
A Man Airlifted from Japan's Mount Fuji Returns to the Slope Days Later and Is Rescued Again
Mount Fuji is viewed, Jan. 29, 2021, in Tokyo.
TOKYO (AP) — A climber airlifted with altitude sickness from near the peak of Japan's Mount Fuji last week returned to the slope and was rescued for a second time just four days later, authorities said Monday.
Officials urged people to be aware of the harsh conditions at the country's tallest peak during its off-season.
The climber was identified only as a 27-year-old Chinese student living in Japan. He made an emergency call on April 22 and was airlifted after developing symptoms of altitude sickness, police said, adding that his climbing irons also were damaged.
On Saturday, he returned to the mountain's Fujinomiya trail about 3,000 meters (nearly 10,000 feet) above sea level to look for his cell phone and other belongings left behind, Shizuoka prefectural police said. Another climber found him there unable to move after he apparently developed altitude sickness for a second time, police said.
The mountain's hiking trails are officially open only from July to early September, but there is no penalty for hiking off-season. There also is no charge or penalty when a climber needs to be rescued, but the Chinese student's case prompted an uproar on social media and generated calls for him to be charged, at least for his second rescue.
The Shizuoka police urged all climbers to use caution, noting that the mountain has low temperatures and is covered in snow even in spring.
The 3,776-meter-high (12,388-foot-high ) mountain was designated a UNESCO World Cultural Heritage site in 2013. A symbol of Japan, the mountain called 'Fujisan' used to be a place of pilgrimage and is increasingly popular among hikers today.
To control overcrowding and risks from rushed overnight climbing through rocky slopes to see the sunrise, local authorities last year introduced an entry fee and cap on the number of entrants on the most popular trail and will introduce similar rules on other main trails this year.

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Yomiuri Shimbun
2 hours ago
- Yomiuri Shimbun
Pope Thrills Hundreds of Thousands of Young Catholics at Holy Year Youth Festival
ROME (AP) — Pope Leo XIV urged hundreds of thousands of young people on Saturday to have the courage to make radical choices to do good, as he presided over his first big encounter with the next generation of Catholics during the highlight of the Vatican's 2025 Holy Year. Leo encountered a sea of people as he arrived by helicopter at the Tor Vergata field on Rome's outskirts for a vigil service of the Jubilee of Youth. Hailing from early 150 countries, the pilgrims had set up campsites on the field for the night, as misting trucks and water cannons spritzed them to cool them down from the 30C (85F) temperatures. Leo displayed his fluency in speaking to the kids in Spanish, Italian and English about the dangers of social media, the value of true friendship and the need to have courage to make radical choices like marriage or religious vows. 'Friendship can really change the world. Friendship is a path to peace,' he said. 'How much the world needs missionaries of the Gospel who are witnesses of justice and peace!' But history's first American pope also alerted them to some tragic news: Two young people who had made the pilgrimage to Rome had died, one reportedly of cardiac arrest, while a third was hospitalized, Leo told the crowd during the vigil service. Leo was to return to the field for an early morning Mass on Sunday morning to close out the celebration. Rome welcomes the throngs For the past week, these bands of young Catholics from around the world have poured into Rome for their special Jubilee celebration, in a Holy Year in which 32 million people are expected to descend on the Vatican to participate in a centuries-old pilgrimage to the seat of Catholicism. The young people have been traipsing down cobblestoned streets in color-coordinated T-shirts, praying the Rosary and singing hymns with guitars, bongo drums and tambourines shimmying alongside. Using their flags as tarps to shield them from the sun, they have taken over entire piazzas for Christian rock concerts and inspirational talks, and stood for hours at the Circus Maximus to confess their sins to 1,000 priests offering the sacrament in a dozen different languages. 'It is something spiritual, that you can experience only every 25 years,' said Francisco Michel, a pilgrim from Mexico. 'As a young person, having the chance to live this meting with the pope I feel it is a spiritual growth.' A mini World Youth Day, 25 years later It all has the vibe of a World Youth Day, the Catholic Woodstock festival that St. John Paul II inaugurated and made famous in Rome in 2000 at the very same Tor Vergata field. Then, before an estimated 2 million people, John Paul told the young pilgrims they were the 'sentinels of the morning' at the dawn of the third millennium. Officials had initially expected 500,000 youngsters this weekend, but Leo and organizers from the stage said the number could reach 1 million. The Vatican didn't immediately provide a final estimate. 'It's a bit messed up, but this is what is nice about the Jubilee,' said Chloe Jobbour, a 19-year-old Lebanese Catholic who was in Rome with a group of more than 200 young members of the Community of the Beatitudes, a France-based charismatic group. She said, for example, that it had taken two hours to get dinner at a KFC overwhelmed by orders Friday night. The Salesian school that offered her group housing is an hour away by bus. But Jobbour, like many in Rome this week, didn't mind the discomfort: It's all part of the experience. 'I don't expect it to be better than that. I expected it this way,' she said, as members of her group gathered on church steps near the Vatican to sing and pray Saturday morning before heading out to Tor Vergata. Romans inconvenienced, but tolerant Those Romans who didn't flee the onslaught have been inconvenienced by the additional strain on the city's notoriously insufficient public transport system. Residents are sharing social media posts of outbursts by Romans at kids flooding subway platforms and crowding bus stops that have delayed and complicated their commutes to work. But other Romans have welcomed the enthusiasm the youngsters have brought. Premier Giorgia Meloni offered a video welcome, marveling at the 'extraordinary festival of faith, joy and hope' that the young people had created. 'I think it's marvelous,' said Rome hairdresser Rina Verdone, who lives near the Tor Vergata field and woke up Saturday to find a gaggle of police outside her home as part of the massive, 4,000-strong operation mounted to keep the peace. 'You think the faith, the religion is in difficulty, but this is proof that it's not so.' Verdone had already made plans to take an alternate route home Saturday afternoon, that would require an extra kilometer (half-mile) walk, because she feared the 'invasion' of kids in her neighborhood would disrupt her usual bus route. But she said she was more than happy to make the sacrifice. 'You think of invasion as something negative. But this is a positive invasion,' she said.


The Mainichi
a day ago
- The Mainichi
Indonesia's Mount Lewotobi Laki Laki erupts again, spewing giant ash plumes miles away
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) -- Mount Lewotobi Laki Laki, one of Indonesia's most active volcanoes, erupted for a second straight day, sending a column of volcanic materials and ash up to 18 kilometers (11 miles) into the sky early Saturday and blanketing villages with debris. No casualties were immediately reported. Another eruption Friday evening had sent clouds of ash up to 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) high and had lit up the night sky with glowing lava and bolts of lightning. The two eruptions happened in a span of less than five hours. Indonesia's Geology Agency recorded an avalanche of searing gas clouds mixed with rocks and lava traveling up to 5 kilometers (3 miles) down the slopes of the mountain. Drone observations showed deep movement of magma, setting off tremors that registered on seismic monitors. Volcanic material, including hot thumb-sized gravel, was thrown up to 8 kilometers (5 miles) from the crater, covering nearby villages and towns with thick volcanic residue, the agency said. It asked residents to be vigilant about heavy rainfall that could trigger lava flows in rivers originating from the volcano. Saturday's eruption was one of Indonesia's largest since 2010 when Mount Merapi, the country's most volatile volcano, erupted on the densely populated island of Java. That eruption killed more than 350 people and forced hundreds of thousands to evacuate. It also came less than a month after a major eruption on July 7 forced the delay or cancelation of dozens of flights at Bali's Ngurah Rai airport, and covered roads and rice fields with thick, gray mud and rocks. Lewotobi Laki Laki, a 1,584-meter (5,197-foot) volcano on the remote island of Flores, has been at the highest alert level since it erupted on June 18, and an exclusion zone has been doubled to a 7-kilometer (4.3-mile) radius as eruptions became more frequent. The Indonesian government has permanently relocated thousands of residents after a series of eruptions there killed nine people and destroyed thousands of homes in November. Indonesia is an archipelago of more than 280 million people with frequent seismic activity. It has 120 active volcanoes and sits along the "Ring of Fire," a horseshoe-shaped series of seismic fault lines encircling the Pacific Basin.


Asahi Shimbun
3 days ago
- Asahi Shimbun
Foreign tourists received tsunami warnings but need better alerts
The Sendai Tourism Convention and International Association posts information about tsunami alerts in easy-to-understand Japanese on its Facebook account on July 30. (Chika Yamamoto) When tsunami alerts went out across a wide area of Japan on July 30, many foreign tourists were left in the dark to the threat and the recommended course of action due to the language barrier. Eugénie Decaux, 21, who was visiting Shirahama in Wakayama Prefecture from France, said, 'I had trouble finding information about the tsunami because I could only find it in Japanese at first.' A woman from the Philippines who was visiting Kamakura in Kanagawa Prefecture said she received an emergency message about the tsunami warning. However, she said, 'The English announcement after the siren was very short and there was little information, so it was scary.' At first, she said she did not think it was a big deal, but after researching on the internet and seeing the staff at the temple she was visiting in a panic, she realized the gravity of the situation. The tsunami alerts issued after a powerful earthquake originating near Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula sent foreign tourists scrambling for safety as well. On social media, multiple videos were seen posted by tourists from overseas, showing them heading to higher ground and evacuation centers alongside with residents. From the Japanese side, there were many initiatives to convey information to foreigners in multiple languages and in easy-to-understand Japanese. The Sendai Tourism Convention and International Association, located in the capital of Miyagi Prefecture on the Pacific coast where a tsunami warning was issued, posted evacuation calls on X and Facebook in English, Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese and Nepali. The organization also communicated in easy Japanese with warnings such as 'A big wave is coming' and "Please escape to a high place.' Television stations displayed subtitles in hiragana within their programs, using phrases such as "tsunami" and "run away." There were also examples of displaying English text reading "EVACUATION TSUNAMI." An app called 'Safety tips' provides disaster information for foreign travelers in 15 languages, including English, Chinese and Tagalog. The Japan Tourism Agency supervised the creation of the app. The Japan Meteorological Agency's website also disseminates the latest tsunami information in 15 languages. However, some tourists said such efforts were still not enough. According to the Immigration Services Agency, approximately 36.78 million foreigners entered Japan last year, the highest number on record. As of the end of last year, the number of foreign residents also reached a record high of about 3.77 million. Isao Nakamura, a professor at Toyo University specializing in disaster information studies, points out the importance of "push-type" information provision, such as area emails and emergency radio messages sent by local governments through mobile phone companies, which reach users without them having to search for it. He also said that there is a study indicating that emergency radios are effective as a medium for conveying tsunami information. 'In areas with many foreign residents, it is necessary to make disaster prevention radios multilingual,' he said. He also said that explaining the difference between tsunami advisories and tsunami warnings is difficult. 'It is important to use illustrations and think of expressions that are easy to understand,' he said.