Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda is hospitalized for medical treatment and will miss the central bank’s upcoming June 15–16 policy meeting, according to statements from the BOJ reported by multiple outlets. The bank says Ueda is expected to remain in the hospital for about two weeks. Because of his absence, he will not participate in the meeting’s policy decision process. Instead, Ueda plans to provide his policy views via a written statement, while BOJ officials will handle the meeting in his place. The reports also note that the situation represents an unusual disruption for the governor, who chairs the BOJ’s policy discussions. With Ueda away, the BOJ is expected to continue its standard procedures for the scheduled rate review, including presiding arrangements by senior leadership. One outlet adds that deputy governors would manage the meeting’s chairing and communications during Ueda’s absence, and that Ueda is expected to return to participate in the next scheduled policy meeting after recovering. Overall, the BOJ frames the development as a temporary medical interruption that affects governance at the June meeting but not the central bank’s timeline for its upcoming deliberations.