News On Japan

2 expressway speed limits to be raised to 120 kph

Jan 31 (NHK) - Japan's National Police Agency is to raise the speed limits on parts of 2 expressways to 120 kilometers per hour in March on a trial basis.

The new limits will apply to sections of the Shin-Tomei Expressway in Shizuoka Prefecture, central Japan, and the Tohoku Expressway in Iwate Prefecture, northeastern Japan.

Japan's expressway speed limit has remained at 100 kilometers per hour since the country's first expressway opened in 1963.

The police agency in 2017 tentatively raised the speed limits on a section of about 50 kilometers on the Shin-Tomei and another of about 27 kilometers on the Tohoku to 110 kilometers per hour.

The agency surveyed the number of traffic accidents resulting in injury or death that occurred on the sections in the year after the change.

The survey showed the number of such accidents was 10 -- down 8 from the previous year.

The agency also found little change in average speed of vehicles on the sections. It concluded that in terms of traffic safety there was no specific obstacle to raising the limits.

It decided to raise them to 120 kilometers per hour, the basis for the expressways' design in terms of highway safety.

The agency plans to keep the new limits in place for at least one year, examine the results of the trial and decide whether to take the same measure on other expressways.

Source: ANNnewsCH

News On Japan
POPULAR NEWS

Ishiba Shigeru has been elected leader of Japan's main ruling Liberal Democratic Party. The former LDP Secretary-General is now virtually assured of becoming the next prime minister. (NHK)

The Hakamada case, a decades-long legal struggle, ended with an acquittal for Iwao Hakamada (88), who, along with his sister Hideko, fought for 58 years. Hakamada was suspected of the 1966 murder of a miso company executive’s family.

A Japanese government information-gathering satellite has successfully been put into a planned orbit around Earth. (NHK)

Japan's National Police Agency is introducing new patrol cars equipped with red lights designed to assist people with hearing impairments, flashing differently depending on whether the vehicle is on an emergency run or a routine patrol.

Yamagata University, which has been conducting research on the Nazca geoglyphs in Peru, announced the discovery of over 300 new geoglyphs, depicting a variety of subjects, including humans and animals.

MEDIA CHANNELS
         

MORE Society NEWS

Four Japanese men have been caught at an Australian airport on suspicion of trying to smuggle a large amount of cigarettes into the country. (NHK)

Japan's National Police Agency is introducing new patrol cars equipped with red lights designed to assist people with hearing impairments, flashing differently depending on whether the vehicle is on an emergency run or a routine patrol.

The former representative of the martial arts event company 'Breaking Down,' Yugo Itagaki, along with two other individuals, has been arrested by the Tokyo Metropolitan Police on charges of defrauding a company executive out of 80 million yen.

Strange incidents involving a woman placing black tape on outlets have been occurring around zoos in the Izu area of Shizuoka Prefecture.

As the number of households with Buddhist altars continues to decline, largely due to space limitations in modern housing, wholesalers of Buddhist goods are struggling with unsold inventory.

Twelve individuals involved in the traditional 'Ageuma Shinji' horse event held last year at Tado Shrine in Kuwana City, Mie Prefecture, have been referred to prosecutors on allegations of violent behavior toward horses, including forcing them up steep slopes.

A 39-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of attacking a female university student by covering her head with a bag and attempting to strangle her.

A group of Humboldt penguins at Tokuyama Zoo in Yamaguchi Prefecture has captured people's hearts, as they chase a butterfly that had accidentally flown into their pool enclosure.