The abuse of a Vietnamese worker in the western Japanese city of Okayama sparked outrage in Japan in January 2022.
The incident once again turned the spotlight on Japan’s treatment of migrant workers and the decades-old Technical Intern Training Program. Its initial aim was to bring in interns, also known as technical trainees, from developing countries, mostly from Southeast Asia. They would learn new skills and when they returned to their countries, they were expected to transfer these skills to their countrymen. But that concept is hardly alive anymore. Critics say technical trainees have become a cheap source of manual labour for farms, factories and other businesses in Japan.
But for Japan to be the top choice for foreigners to work and live in, this has to change. And the Japanese people must learn to be more accommodating to those who cannot speak Japanese and are of different cultures and values. As its demographic time bomb keeps ticking, there’s no other option.
Is Cannabis Legal In California?
newsonjapan.com – Oct 29
When voters in California approved the Compassionate Use Act in 1996, the state became the first country to legalize cannabis for medical use.
School absences in Japan hit record high
NHK – Oct 28
Japan’s education ministry says its survey shows the number of elementary and junior high students absent for long periods from school increased by 25 percent to a record high in the year to March.
3 Disturbing Unsolved Mysteries from Japan
Lazy Masquerade – Oct 19
The Noyama Incident: Keiko and Nako left their bicycles at the foot of the mountain and walked up the pathway arriving sometime around noon. Neither of them would ever come back down alive.
Foreign workers shun Japan as yen’s value plunges
Nikkei – Oct 17
The yen’s sharp drop against the dollar and other currencies is making Japan less attractive to foreign workers, at a time when the average wage of Japanese workers in dollar terms has fallen 40% over the past decade.
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