News On Japan

Japanese figure skating icon Hanyu to retire from competition

Jul 19 (Nikkei) - Japanese figure skating superstar Yuzuru Hanyu on Tuesday announced that he will retire from competitive skating, though suggested will continue to perform at ice shows.

"I will continue to be a professional athlete and will no longer be compared to other skaters as a competitor," the charismatic 27-year-old said at a news conference in Tokyo. "I don't intend to enter competitions in the future."

News of his decision was reported by local media in the morning, after his management company said on Monday that he would hold a news conference.

Hanyu won back-to-back gold medals at the Olympics in Sochi in 2014 and Pyeongchang in 2018. In 2020, he won the Four Continents Championships, becoming the first man to win all major international competitions, including the Olympics and World Figure Skating Championships, at junior and senior levels.

At the Beijing Olympics earlier this year, Hanyu was aiming to become the first male figure skater to win three straight Olympic golds in 94 years, even though he was hampered for most of the season by an ankle injury that had largely prevented him from competing. ...continue reading

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Bear attacks are reaching unprecedented levels across Japan, with a record 12 fatalities so far this year as sightings continue daily from mountain towns to city centers, disrupting schools and local institutions.

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The Liberal Democratic Party, Nippon Ishin no Kai, and Komeito have reached an agreement on the framework for Japan’s new free high school tuition program, which will begin in fiscal 2026. Under the plan, tuition support for private full-time high schools will be capped at 457,000 yen, while correspondence courses will have an upper limit of 337,000 yen.

Bear sightings have surged across Japan, and in Gifu Prefecture’s Shirakawa Village—home to the UNESCO World Heritage site of Shirakawa-go—local authorities held a nighttime drill on October 28th to prepare for possible emergencies.

The Japan Mobility Show opened on October 29th, marking the start of Japan’s premier automotive exhibition, where foreign manufacturers are stepping up their entry into the country’s growing electric vehicle (EV) market.

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