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/ 23 January 2006
Police on Monday raided Yamaha Motor on suspicion that the Japanese company tried to export illegally to China agricultural-use helicopters that can be converted for military purposes. While the major motorcycle maker denied any wrongdoing, police and customs mobilised 280 investigators to search 20 locations.
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/ 23 January 2006
A Japanese court on Monday sentenced a former assistant nurse to three years and eight months in prison for manually pulling 49 fingernails and toenails off of six female patients in 2004. The Kyoto District Court ruled that Akemi Sato (32) committed cruel and selfish crimes against her patients, most of whom had almost no physical strength to resist.
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/ 22 January 2006
It began with a tip-off to the media that the offices of one of Japan’s top internet entrepreneurs were going to be raided. Soon dozens of reporters were camped outside, a whiff of scandal in the air. Two days later, the Tokyo stock market was in turmoil and more than -billion had been wiped off the market value of Japanese companies.
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/ 18 January 2006
The Tokyo Stock Exchange closed early on Wednesday for the first time ever to prevent a system crash from heavy trading volumes as investors took fright at claims of fraud at internet trailblazer Livedoor. The exchange operator suspended trading in all shares 20 minutes ahead of the scheduled close of Asia’s largest bourse.
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/ 16 January 2006
A six-year-old boy was killed and another child seriously injured after being hit by snow that fell from the roof of their kindergarten in north-eastern Japan, police said on Monday, as reports put the death toll from extreme weather at 100. The boy died in hospital late on Monday.
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/ 16 January 2006
It may be the Year of the Dog, but in Japan man’s best friend has seen better days with a bitter winter leaving the canine population suffering indoors, veterinarians said on Monday. Dogs have suffered a greater number of cases this winter of cystitis, a bladder inflammation, since the snow has kept them from going for walks.
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/ 13 January 2006
Friday the 13th proved to be bad luck for the Tokyo stock market, which saw the latest in a series of mishaps. The Japanese investment banker Daiwa Securities SMBC mistakenly placed a sell order for 25 000 shares of Sumitomo Mitsui Financial instead of another firm after an employee interchanged the names.
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/ 13 January 2006
Nikon, the iconic Japanese camera maker, has put another nail in the coffin of traditional photography with plans to stop selling most of its film models in favour of hot-selling digital cameras. Nikon said it will end production of all but two of its eight single-lens reflex analogue models and axe all of its non-digital compacts, signalling the end of its more than 50 year history of selling film cameras.
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/ 11 January 2006
Kim Jong-Il has no chance to see it, but thousands have flocked to an exhibition in Tokyo of happy family photos of a Japanese girl kidnapped by North Korea, fuelling anger against his regime. Megumi Yokota was snatched away in 1977 when the then 13-year-old schoolgirl was on her way home.
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/ 26 December 2005
Rescuers on Monday pulled the body of a fourth passenger from the twisted and snow-blown wreckage of a train that crashed in northern Japan after derailing during a blizzard. Five carriages of the six-carriage train left the tracks in strong winds late on Sunday north of Tokyo.
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/ 19 December 2005
Never tired of sampling new ways to travel, Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi whizzed around the grounds of Parliament on Monday in an eight-wheeled car billed as the world’s fastest electric sedan. "It is comfortable to ride in," Koizumi said after being taken for a 10-minute spin in the vehicle, dubbed the Eliica.
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/ 19 December 2005
The film is set in Japan, the characters are quintessentially Japanese and the actress in the title role is … Chinese. Memoirs of a Geisha is the latest film highlighting how few Japanese have made it in Hollywood. Based on a novel that raised hackles in Japan for allegedly depicting the traditional hostesses as prostitutes, the movie had a lukewarm reception on its opening weekend in Japan.
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/ 16 December 2005
Fifa chief Sepp Blatter on Friday said clubs tolerating discrimination should be expelled from competitions or relegated from their leagues and players like Paulo Di Canio should be thrown out of the game. Blatter, in Japan for the World Club Championships, said there was no place in football for discrimination or extremism of any kind.
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/ 14 December 2005
A Japanese spacecraft that failed on its landmark mission to collect asteroid samples suffered a new setback on Wednesday with its return to Earth delayed by three years until 2010. The Hayabusa spacecraft has been out of control since Friday because of a gas burst caused by leaking fuel.
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/ 10 December 2005
United States software giant Microsoft went on the offensive on the home turf of its Japanese rivals on Saturday, launching its sleek new Xbox 360 console ahead of the holiday season. About 200 game fans queued up for the main launch event that began at 7am local time at a music store in central Tokyo’s fashionable Shibuya district.
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/ 8 December 2005
When Microsoft brought the first Xbox game console to the home turf of its Japanese arch-rivals in 2002 it was nearly two years behind Sony’s PlayStation 2 and it has trailed behind ever since. This time the United States software giant is doing its utmost to prevent history from repeating itself.
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/ 2 December 2005
A large earthquake measuring 6,4 on the Richter scale hit northern Japan late on Friday. The northern region of Tohoku felt ”a strong jolt” from the quake, which happened at 10.13pm local time, according to the meteorological agency. The quake happened 40km underground, the agency said.
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/ 29 November 2005
Whether a key ingredient for a special batch of sake that has been to outer space and back will change the taste of the rice wine will soon be found out as the brew is being prepared in western Japan. Sake brewers began preparing this year’s batch with yeast that completed a 10-day stay at the International Space Station.
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/ 29 November 2005
To the untrained ear, monkeys of a certain species may all sound the same, but Japanese researchers have found that, like human beings, they actually have an accent depending on where they live. The finding, the first of its kind, will appear in the December edition of a German scientific journal.
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/ 26 November 2005
A Japanese spacecraft successfully landed on a far-away asteroid on Saturday for a second time and almost certainly collected the first-ever samples from such a celestial body, Japan’s space agency said. The Hayabusa probe is on a landmark mission to bring back material from the Itokawa asteroid.
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/ 22 November 2005
A Japanese café started serving up berries that make sour desserts taste sweet on Tuesday, offering dieters the chance to indulge in snacks without piling on the calories. ”You could eat a whole lemon and it would taste sweet,” a spokesperson for Namco, which runs the café, said of the berries.
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/ 20 November 2005
A Japanese research probe moved within meters of an asteroid on Sunday, but officials then lost contact and it was unclear whether it had successfully landed to collect surface samples, Japan’s space agency said. The Hayabusa probe, which botched a rehearsal earlier this month, is on a mission to collect material from the asteroid during a brief landing and then bring it back to Earth.
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/ 18 November 2005
Moving beyond the monopoly of sight and touch in the computer world, a Japanese company is offering a service to download aromatic scents at a click of a button. A customer who wants to be surrounded by a new fragrance has a choice of six scented oils ready to mix in a blender, which is hooked up to the computer like a mouse.
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/ 15 November 2005
A powerful earthquake shook northern Japan early on Tuesday, triggering small tsunami waves that struck towns along the north-eastern coast about 350km away. There were no immediate reports of damage or injuries. Japan’s Meteorological Agency said the magnitude-7,1 quake hit at 6.39am local time.
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/ 9 November 2005
For the woman who wants to stay both warm and environmentally conscious this winter — and isn’t bothered by extra bulk under her shirt — a lingerie maker on Wednesday unveiled a thick bra that can be heated in a microwave. Triumph International modelled the bra in Japan.
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/ 9 November 2005
On television around the world and even toasted by the Japanese embassy in Washington, Yumi Yoshimura and Ami Onuki, the two 30-something women who form the duo "Puffy," are learning the unlikely role of Japanese pop ambassadors. Puffy have suddenly succeeded where few Japanese pop artists have before — finding a fan base overseas.
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/ 4 November 2005
A self-confessed Japanese cartoon geek said on Friday he will become the world’s fourth space tourist late next year — and he wants to gaze down at the Earth dressed as an ace pilot from a hit animation series. The -million trip will take into space Daisuke Enomoto, a 34-year-old former board director of the Livedoor internet firm.
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/ 2 November 2005
Customers stopping to gaze at the store window may soon be less anonymous than they think — the store will instantly know their age and gender. Japanese bikemaker Yamaha Motor has unveiled a camera system that recognises if a person is a man or woman and puts them into one of five age groups.
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/ 2 November 2005
A 16-year-old Japanese girl was arrested for trying to kill her mother with rat poison and keeping an internet blog narrating how her condition deteriorated, news reports said on Wednesday. The girl, part of an elite high school chemistry club, reportedly admired British serial killer Graham Young and kept severed animal body parts including a cat’s head in her bedroom.
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/ 1 November 2005
For those willing to spend a little extra money to make next year golden, a Japanese jewellery shop on Tuesday put on sale a wall calendar made of solid gold. The price, appropriately, is 20,06-million yen — equivalent to R1,15-million. The one-sheet 2006 calendar weighs 5,5kg even though it is only 1mm thick.
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/ 1 November 2005
The Tokyo Stock Exchange was forced to suspend trading in all shares for the first time on Tuesday after its computer system crashed in an embarrassment for Asia’s largest bourse, which plans to go public. Software failure delayed the start of trade for the entire morning and the first 30 minutes of the afternoon session.
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/ 26 October 2005
Japan’s top three manufacturers have so far rejected offers from Airbus of contract work on the planned A350 jets, citing their order commitments to rival Boeing, Airbus chief executive Gustav Humbert said on Wednesday.