Japanese coastguard has died. https://t.co/YrzrVGD9Sg pic.twitter.com/G3vTOgyyKc
— nzherald (@nzherald) September 4, 2020
#BREAKING They sent a distress signal at 4.45am NZT off the coast of Japan as the area was hit by a Typhoon. Now the ship has disappeared. https://t.co/UJUmRTrPFY pic.twitter.com/KGDrbXTWTJ
— nzherald (@nzherald) September 2, 2020
Japan's Parliament has elected Yoshihide Suga as prime minister, replacing long-serving leader Shinzo Abe with his right-hand man. https://t.co/i4yQL9llz4
— CBC News (@CBCNews) September 16, 2020
Yoshihide Suga has been elected as the new head of Japan's ruling party, virtually guaranteeing that he will become the country's next prime minister. https://t.co/rqR2DwTZGn
— CBC News (@CBCNews) September 14, 2020
One person in Japan is dead, and at least two are missing in South Korea after a powerful typhoon. https://t.co/f8sxEEjNOw
— CBC News (@CBCNews) September 8, 2020
U.S. authorities have arrested a former Green Beret and his son who are accused of using large boxes to help scurry Nissan chairman Carlos Ghosn out of Japan. https://t.co/UPxjNx3A05
— CBC News (@CBCNews) May 20, 2020
As the coronavirus spreads in Japan, the chief executive of the Tokyo Games said Friday he can't guarantee the postponed Olympics will be staged next year — even with the long delay. https://t.co/V6QqzigJwC
— CBC News (@CBCNews) April 10, 2020
Japan's prime minister says he will declare a state of emergency for seven prefectures, with Japan also launching its largest ever stimulus package. https://t.co/f6SWfrhyQg
— CBC News (@CBCNews) April 7, 2020
The streets of Tokyo remain busy as Japan adopts its own approach to preventing the spread of coronavirus, one that relies on tracing cases and requesting cooperation, not lockdowns. https://t.co/YKNNsYkV4N @sasapetricic
— CBC News (@CBCNews) April 4, 2020
Japan Olympic minister Seiko Hashimoto says the Tokyo Summer Games could be held later in 2020 due to fast-spreading COVID-19. https://t.co/8gEqMSG8cX
— CBC News (@CBCNews) March 3, 2020
Canadian quarantined in Japan with asymptomatic COVID-19 describes comforts during enforced stay. https://t.co/HfOuAh3Jhb pic.twitter.com/y70dRyVzIE
— CBC News (@CBCNews) February 27, 2020
Japan’s Yoshihide Suga poised to win party race, succeed Shinzo Abe as PM https://t.co/XHP4temuFe
— The Globe and Mail (@globeandmail) September 14, 2020
Japan, eyeing Olympics, lines up half-billion doses of COVID-19 vaccine https://t.co/N3ShUXL25O
— The Globe and Mail (@globeandmail) August 28, 2020
Japan says China has used coronavirus to expand territory, influence https://t.co/6vtuc3NY8T
— The Globe and Mail (@globeandmail) July 14, 2020
Japan to end Tokyo’s state of emergency, eyes massive new stimulus https://t.co/2xqo1lBlOs pic.twitter.com/SQsnCVxqFx
— The Globe and Mail (@globeandmail) May 25, 2020
Japan’s Shinzo Abe slammed over ‘stay home’ shutdown tweet https://t.co/ZpaFBQxGOg pic.twitter.com/93TI0ssMk1
— The Globe and Mail (@globeandmail) April 13, 2020
Nearly 40 feared dead as torrential rains continue to ravage southwest Japan https://t.co/6f7TjQpdH8 pic.twitter.com/DRfb2d0pvW
— The Globe and Mail (@globeandmail) July 6, 2020
Japan bracing for dangerously powerful Typhoon Haishen https://t.co/6iorZ3r31N
— The Globe and Mail (@globeandmail) September 4, 2020
Japan’s ruling party urges government to cancel Xi’s visit over new Hong Kong national security law https://t.co/CVKC12xKeB pic.twitter.com/g0Ybpfpp4g
— The Globe and Mail (@globeandmail) July 7, 2020
Japan ignored the usual rules but contained COVID-19. How did it work? https://t.co/dDDSjdHmbe
— National Post (@nationalpost) May 25, 2020
#Breaking: Olympic Games delayed one year after agreement reached with IOC and Japan PM. https://t.co/5AIrozWunM
— Toronto Star (@TorontoStar) March 24, 2020