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Visa violators continue sit-in at Immigration

National

Visa violators continue sit-in at Immigration

by Tomohiro Osaki

A sit-in by visa violators and their families entered its second day Tuesday in front of the Tokyo Regional Immigration Bureau with protesters seeking government good will. The action at the bureau in Minato Ward is being organized by the Asian People’s Friendship Society, ...

  • Hashimoto brings South Korea into fray
  • Lower House OKs bill to give voting rights to wards
  • Excessive intake of beef, pork boosts male diabetes risk
  • Japan's cellphone lineups for summer 2013 — fit and focused
  • Politics goes pop in 'Arab Idol' show
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Pankaj Mishra

Why China's developmental state says no to liberalism

by Pankaj Mishra

Modern history is the story of how liberal democracy, originating in Britain and America, spread around the world. This may sound like an absurd fantasy. In actuality, this Whiggish narrative of progress underpins most newspaper editorials, political commentary and speeches in the West, and ...

  • Managing Mount Fuji's fame
  • Recovery only benefiting a few
  • Clock is running out for some key Asian reformers
  • Window on China's defense policy
  • Weep for poor Earth itself
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A fortunate life among hot springs

People | WORDS TO LIVE BY

A fortunate life among hot springs

by Judit Kawaguchi

Kazuhiro Shiraishi, 66, is a guest-house manager in the Izu-kogen Highlands, a famous resort area on the Izu Peninsula of Shizuoka Prefecture. Looking out onto the Pacific Ocean, and just 90 minutes by train from Tokyo, Izu has a warm climate all year round ...

  • Is computing speed set to make a quantum leap?
  • Cracked cellphone screens become the latest youth status symbol
  • Apps to stay healthy, hear the news and keep in touch
  • Product names show language creativity at work
  • Fukushima photos focus on what can't be seen
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Fear and incarceration, from Kampala to Nagoya

Issues | THE FOREIGN ELEMENT

Fear and incarceration, from Kampala to Nagoya

by Stephen Carr

“I was stopped by two men in a government-registered vehicle, blindfolded and dragged off the street. They took me away to a house in a place I did not know. I was forced into a room with blood all over the walls and floor, ...

  • Ambivalent Japan turns on its 'insular' youth
  • Precedent backs (nearly) equal pay for equal work
  • Yokohama: What do you think of the prime minister's 'Abenomic' strategy so far?
  • Taking care of an aging smartphone — until the end
  • Tokyo: What do you make of Gov. Naoki Inose's comments about Muslims and Istanbul's Olympic bid?
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Miike’s gore-filled flick panned at Cannes

Entertainment

Miike’s gore-filled flick panned at Cannes

Takashi Miike's blood-soaked vengeance tale, one of two Japanese films being shown in competition at the Cannes Film Festival, draws the biggest boos so far, with critics savaging it as overacted and cliched.

  • Power and mastery of the blank space — Toko Shinoda
  • Founding Doors member Manzarek dies at 74
  • Outsider art that comes from within
  • Danish singer wins Eurovision
  • Authorized life of Thatcher is clear-eyed, rich in details
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Flawed strategy, mistakes jeopardizing Tokyo's bid to host 2020 Olympics

Sports | SPORTS SCOPE

Flawed strategy, mistakes jeopardizing Tokyo's bid to host 2020 Olympics

Have you ever given your best effort while striving to achieve something but felt like what you were doing was futile? That’s the feeling I’m getting about Tokyo’s bid to host the 2020 Olympics. With just over three months to go until the IOC ...

  • Stranger than fiction: Ryukyu fires Toyama after setting wins record
  • Mourinho out at Real Madrid
  • Injuries gave marathon runner Noguchi valuable lessons about training
  • Kisenosato, Hakuho tied
  • Corbin fans 10, improves to 7-0
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Community | MAKING A DIFFERENCE Jan 17, 2009

Embroidery center gives women fabric for a future

by Mariko Kato

For bank manager Miki Yoshida, her desire to do volunteer work in rural India started from an unlikely inspiration on an American expressway. “It was a defining moment in my life, when I realized that I wanted to help people,” says Yoshida who, while ...

Second Harvest gets the food to those who need it

Community | MAKING A DIFFERENCE Nov 29, 2008

Second Harvest gets the food to those who need it

by Mio Yamada

Sitting at the wheel of a 4-ton truck, Charles McJilton suddenly says, “Oh wait, wait!” before pulling off his T-shirt and swapping it for a white one with a bright orange Second Harvest Japan logo on the chest and “Food for all people” spanning ...

Community | MAKING A DIFFERENCE Jan 26, 2008

Stray cats captivated by couple's efforts to help

by Thomasina Larkin

For anyone who has wandered the streets of Japan, the sight of a woman carrying her designer-clad lapdog will be a familiar one. Also familiar will be the sight of a dirty, scrawny cat, perhaps covered in bloody sores and missing clumps of fur, ...

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Group helps volunteers get their hands on work

Community | MAKING A DIFFERENCE Dec 1, 2007

Group helps volunteers get their hands on work

by Thomasina Larkin

No matter how badly someone wants to put their good will to use, getting a handle on where to start is often the hardest thing to grasp. Realizing this difficulty, a group of U.S. volunteers in the late ’80s got together to create New ...

No holds barred in fight for dolphins

Community | MAKING A DIFFERENCE Nov 17, 2007

No holds barred in fight for dolphins

by Thomasina Larkin

Within minutes of meeting Allison Lance, one might start to wonder if she was a dolphin in a past life. Her enthusiasm and passion in her drive to protect her animal friends is so strong that it touches just about every area of her ...

International group helps shed light on shadows of injustice

Community | MAKING A DIFFERENCE Nov 3, 2007

International group helps shed light on shadows of injustice

by Thomasina Larkin

Monday to Friday, 9 to 5, you can pretty much expect to find Akiko Mera in the second-floor Oxfam office in a gray, nondescript building in Ueno, Tokyo, surrounded by a half-dozen desks piled high with papers, pamphlets and books. It looks very much ...

Putting the red light on human trafficking

Community | MAKING A DIFFERENCE Sep 29, 2007

Putting the red light on human trafficking

by Thomasina Larkin

“Neary grew up in rural Cambodia. Her parents died when she was a child, and in an effort to give her a better life, her sister married her off when she was 17. Three months later, they went to visit a fishing village. Her ...

Children smile again thanks to art of healing

Community | MAKING A DIFFERENCE Sep 22, 2007

Children smile again thanks to art of healing

by Thomasina Larkin

When you’re just one person who wants to make a change in a world of 6 billion, effecting that change can be a little daunting. But for some people, waiting around for something to happen is a whole lot more worrisome. Colombia native Hector ...

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