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Posts Tagged ‘Japan’

Japan supports better health care model for mothers, children

In Uncategorized on January 8, 2011 at 4:24 am

Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) and Vietnamese Ministry of Health (MOH) signed off on a project to support heath care for mothers and children on December 27 in Hanoi.

Representatives of JICA and MOH sign off on a project to support heath care for mothers and children on December 27 in Hanoi( Photo: Courtesy of JICA)

Maternal and Child Health Handbook – a Japanese adapted health care project will be carried out next year in the northern provinces of Dien Bien, Hoa Binh, Thanh Hoa, and the Mekong delta province of An Giang.


The project will last for 3 years, starting from January 2011, with total budget of 154 million Japanese Yen (equivalent to US$1.8 million) which will provided by JICA.


Maternal and Child Health Handbook is a comprehensive instruction manual with essential information about the physical and intellectual development of children, from the fetus up to 6 years old.


The handbook is convenient for use and storage, as it replaces existing notebooks and health monitoring graphs, and serves as a continuing record on the health condition of both mother and child.


Mr. Tsuno Motonori, Chief Representative of JICA shared “By using the handbook, women are much less likely to miss their regular checkups. The handbooks help mothers provide accurate information, about the child’s development and vaccination records, for doctors and even schools when necessary”


In Japan the MCH Handbook was developed and used in 1942 under the name of ‘Maternal Handbook’, it became a tool in the hands of every mother to ensure the baby’s health. In 1950s, the infant mortality rate in Japan was 60.1 per 1000 live births, while the ratio in 2002 was 3.0 – one of the lowest in the world. Whereas, the infant mortality rate in Vietnam is 15.0 per 1,000 live births (statistical data from 2008).


Based on Japanese experience, MOH have drafted the Maternal and Child Health handbook, covering four parts: the monitoring of mothers during pregnancy, taking care of mother and child during delivery and after delivery, and taking care of the child until 6 years old.


The JICA project is going to conduct training activities to health staff on the contents, ways of usage and distribution to pregnant women, families with small children, village health workers and volunteers. The most important activity is to promote the utilization of the book at community health centers from antenatal check up, at birth, post partum, neonatal and child health.


After piloting at the four provinces, the Ministry of Health will have a plan for distributing the Handbook nationwide, contributing and improving the health condition of both mother and child, and achieving Millennium Development Goals, as committed by the Government of Vietnam.

Source: SGGP

Japan eyes building its own GPS system

In Uncategorized on January 8, 2011 at 4:14 am

 Japan is considering launching new satellites to establish its own global positioning system (GPS) in a bid to reduce its reliance on the US navigation network, officials said on Wednesday.


In September, Japan launched a rocket carrying its first satellite intended to improve GPS systems widely used by Japanese motorists for navigation as well as by aviation and maritime operators.


The government’s space development strategy headquarters, headed by Prime Minister Naoto Kan, is now discussing plans to launch additional satellites, said an official.


“There is a proposal that our country should secure its own GPS as it is now fully relying on the US system,” the official said.


“The new system may also open our opportunity for marketing GPS services to other Asian countries,” he said, adding that the government plans to reach a final decision by August.

A Japanese rocket takes off carrying satellites at the Tanegashima Space Center in Kagoshima prefecture in the south of the country

The Yomiuri Shimbun daily reported on Wednesday that Japan had decided to launch six to seven new satellites to establish its own GPS system by 2014 and 2015 to cover the entire Asia-Pacific region.


By using both the new satellites and American GPS in combination, Japan could raise the degree of precision of car navigation systems 10-fold, the mass-circulation said.


The government plans to charge private GPS operators some 13 billion yen (158 million dollars) per year for using the system as it would cost more than 200 billion yen to launch six satellites, it said.

Source: SGGP

Northern provinces to receive Japan aid for primary school project

In Uncategorized on January 8, 2011 at 4:09 am

The Government of Japan has agreed to a grant of US$191, 900 for the construction of primary schools in the northern provinces of Nam Dinh and Quang Ninh.


Japanese Ambassador to Vietnam Yasuaki Tanizaki, handed US$ 95,183 and US$ 96,717 to Mr. Nguyen Van Dong, Chairman of People’s Committee of Yen Tho Commune in Nam Dinh province and Mr. Nguyen Van Thanh, Chairman of People’s Committee of Xuan Son Commune in Quang Ninh respectively on December 28, 2010 at the Embassy of Japan in Vietnam.


The Yen Tho Primary School in Nam Dinh Province was built in 1975 but was damaged by floods and is in need of repair. Furthermore, classrooms are too small to accommodate enough students, as a result the school has to borrow space in a nearby secondary school and often students study in two shifts.


Xuan Son Primary School in Quang Ninh province was built in 1964 and is now in a dilapidated condition. It has only three classrooms hence can only facilitate children from grade 1-2. The school has to continually borrow space from the nearby secondary school for their 3-5 grade children and pupils have to learn in two shifts.


The People’s Committee, in an effort to improve the condition of both the schools plans to build a new 2 storey 8 classroom building. The Government of Japan grant that supports this project will help towards the purchase of building materials.
 
At a ceremony, Ambassador Tanizaki hoped that through this project, funded by the Government of Japan, learning conditions in Xuan Son Commune would improve considerably and that through this project friendship and mutual understanding between Japan and Vietnam would further deepen.

Source: SGGP

Japan to approve record budget: reports

In Uncategorized on December 24, 2010 at 5:56 am

 The cabinet of Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan is on Friday expected to approve a record budget of 92.40 trillion yen (1.11 trillion dollars) for fiscal 2011, according to local media reports.

The cabinet of Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan (pictured) is on Friday expected to approve a record budget of 92.40 trillion yen (1.11 trillion US dollars) for fiscal 2011, according to local media reports

The budget is expected to be slightly larger than the initial budget for 2010, which stood at 92.30 trillion yen, Jiji Press and Kyodo News said.


The budget will include more than 44 trillion yen from issuing new government bonds, a second straight year that bonds have exceeded tax revenue as a source of income, the reports said.


The draft budget, which covers the financial year starting in April, was expected to be approved at a special cabinet meeting later on Friday.


Kan took office in June promising to slash spending and work towards cutting Japan’s massive public debt, which accounts for nearly 200 percent of gross domestic product, but the state of the economy has complicated his task.

Source: SGGP

Japan 7.4 seabed quake sparks tsunami scare, evacuations

In Uncategorized on December 24, 2010 at 4:31 am

TOKYO, Dec 22, 2010 (AFP) – Scores of villagers on a remote Japanese island chain in the Pacific scrambled for higher ground after a major 7.4-magnitude offshore quake early Wednesday sparked a tsunami alert.


The seabed tremor struck at 2:19 am local time (1719 GMT Tuesday), jolting people out of bed as loudspeakers blared across the islands and authorities warned of the risk of a two-metre (six-foot) high local tsunami.


The tsunami alert was later downgraded and all warnings were lifted five hours after the quake hit near the Ogasawara islands, some 1,000 kilometres (600 miles) south of Tokyo. No injuries or damage were reported.


But about 120 people temporarily evacuated to higher ground on Chichi-shima island and some 50 people on Haha-shima island, Koji Watanabe, a village official on Chichi-shima, said overnight.


“It was the biggest earthquake I have ever felt,” said Masae Nagai, a hotel owner on Chichi-shima, part of the remote archipelago also called the Bonin islands, which has a population of about 2,300.


“We were awakened by the quake. It was scary,” she told AFP by telephone around sunrise, but she added that the walls of her hotel were not cracked and that “things have returned to normal”.


Local authorities on the Ogasawara islands, near Iwo Jima, said they had set up five shelters for local residents but had closed them before sunrise as there were no reports of injuries or property damage.


“The jolts were relatively stronger than those we have felt in the past,” Kenichi Mochida, another Chichi-shima official, told AFP.


“But there was no panic as people acted in an orderly manner,” Mochida said. “Residents who were in the shelters have already returned home.”


The quake hit at a shallow depth of 14 kilometres, 153 kilometres (95 miles) east of Chichi-shima, and was followed by a series of aftershocks measuring between 5.3 and 5.6 which continued into the morning.


About three hours after the quake, a 60 centimetre (two feet) wave was monitored 700 kilometres away at Hachijo-jima, part of the Izu island chain that runs south of Tokyo, the meteorological agency said.


Authorities warned of the risk of further aftershocks.


“We would like people to remain on full alert as subsequent waves could be higher than the first ones,” Hirofumi Yokoyama, a meteorological agency official in charge of tsunami observation, told a Tokyo news conference.


The Ogasawara chain, made up of more than 30 subtropical and tropical islets some 240 kilometres north of Iwo Jima, were put under the control of the United States after World War II, and returned to Japan in 1968.


The remote islands have preserved their unique biological habitats and have been dubbed the “Galapagos of the Orient”.


The Hawaii-based Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said after sounding the initial alert there was no threat of a destructive widespread tsunami and no nearby islands were thought to be in the tsunami danger zone.


But it warned in a bulletin shortly after the quake: “Earthquakes of this size sometimes generate local tsunamis that can be destructive along coasts located within 100 kilometres of the earthquake epicentre.


“Authorities in the region of the epicentre should be aware of this possibility and take appropriate action.”


Around 20 percent of the world’s most powerful earthquakes strike Japan, which sits on the “Ring of Fire” surrounding the Pacific Ocean.


In 1995 a magnitude-7.2 quake in the port city of Kobe killed 6,400 people.


But high building standards, regular drills and a sophisticated tsunami warning system mean that casualties are often minimal.

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Source: SGGP

Japan knife rampage on buses leaves 13 wounded

In Uncategorized on December 17, 2010 at 8:57 am

TOKYO (AFP) – A Japanese man with a knife went on a rampage on two packed buses Friday and wounded 13 people, mostly teenage school children, by slashing and beating them and sparking a panicked stampede.


Police said they had arrested 27-year-old unemployed Yuta Saito after the attacks during the morning rush hour outside Toride railway station, about 40 kilometres (25 miles) northeast of Tokyo.

(AFP) Policemen inspect buses after a Japanese man with a knife went on a rampage on two packed buses Friday

“The suspect got onto the buses and wielded a knife and slashed passengers,” said a local police spokesman after the bloody attack with what media reports said was a 25-centimetre (10-inch) kitchen knife.


Passengers subdued the attacker, who also sustained some injuries.


“I wanted to end my life,” he was later quoted as saying by broadcaster NHK.


The knife attack in Japan, where violent crime is rare, evoked memories of a far bloodier stabbing spree in 2008 when a man killed seven people in Tokyo, running over three with a truck and stabbing four to death.


Friday morning’s attacks left 13 people wounded, none with life-threatening injuries. Among the victims were seven girls and four boys from junior high and high schools and two women aged 49 and 59, reports said.


The man slashed at least five passengers, a local fire department official said. He punched others and triggered a panicked flight from the buses that left the remaining victims injured.


“People screamed: ‘Run. A man with a knife is getting in’. I was scared, so scared,” said one woman, speaking on television.


Another woman said: “There was an uproar. High school students were running out, and I saw a schoolboy bleeding from his forehead.”


The driver of the first bus that was attacked told NHK: “There were some 50 passengers on the bus when the man entered.


“First, I thought it was a fight among students. But then I heard a scream and I thought this isn’t normal. I saw the man wielding a knife, and I quickly opened the door to let the students flee. That’s all I could do.”


The attacks stunned the local community in Ibaraki prefecture.


“It’s an unforgivable act,” said Kenji Takezawa, deputy principal of Edogawa Gakuen school, some of whose students were among the victims.


“We gathered our students in our hall and told them to stay calm,” he said, adding that all afternoon classes were cancelled.


The National Police Agency said this week that the number of criminal cases detected by police in 2010 looks set to total below 1.6 million for the first time in 23 years, Kyodo News reported.


Murders, attempted murders and conspiracy to murder are on track to hit a new post-war low this year, with 988 cases reported by the end of November, down 2.8 percent from last year, the report said.

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Source: SGGP

Japan eco-fair seeks to reach next generation

In Uncategorized on December 16, 2010 at 9:44 am

TOKYO, Dec 16, 2010 (AFP) – Japanese schoolchildren in yellow scarves, blue hats and red caps buzzed through an eco-products fair — a green show-and-tell for high tech companies seeking to enthuse a new generation.


Educational workshops and corporate booths at Eco-Products 2010, one of the country’s largest environmental exhibitions, last week showed off ways to save and sustain the planet that these youngsters will soon inherit.


“Do you know how we can separate different plastics used in a refrigerator after it is crushed?” asked an engineer from Mitsubishi Electric, one of more than 700 exhibitors that filled the large trade fair hall.


A lot of blank faces stared back — but soon the children tried the process for themselves, shaking up clear plastic bottles filled with water and a mixture of scraps of different plastic components.


“If we put the plastic scraps in the water, some float and others sink, so you can make an initial separation,” said the engineer, explaining the concept behind Mitsubishi Electric’s industrial-scale recycling processes.


In the next stage of the experiment, the children spun the remaining scraps in a second, dry bottle, with some bits sticking to the side because of static electricity and others sliding to the bottom.


The theme of the exhibition — held at Tokyo Big Sight, a futuristic harbourside conference centre topped by a giant inverted pyramid — was “Green x Clean Revolution! Expand the power to connect lives to the world”.


The fair drew a record of more than 180,000 visitors in three days, including some 20,000 students from in and around Tokyo, organisers said.


To stay true to its green message, the fair was powered by wind, solar and biomass energy sources, and paper entry tickets were replaced with bar-codes emailed to guests’ cellphones and scanned on the way into the fair.


On display were eco-products from home appliances to hybrid and electric cars, but also energy and chemical applications, and sustainable and non-polluting methods of making paper and other materials.


Also pushing eco-education with games and quizzes were other electronics giants such as Sony, Fujitsu and Toshiba, which showed off green products from mini-wind farms to solar-powered toy cars.


Many of the stands also featured manga and anime cartoons — including hugely popular “future cat” Doraemon — as well as pictures and pronunciation guides for tech jargon to teach their impressionable young audience, many of whom embraced the message.


“The Earth is being degraded and we must fix it,” said one of the students, nine-year-old Ryunosuke Takagi.


“Coming here, I can really learn about new energy sources, and I am really amazed at the techniques that have been devised to better preserve the environment. It’s frankly very interesting,” he said.


Nature, the need to preserve it and, occasionally, its destructive wrath, are ever-present in Japan — a volcanic island-nation that is regularly battered by earthquakes, tsunamis and typhoons.


With precious few energy and mineral resources of its own, Japan was hard hit by the 1973 oil crisis, which sent its companies and citizens scrambling for ways to save on oil, water and electricity.


They have helped make Japan a leader in green technology — from hybrid and electric cars, to light emitting diodes, solar cells, new power systems, and even water-saving electronically-controlled toilets.


Companies have found that ecology sells.


“Our goal is to sell products that are less polluting — in the production phase, during use and when they are recycled,” said Machiko Miyai, director of Panasonic’s green electronics and appliances division.


Another student, Genki Watanabe, 10, said he was captivated by the cutting-edge environmental technologies: “It’s awfully nice to be here, we are taught so many things. I want to come every year.”

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Source: SGGP

Vietnam treasures cooperation with Japan

In Uncategorized on December 16, 2010 at 9:28 am




Vietnam treasures cooperation with Japan


QĐND – Saturday, December 11, 2010, 21:6 (GMT+7)


Vietnam always attaches importance to developing cooperation with Japan, especially in economics, trade and investment, and creates favourable conditions for Japanese investors to operate effectively in the country. 

Politburo member and standing member of the Secretariat of the Party Central Committee Truong Tan Sang made the statement while receiving President of the Japan-Vietnam Economic Committee Kato Susumu and President of the Japan Federation of Economic Organizations (JFEO) Kyohei Takahashi in Hanoi on December 10. 


Mr Sang spoke highly of the results of the implementation of the Japan-Vietnam Joint Initiative as well as active contributions by the JFEO and the Japanese Embassy in Vietnam to building a safe and attractive investment environment in the country. 


He expressed his belief that the Japanese side will continue to closely coordinate with Vietnamese authorized agencies to effectively implement agreed cooperation contents. 


For their part, the Japanese guests emphasized the positive results of a conference on the Japan-Vietnam Joint Initiative in the third phase (WT1-3) with proposals to improve Vietnam’s competitiveness and expand Japanese investment in Vietnam, including stabilizing the macro economy and improving tax policies, human resource training quality and transport systems as well as developing support industries. 


The two presidents said the Japan-Vietnam Joint Initiative was a practical cooperation mechanism that should be effectively implemented, helping improve the quality of the economic and trade cooperation between the two countries’ businesses.

Source: VNA

Source: QDND

Japan says N. Korea’s new uranium enrichment ‘unacceptable’

In Uncategorized on November 22, 2010 at 10:05 am

Japan funds dormitory for disabled children

In Uncategorized on November 20, 2010 at 8:13 am