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General

Sep 19 2005 5 Comments

Holiday homage

Today is a national holiday; and as is the custom here, it has a name/purpose — Respect The Aged Day.

This year the day off falls at a rather apt time, as figures have just been released stating that by the end of September — barring any untimely falls or bouts of pneumonia — the number of centenarians in Japan will reach 25,554. Meaning there’s going to be an awful lot of ‘respecting’ going on.

Not surprisingly women make up the majority of this hardy bunch, accounting for a whopping 85% of all those who reach this memorable (or not as the case may be) milestone. Old salary man Suzuki having usually popped his clogs a long time before reaching 100; the years of excessive overtime and marathon commutes exacting a decidedly terminal toll.

gin-san and kin-san

This geriatric gang is a relatively modern phenomenon, and has been increasing in numbers for the last 35 years — steadily growing each and every year. The fact that there were only 153 centenarians in 1963 proving how exclusive the club once was.

The oldest person (as of writing) is 112-year-old Yone Minagawa. Although as impressive as this is, Mr. and Mrs. Semba’s record for the world’s oldest couple is even more staggering. Yae Semba plods along at a sprightly 100-years-old, whilst her husband Nisaburo clocks in at an impressive — and statistic contradicting — 107. The pair narrowly edging out Yoichi and Gomi kazono of Kanagawa. A couple that also boasts a combined age of 207.

old Japanese

Now this is all well and good, but having already lived here for seven years and in no rush to go home anytime soon, will some of this longevity rub off on me?

It’d certainly be nice to think so.

Perhaps.

Categorized: Culture, General

Sep 15 2005 1 Comment

Crazed commuters

“In packed trains, conditions are ripe to turn so-called ‘normal’ people into the abnormal.”

Doctor, and former head of the UFJ Bank health management centre, Yoichi Maitada, explaining the stresses and strains of travelling on Japan’s jam-packed trains.

The already ‘abnormal’ however just go absolutely berserk.

Categorized: General, Travel

Sep 09 2005 15 Comments

Blue bloom

Perhaps for no other reason than to stop greeting card manufacturers using tired old rhymes concerning the colour of roses and violets, Suntory Ltd — with the help of Australian company Florigene — has produced a blue rose. A result that took a staggering 15 years of research to achieve.

As it’s due to go on public display over the weekend (for the first time I think), the blue bloom was shown to the press yesterday.

blue rose

An event that must have been fascinating to say the least.

Categorized: General, Science

Sep 09 2005 Leave a Comment

Bobbing bobby

A 31-year-old senior police officer — who has already been suspended for three months — is expected to resign very soon, as yesterday the local police sent an investigation report to prosecutors.

The unnamed officer it seems drove his car into a river on August 27, while allegedly under the influence of alcohol. And although no test appears to have been carried out at the time, the policemen who picked him up (or out as the case may be) detected a massive amount of alcohol on his breath.

For such an incident to not make the press and be conveniently swept under the carpet would be of no surprise to anyone, however there are rumours that it may not be the first time the boozing bobby has partaken in one too many beverages.

cars in river

Categorized: General

Sep 08 2005 4 Comments

Peko pilferers

Earlier this year, Tetsuji Shibuya was sentenced to 5 ½ years in prison for stealing Peko-chan dolls; and in a decision that further underlines the gravity of such a crime, his accomplice, Hiroyuki Cho, was sentenced to an even heftier 7 years behind bars this week.

peko-chan

As you can see from the picture, Peko-chan dolls aren’t the most attractive of figurines, but the mascot of Fujiya cakes and sweets — which made its first appearance 45 years ago — has become something of a collectors item, especially as the promotional dolls are not for sale. Creating a situation where they are stolen and then sold illicitly over the internet and at flea markets. The life-size versions that are placed outside shops sometimes selling for as much as 100,000 yen (500 pound) a piece.

peko

It is said that the Peko pair managed to steal around 15 life-size versions of the doll, making a relatively impressive 1.1 million yen (5,500 pound). This unprecedented number of thefts — of which some included violence — prompted prosecutors to demand an 11-year prison sentence for Cho, as he was considered the mastermind behind the Peko pilfering plan. Judge Takeshi Kaneko agreed, adding that Cho-san had shown no signs of repentance, despite being the brains behind the operation. The unemployed 39-year-old found guilty of emailing instructions to his sidekick Shibuya.

An alleged copy of one of the incriminating electronic messages is shown below, after apparently being leaked by the prosecution. The email outlining the planning and intelligence needed for such a delicate operation.

A document that was inexplicably written in English.

email

Categorized: General, Odd

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