March 5, 2006
RSS Podcast Feed - MP3 TOKYO - Japan Airlines is facing an uphill battle in the wake of recent safety concerns and company infighting. The latest news has the corporation’s chief executive stepping down. Meanwhile a passenger abuses a JAL flight attendant after being asked not to use his cellphone in flight.
When is a museum not a museum? When all its exhibits are locked in vaults. The Osaka government’s wild spending on art in the bubble economy days and the lack of a building to house it all.
Recently on this program we talked about Japan’s continued whaling in contrast to an international ban. Now a story from the shores of Chiba where a group of citizens came to the rescue. 70 of the sea mammals washed up on the shores of Chiba prefecture near Tokyo. 2 meter melon-headed whales to be exact.
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February 11, 2006
RSS Podcast Feed - MP3 TOKYO - Japan’s imperial family is said to be the oldest hereditary monarchy in the world. Now the country is facing a succession crisis, no male heirs to the throne have been born in 40 years. Will Japan allow an Empress to occupy the Imperial throne?
Late in the day on August 12th 1985 a drama was unfolding over the skies of Japan that would quickly lead to the single worst air disaster of all time claiming the lives of 520 people on JAL Flight 123. The cause? A tail strike on the 747’s rear bulkhead had occurred 7 years earlier, a flawed repair job by Boeing led to metal fatigue and the subsequent in flight loss of the plane’s rear stabilizer. Now, 21 years on, Japan Airlines is set to display key components of the recovered wreckage at, of all places, Haneda airport, Tokyo’s city air terminal.
Whaling might be against international law but that hasn’t stopped Japan catching the mammals under the guise of “scientific research.” With reports that surplus stocks are being used in pet food, many are questioning why Japan needs to continue with its controversial practice.
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Posted by datelinetokyo