Tue, 21-Oct-2025

US allies South Korea and Japan makes deal to ease strains

South Korea

South Korea has announced a deal to recompense those who were subjected to forced labor by Japan. During its rule of Korea, as a way to restore a healthy relationship between the two countries. The Yoon administration has been working to strengthen ties between Seoul and Tokyo. South Korea on Monday announced a deal to … Read more

Watch: Breathtaking video of valley of blue flowers goes viral

valley of blue flowers

Twitter user captured a breathtaking video of a valley of blue flowers in Japan. It is encircled by a sea of blue flowers. Viewers can be seen strolling through the sea of tiny blossoms as the camera pans. Look at this magnificent valley that is encircled by a sea of blue flowers. In a recent … Read more

Boat sinks off disputed Japan islands, seven missing

Japan islands
  • A Japanese navy patrol in the region discovered the capsized boat on Sunday.
  • Even though the coastguard indicated the boat “looks to be a fishing boat.”
  • The crews consist of one Taiwanese and six Indonesians.

Japan’s coastguard reported on Monday that it was looking for seven people who had vanished after their boat capsized and was found in the waters around the Senkaku island, which is controlled by Tokyo but is also claimed by China.

A Japanese navy patrol in the region discovered the capsized boat on Sunday afternoon as it was drifting in the waters north of the islands, according to coastguard spokesman Keisuke Nakao for AFP.

He noted that the crews consist of one Taiwanese and six Indonesians.

‘After getting the information at around 1:30 pm (0430 GMT) Sunday from the Maritime Self-Defense Force, we have been scanning the region with patrol ships and aircraft,’ he said.

Even though the coastguard indicated the boat “looks to be a fishing boat,” local Japanese media reported that it was Taiwanese.

Nakao claimed that Taiwan, which also claims the Senkaku islets, and Japanese officials were collaborating. Beijing refers to the unpopulated area as the Diaoyu Islands.

[embedpost slug=”japan-to-announce-new-sanctions-against-russia-at-g7-summit/”]

Read more

PM Fumio Kishida under fire for same-sex marriage remarks

same-sex

Kishida receiving backlash after claiming that Japan’s ban on same-sex unions is not discriminatory. But LGBTQ groups have accused him of backpedaling on commitments. Two-thirds of voters support making same-sex marriage legal, particularly among younger people. Fumio Kishida, the prime minister of Japan, has come under fire for claiming that the nation’s ban on same-sex … Read more

Japan’s birth rate has reached an all time low

Japan
  • The number of births registered in Japan fell to a new low last year.
  • Last year, Japan reported a record number of post-war deaths, totaling more than 1.58 million.
  • Japan’s population has been steadily declining since the 1980s economic boom.

The number of births registered in Japan fell to a new low last year, continuing a decades-long decline that the country’s authorities have failed to reverse despite extensive efforts.

The country saw 799,728 births in 2022, the lowest number on record and the first ever dip below 800,000, according to statistics released by the Ministry of Health on Tuesday. That figure has nearly halved in the last 40 years; in 1982, Japan had more than 1.5 million births.

Last year, Japan reported a record number of post-war deaths, totaling more than 1.58 million.

For more than a decade, deaths have outpaced births in Japan, posing a growing problem for the leaders of the world’s third-largest economy. They now face an ageing population and a shrinking workforce to fund pensions and health care as demand from the ageing population rises.

According to the most recent government figures, Japan’s population has been steadily declining since the 1980s economic boom, and will stand at 125.5 million in 2021.

In the absence of immigration, its fertility rate of 1.3 is far below the rate of 2.1 required to maintain a stable population.

The country also has one of the highest life expectancies in the world; according to government data, nearly one in every 1,500 Japanese people was 100 or older in 2020.

These worrying trends prompted Prime Minister Fumio Kishida to warn in January that Japan is “on the brink of not being able to maintain social functions.”

“In thinking of the sustainability and inclusiveness of our nation’s economy and society, we place child-rearing support as our most important policy” he said, adding that Japan “simply cannot wait any longer” to solve its low birth rate problem.

Kishida stated in January that he wants the government to double its spending on child-related programmes, so a new government agency will be established in April to address the issue.

But money alone might not be able to solve the multi-pronged problem, with various social factors contributing to the low birth rate.

Japan’s high cost of living, limited space, and lack of child care support in cities make raising children difficult, resulting in fewer couples having children. Urban couples are also frequently separated from extended family members in other regions who could provide support.

According to sources, Japan will be one of the most expensive places in the world to raise a child in 2022. Nonetheless, the country’s economy has been stagnant since the early 1990s, resulting in depressingly low wages and limited opportunities for advancement.

According to Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare data for 2021, the average real annual household income fell from 6.59 million yen ($50,600) in 1995 to 5.64 million yen ($43,300) in 2020.

Marriage and family formation attitudes have also shifted in recent years, with more couples deferring both during the pandemic – and young people feeling increasingly pessimistic about the future.

It’s a familiar story in East Asia, where South Korea‘s fertility rate, which was already the lowest in the world, fell even further last year, thwarting the country’s efforts to increase its declining population.

Meanwhile, China is inching closer to officially losing its title as the world’s most populous country to India after its population shrank in 2022 for the first time since the 1960s.

[embedpost slug=”/a-magnitude-6-1-earthquake-rattled-japans-hokkaido-no-tsunami-warning-issued/”]

Read more

A magnitude 6.1 earthquake rattled Japan’s Hokkaido, no tsunami warning issued

Earthquake Central America

Japan Meteorological Agency reported a magnitude 6.1 earthquake. The quake depth was roughly 43 kilometers. The country has tight construction laws in place to ensure that structures can withstand strong earthquakes. The US Geological Survey and the Japan Meteorological Agency reported a magnitude 6.1 earthquake off the coast of Hokkaido in northern Japan on Saturday … Read more

Japan to announce new sanctions against Russia at G7 summit

Russia

The G7 will discuss sanctions against Russia. During a virtual meeting with Fumio Kishida and Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Kishida reiterated the need for restoring world peace. The notion of implementing fresh sanctions against Russia will be discussed during a virtual meeting with the G7 leaders and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Friday, according to Japanese Prime … Read more

Japanese motor giants announce the greatest salary raises in decades

  • Honda and Toyota have agreed to give their employees in the country the biggest wage raises.
  • Japan’s inflation rate was at its highest in nearly 40 years.
  • Japanese companies undergo weeks of compensation negotiations with unions every year.

Toyota and Honda, two Japanese automakers, have agreed to give their employees in the country the biggest wage raises in decades.

They are the most recent companies in the world’s third-largest economy to raise pay while prices rise.

Japan’s inflation rate was at its highest in nearly 40 years, according to official numbers released last month.

This has put pressure on businesses and governments to assist individuals as their purchasing power has shrunk.

Every year, Japanese companies undergo weeks of compensation negotiations with unions before announcing their decisions around the middle of March.

The automobile manufacturers have not stated why this year’s statements were issued sooner than usual.

Toyota announced on Wednesday that it will meet union demands for compensation and incentives, with earnings increasing by the greatest in 20 years.

Toyota’s incoming president, Koji Sato, expressed hope that the move will have a positive impact on the Japanese automotive industry and “lead to frank discussions between labor and management at each company.”

‘Completely responded’

Nevertheless, Honda said that it has “completely responded” to union requests for salary rises and bonuses.

The corporation announced a 5% pay boost, the largest since 1990 and higher than Japan’s inflation rate.

According to a Honda representative, the additional funds will be handed primarily to younger staff as starting salaries are increased.

“Despite the severe business environment, management has a strong desire to create an environment in which all employees can… push forward with their work with a sense of urgency,” the spokesperson added.

Earlier this year, Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida called on businesses to raise pay in order to assist consumers dealing with rising expenses.

Fast Retailing, the parent company of Uniqlo, announced in January that it will increase employee pay in its native nation by up to 40%.

From the beginning of March, the new pay policy will apply to full-time employees at the business’s headquarters and company stores in Japan, according to the company.

In Japan, both price and wage growth have been stagnating for decades.

In recent months, global inflation has risen as governments relax pandemic restrictions and the Ukrainian conflict drives up oil prices.

In December, Japan’s core consumer prices rose by 4% from a year earlier, double the central bank’s target level and the highest rate in 41 years.

[embedpost slug=”/japanese-company-starts-a-historic-mission-to-the-moon/”]

Read more

Mysterious metal sphere found on beach baffles Japan

Japan

Locals in Japan are puzzled by a mysterious metal orb. That has been dubbed “Godzilla egg”, “mooring buoy” and “from outer space”. According to local authorities, the object will be taken out soon. Locals in Japan are puzzled by a huge metal orb that washed ashore and has sparked a frenzy of speculative activity. Even … Read more

Japan PM pledges $5.5 billion in additional Ukraine aid

Japan
  • Japan to aid $5.5 billion to Ukraine.
  • Japanese prime minister will host a G7 video conference with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
  • The G7 leaders will meet in person in May in Hiroshima.

Japan will provide Ukraine with $5.5 billion in new financial assistance, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida announced Monday, just days before the first anniversary of Russia’s invasion.

When the war began on February 24, 2022, Japan, this year’s Group of Seven presidents, joined Western nations in putting sanctions on Moscow.

According to the prime minister’s office, it has already offered Ukraine $600 million in financial help as well as hundreds of millions of dollars in emergency humanitarian assistance.

But “there is still a need to assist people whose livelihoods have been destroyed by the war, and to restore destroyed infrastructure”, Kishida said in a speech at a think tank symposium in Tokyo.

“We have decided to provide additional financial support of $5.5 billion.”

The Japanese prime minister also stated that he will host a G7 video conference with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Friday, the one-year anniversary of the invasion.

Non-permanent member of the UN Security Council

“This year, Japan, as G7 president and a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council, will support Ukraine in its fight against Russian aggression and lead the world’s efforts to uphold a free and open international order based on the rule of law,” Kishida said.

The G7 leaders will meet in person in May in Hiroshima.

Japan has also taken the unusual step of supplying defensive equipment and extending asylum to refugees fleeing the fighting since Russian President Vladimir Putin launched his invasion.

The country has a post-war pacifist constitution that restricts its military power to presumably defensive measures.

Kishida’s remarks came as US Vice President Joseph Biden promised expanded weaponry deliveries to Ukraine during an unexpected visit to Kyiv.

It is Biden’s first visit to Ukraine since the war began, and the trip was greeted by Zelensky as “an extraordinarily important expression of support for all Ukrainians”.

[embedpost slug=”/japan-china-have-agreed-to-undertake-high-level-defence-talks/”]

Read more

After North Korea’s ICBM launch US holds drills with Asian allies

ICBM

The US conducted air exercises with South Korea and Japan. In response to North Korea’s Hwasong-15 test launch. Which was denounced as a violation of UN Security Council resolutions. One day after North Korea launched an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) called the Hwasong-15, the United States conducted air exercises with South Korea and Japan utilizing … Read more

Japan, China have agreed to undertake high-level defence talks

Japan
  • Japanese and Chinese officials will hold senior-level security discussions.
  • Both officials met for about an hour on the margins of the Munich Security Conference.
  • The two officials discussed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

MUNICH: Japanese and Chinese officials will hold senior-level security discussions next week for the first time since February 2019, Tokyo’s top diplomat said Saturday.

According to his office, Japanese Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi and his Chinese colleague Wang Yi met for about an hour on the margins of the Munich Security Conference in Germany on Saturday.

According to the statement, the two officials discussed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which is a significant topic of this year’s Munich summit, which is taking place just a few days before the one-year anniversary of Moscow’s assault.

Hayashi “urged China to respond to the situation in Ukraine as a responsible major power”.

He also condemned North Korea’s latest missile launch on Saturday, while calling on China “to make positive contributions to the international community under established international rules”.

The two officials agreed to meet next week for security and diplomatic talks, according to Hayashi’s office, without specifying where the meeting will take place.

The most recent summit was held in November 2019 in Beijing.

For years, Tokyo and Beijing have been at odds over the sovereignty of uninhabited islands in the East China Sea that Japan administers as the Senkakus but the Chinese claim as the Diaoyus.

Relations between the two main Asian countries deteriorated in 2012 when Japan infuriated China by nationalizing several of the islands.

Serious concerns regarding the East China Sea

“Minister Hayashi again expressed serious concerns regarding the East China Sea including the situation surrounding the Senkaku Islands, as well as China’s increasingly active military activities near Japan including its coordination with Russia,” the Foreign Ministry statement said Saturday.

The upcoming security meeting would also be held in light of Japan’s recent accusations that it too had observed Chinese surveillance balloons over its territory in prior years after Washington shot down what it said was a spy balloon in early February.

Hayashi “clearly conveyed, once again, Japan’s position regarding the specific balloon-shaped flying objects that have been detected in Japan’s territorial airspace in the past,” the statement said.

“I said that if a balloon enters our country’s airspace without permission, it would be considered an intrusion no matter which country it came from,” Hayashi told reporters after the talks, Kyodo reported.

Previously, Japanese media stated that government authorities were considering loosening restrictions to allow the shooting down of aircraft objects that violated its airspace.

[embedpost slug=”/japans-new-rocket-h3-fails-to-launch/”]

Read more

Japan’s new rocket H3 fails to launch

Japan's new rocket H3 fails to launch
  • Japan’s H3 rocket failed due to an ignition issue.
  • Marking the first rocket failure since 2003.
  • JAXA will investigate and reschedule the launch.

The national space agency said Friday’s launch of Japan’s next-generation rocket failed due to an ignition issue.

The H3 rocket, JAXA’s 2001 H-IIA model’s successor, was scheduled to launch mid-morning from Tanegashima Space Centre in southwestern Japan.

“It appears that we failed to light the two solid rocket boosters, after successfully starting the main liquid engines,” JAXA spokesman Nobuyoshi Fujimoto told AFP.

News footage showed the spaceship sitting stationary on its launch pad as white smoke from its main engines indicated a successful ignition.

Fujimoto said the agency would investigate and reschedule the Friday launch, which has been postponed multiple times.

The H3 rocket was designed for more commercial launches, cost efficiency, and reliability.

JAXA has had other launch failures.

The agency had to self-destruct its solid-fuel Epsilon rocket after takeoff in October. It launched satellites for technology demonstrations.

Japan’s first rocket failure since 2003.

[embedpost slug=”japan-provides-12-7-million-usd-for-upgrading-primary-girls-schools-into-elementary-schools-in-rural-areas-of-sindh/”]

Read more

China’s three spy balloons in Japan’s airspace are “absolutely intolerable”

Chinese spy balloon
  • Four flying objects have recently been shot down by the US.
  • Three other dropped objects in North America have not been linked to Chinese espionage.
  • China warned its neighbor to proceed with caution.

The Japanese Defense Ministry provided the most conclusive evaluation of the three previously unknown objects when it indicated they were likely Chinese spy balloons.

According to the ministry’s statement posted on its website late Tuesday, the administration has asked China for confirmation and requested that similar occurrences never happen again. Such airspace violations, which took place in November 2019, June 2020, and September 2021, were described as “absolutely unacceptable” in the statement that followed.

The MOD will keep learning more and keep an eye out for balloons, the ministry said, adding that entering our airspace without authorization, even if it’s a balloon, is a territorial infraction.

Four flying objects have recently been shot down by the US over US and Canadian territory, one of which it claimed to be a Chinese surveillance balloon, rekindling concerns about previously mysterious objects spotted over Japan.

According to US National Security Council spokesman John Kirby, the three other dropped objects in North America have not been linked to Chinese espionage and may have been launched for “commercial or benign purpose.”

China has retaliated by alleging that US balloons had flown over its land and has warned its neighbours not to handle such events in the same way as the US. According to Japanese Defense Minister Yasukazu Hamada, if the Self-Defense Forces felt that the balloon posed a danger to people or property, they would have the option of shooting it down.

China warned its neighbour to proceed with caution. We want to emphasise that Japan should not dramatise this issue like the US has done, Wang Wenbin, a spokeswoman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told reporters on Tuesday.

Sun Weidong, the vice foreign minister of China, told the South Korean ambassador to China on Tuesday that he hoped Seoul would render a fair verdict over the US shooting down of the Chinese balloon.

[embedpost slug=”the-us-military-claims-to-have-retrieved-sensors-from-chinese-spy-balloon/”]

Read more

Japan provides 12.7 million USD for upgrading Primary Girls’ Schools into Elementary Schools in Rural Areas of Sindh

Japan Rural Sindh

The Government of Japan has agreed to provide new grant assistance worth 1,686 million Japanese Yen (equivalent to around 12.7 million USD/ around 3,510 million PKR) for upgrading primary girls schools into elementary schools in rural Sindh. On February 10, 2023, a signing ceremony for the assistance was held at the Ministry of Economic Affairs … Read more

Japan provides 0.37 million USD for improvement of conservation and exhibition capacity of Taxila Museum

Japan Taxila Museum

The Government of Japan has agreed to provide new grant assistance worth 48.8 million Japanese Yen (equivalent to around 0.37 million USD/ around 101.6 million PKR) for enhancement of the antiquities conservation and exhibition capacity of Taxila Museum. On February 10, 2023, a signing ceremony for the assistance was held at the Ministry of Economic … Read more

US sources insist Chinese balloon was military in nature

US
  • The US intelligence officials say the balloon was employed for espionage by the Chinese military.
  • The US briefed 40 friendly countries on the alleged espionage.
  • Chinese officials have already denied employing surveillance balloons.

According to US intelligence officials, the balloon shot down on Saturday was employed for espionage by the Chinese military.

According to unnamed officials, such balloons were deployed to collect intelligence on strategically important countries.

Among them were Japan, India, Taiwan, and the Philippines.

Chinese officials have already denied employing surveillance balloons.

According to the Washington Post, the US intelligence agency believes that some of the balloons were launched from Hainan, a southern Chinese island with a naval military facility.

Quoting an unnamed senior Biden administration official, sources confirmed that the US intelligence community believed the balloon was part, in its words, of an “aerial surveillance program run by the People’s Liberation Army out of Hainan”.

A senior Biden administration official confirmed to sources that America briefed 40 friendly countries on the alleged espionage on Monday.

Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman also announced in the meeting that one balloon had circumnavigated the globe in 2019, passing over Hawaii and Florida.

According to a Biden administration official, the Gang of Eight, a group of US Congressional leaders in charge of supervising national intelligence affairs, would be briefed on the development on Wednesday, and Congress will be updated on Thursday.

[embedpost slug=”/china-spy-balloon-us-navy-has-released-photographs-of-debris/”]

Read more

US intensifies pressure on Middle Eastern partners

US intensifies

A senior US Treasury official travelled to the United Arab Emirates (UAE) on Monday. Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the UK, and the US are members of the G7. Since the war, Russian investors have flocked to the UAE, making it the most popular Arab destination. The United States is intensifying its efforts to strangle … Read more

Fumio Kishida dismisses aide for disparaging LGBT people

Fumio Kishida

Fumio Kishida dismisses cabinet minister for disparaging LGBT couples. Arai said he wouldn’t want to live next to or observe people in same-sex relations. Also cautioned that allowing gay marriage in Japan would result in many people leaving the nation. Fumio Kishida, the prime minister of Japan, has dismissed a cabinet minister for disparaging LGBT … Read more

Nick Kyrgios appears in Australian court on assault charge

Nick Kyrgios court

Nick Kyrgios in court to argue assault allegation against him should be dropped. The Wimbledon champion entered the courthouse on crutches and a knee brace. Australian tennis pro is known for his erratic play and on-court antics. Tennis pro Nick Kyrgios appeared in court in Canberra on Friday to argue that an assault allegation against … Read more

NATO head applauds Japan’s efforts to increase defence spending

Nato
  • Japan to quadruple defense expenditure.
  • Japan is proposing (a military budget) to meet the NATO norm.
  • Japan’s plans will execute by the fiscal year 2027.

NATO‘s president praised Japan’s intention to quadruple defense expenditure on Wednesday, saying the pledge underlined the country’s determination to increase its security role in a turbulent world.

Jens Stoltenberg, speaking in Tokyo, said Japan’s increasing focus on security made the country “even more” of a partner “for peace.”

“I am pleased that Japan is proposing (a military budget) to meet the NATO norm of 2% of GDP allocated to defense,” he said during a speech at Tokyo’s Keio University.

Japan has capped military spending at approximately 1% of GDP for decades, but Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s cabinet approved a new security strategy late last year, including plans to raise defense spending to 2% of GDP by the fiscal year 2027.

“This proves that Japan values international security,” Stoltenberg said on Wednesday.

Rising Chinese and North Korean threats, as well as Russia’s conflict with Ukraine, have fueled public support for increased military spending in Japan.

Stoltenberg emphasized that Russia’s war was a global issue that affected Asia’s security environment.

He claimed that Russian President Vladimir Putin had “completely miscalculated Ukraine” and the country’s NATO allies’ strong unity in support of it.

While emphasizing that NATO does not regard China as an opponent, he said Beijing’s military buildup and goals were a concern that needed to be addressed.

“Today, the global order that has served us so well for so long is in jeopardy. Moscow and Beijing are leading the charge against the autocratic rule “Stoltenberg explained.

“In a more hazardous world, Japan can count on NATO to be there for them,” he said.

[embedpost slug=”/japan-and-nato-vow-a-strong-response-to-china-russias-threats/”]

Read more

Japan and NATO vow a strong response to China, Russia’s threats

Japan
  • Stoltenberg and Kishida expressed concern about the growing cooperation between China and Russia.
  • Tokyo, along with its G7 partners, has imposed sanctions on Moscow.
  • Stoltenberg pushed South Korea the day before in Seoul to provide military help for Ukraine.

TOKYO – Jens Stoltenberg, Secretary-General of NATO, said Tuesday in Tokyo that Japan and NATO must “stay unified and firm” in the face of security threats posed by China, North Korea, and Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Stoltenberg, secretary general of the European and North American military alliance, cautioned that Beijing was keeping a close eye on developments in Ukraine and “learning lessons that may affect its future decisions”.

He spoke with Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida during talks as part of Stoltenberg’s journey to Asia to strengthen connections with democratic allies.

“What is happening in Europe today could happen in East Asia tomorrow. So we must remain united and firm, standing together for freedom and democracy,” he said.

Stoltenberg and Kishida expressed concern about the growing cooperation between China and Russia.

“We highlight with concern Russia’s growing military cooperation with China, including through joint operations and drills in the vicinity of Japan,” they said in a joint statement.

Stoltenberg had pushed South Korea the day before in Seoul to provide military help for Ukraine, which was invaded by its neighbor Russia about a year ago.

On Tuesday, though, he commended Japan’s “firm position” and “significant support” for Ukraine.

Tokyo, along with its G7 partners, has imposed sanctions on Moscow and taken the unusual step of providing defense weaponry and offering asylum to individuals fleeing the crisis.

Provocative behavior

Stoltenberg and Kishida both expressed alarm about North Korea’s “provocative behavior,” which ranged from nuclear testing to ballistic missile tests.

Stoltenberg had pushed South Korea the day before in Seoul to provide military help for Ukraine, which was invaded by its neighbor Russia about a year ago.

He stated that China was “not our adversary,” but he warned of China’s rising military presence in Asia, “including nuclear weapons, bullying neighbors, and threatening Taiwan,” as well as disseminating misinformation about NATO and Ukraine.

As part of efforts to strengthen ties, Kishida stated that Japan would establish an independent representative office for its contacts with NATO.

Kishida also stated that Japan will consider regular participation in the alliance’s high-level meetings.

In December, Japan announced the most significant changes to its defense and security strategy in decades.

The new strategy includes plans to raise defense spending to two percent of GDP by fiscal 2027, bringing Japan in line with NATO member guidelines.

[embedpost slug=”/nato-japan-pm-fumio-kishida-pledge-to-strengthen-ties/”]

Read more

Eight died after cargo ship sinks off coast of Japan

Japan

Rescue personnel have been looking for survivors ever since the Jin Tian went down. The ship’s Hong Kong-flagged ship departed Port Klang in Malaysia last month. It was supposed to land in South Korea on Wednesday. Chinese authorities report that a cargo ship sank in Japanese waters, killing eight persons, several of them were Chinese … Read more

Japan hunts for sending death threats to hundreds of schools

Japan

Bomb and murder threats faxed to schools across Japan. Threats were faxed from a Tokyo-registered number. Texts sought ransom payments between 300,000 and 3 million yen. Japan police are looking for the person who received bomb and murder threats to numerous schools, forcing hurried closures. This week, the threats were faxed to colleges and high … Read more

North Korea issues ‘extreme cold’ weather alert

North Korea

A cold wave warning has been issued for North Korea and South Korea. The poorest provinces in the nation are expected to see temperatures below -30C. High winds are also anticipated for coastal areas, according to state media. Authorities in North Korea have issued warnings about severe weather as a cold wave sweeps the Korean … Read more

Cargo Ship With 22 Aboard capsizes off Southwestern Japan

Japan
  • The incident occurred during a particularly cold week in Japan.
  • Five crew members were rescued from the ship.
  • The ship was expected to arrive in the South Korean port of Incheon.

Cargo ship capsizes off Japan: Five crew members have been rescued and efforts are underway to save 17 others after a cargo ship capsized off Japan’s Nagasaki prefecture on Wednesday.

According to the coast guard, it received a distress signal late Tuesday night from the Hong Kong-flagged vessel Jin Tian, which was cruising 110 kilometers west of the Danjo Islands in the East China Sea.

According to the Japan Coast Guard, the crew of 14 Chinese and eight Myanmar nationals was transferred to lifeboats before rough seas hampered their rescue.

The coast guard has sent two patrol boats to the scene, and three private vessels, including a tanker, that was cruising nearby are helping with the rescue.

The ship was expected to arrive in the South Korean port of Incheon on Wednesday, according to the coast guard.

According to the tracking website MarineTraffic, it left Malaysia’s Port Klang in early December.

[embedpost slug=”/japan-pm-says-declining-birthrate-puts-nation-on-verge-of-collapse/”]

Read more

Japan’s prime minister issued a dire warning about the country’s population

Japan

The prime minister of Japan gave a severe warning about the population crisis. Japan has one of the lowest birth rates in the world. Since its asset bubble burst in the early 1990s, Japan’s economy has stagnated. The prime minister of Japan gave a severe warning on the population crisis, stating that the country was … Read more