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Kyodo News Digest: July 6, 2025
Kyodo News Digest: July 6, 2025

Kyodo News

time06-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Kyodo News

Kyodo News Digest: July 6, 2025

TOKYO - The following is the latest list of selected news summaries by Kyodo News. ---------- Japan right-wing leader's remarks on foreigners may be hate speech FUKUOKA - Naoki Hyakuta, leader of the minor right-wing opposition Conservative Party of Japan, made remarks on Saturday that could be construed as hate speech, criticizing foreign workers during a national election campaign. Foreign workers "disrespect Japanese culture, ignore the rules, assault Japanese people, and steal their belongings," Hyakuta, a former novelist, said in a stump speech ahead of the July 20 House of Councillors election. ---------- Japan's 1st rocket launch with foreign capital delayed by typhoon KUSHIRO, Japan - Japan's first launch of a rocket developed with foreign capital has been delayed from Sunday due to an approaching typhoon, the operator of a private spaceport in Hokkaido said. Space Cotan Co., which operates the spaceport in Japan's northernmost prefecture, said the launch has been postponed to the following Saturday or later, as the typhoon could hinder ship-based monitoring and debris recovery in the event of an emergency. ---------- About 80% of Japan local gov'ts have used drones at disaster sites TOKYO - Around 80 percent of Japan's 47 prefectures and 20 major cities have used drones at disaster sites, a Kyodo News survey showed Saturday, underscoring growing recognition of unmanned aircraft as an effective disaster response tool. Momentum for drone utilization has been spurred in part by their role in last year's earthquake that struck the hard-to-reach Noto Peninsula in central Japan, where they delivered supplies to isolated communities and assessed damage from the air. ---------- Monkey King stars as China's 1st Legoland opens in Shanghai SHANGHAI - China's first Legoland opened in Shanghai on Saturday, featuring eight areas themed on such characters as the Monkey King from the classic Chinese novel "Journey to the West" as well as an expansive replica of the local cityscape made of Lego bricks. The amusement park spanning 318,000 square meters in the suburbs of Shanghai is the 11th globally. Visitors can enjoy more than 75 interactive rides, shows and attractions in addition to thousands of models made with over 85 million Lego bricks. ---------- Quake not connected to viral manga prediction: Japan weather agency TOKYO - Japan's weather agency said an earthquake that rattled small islands in the country's southwest on Saturday was in no way connected to a manga author's disaster prediction that went viral on social media and even affected inbound tourism. "It is absolutely a coincidence. There is no causal connection," Ayataka Ebita of the Japan Meteorological Agency said at a press conference on the day the prediction was supposed to materialize -- a claim authorities have repeatedly dismissed as a "baseless rumor." ---------- Boy with measles visited Osaka Expo, officials urge caution OSAKA - A boy from Kanagawa Prefecture near Tokyo who tested positive for measles visited the World Exposition in Osaka on June 21, local governments said Saturday, urging other visitors to exercise caution due to possible exposure. The local governments said the boy, identified only as being between the ages of 10 and 19, may have come into contact with an unspecified number of people at the venue. He was there from around 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., visiting at least eight pavilions, including those of the European Union and Cambodia. ---------- Rugby: Test debutants spur Japan to 24-19 comeback win over Wales KITAKYUSHU, Japan - Debutants Ichigo Nakakusu and Halatoa Vailea scored second-half tries and flyhalf Lee Seung Sin was flawless with the boot as Japan came back for a 24-19 win against Wales in the first match of their two-test series on Saturday. Both sides gave error-strewn performances, but it was the hosts who rallied late to overcome a 19-7 halftime deficit and open their international season with a gritty victory at a sweltering Mikuni World Stadium Kitakyushu in southwestern Japan's Fukuoka Prefecture. ---------- Video: Lantern festival takes place in quake-hit central Japan town

Monkey King stars as world's largest Legoland opens in Shanghai
Monkey King stars as world's largest Legoland opens in Shanghai

The Mainichi

time05-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Mainichi

Monkey King stars as world's largest Legoland opens in Shanghai

SHANGHAI (Kyodo) -- The world's largest Legoland opened in Shanghai on Saturday, featuring eight areas themed on such characters as the Monkey King from the classic Chinese novel "Journey to the West" as well as an expansive replica of the local cityscape made of Lego bricks. The amusement park spanning 318,000 square meters in the suburbs of Shanghai is the first Legoland resort in China and the 11th globally. Visitors can enjoy more than 75 interactive rides, shows and attractions in addition to thousands of models made with over 85 million Lego bricks. The Lego models include pandas and the Bund, Shanghai's iconic waterfront promenade. The resort also features a hotel with 250 Lego-themed rooms. Shi Shuyi, 32, who traveled two hours from Changzhou in Jiangsu Province to reach Shanghai Legoland during a trial opening in late June, rode the same attraction three times with her 4-year-old son. "I want to go to a Legoland in Nagoya as well," Shi said. The other Legoland resorts are located in Britain, Denmark, Germany, South Korea, Malaysia, the United Arab Emirates and the United States. In China, two more Legoland resorts are under construction, one in Shenzhen in the southern Guangdong Province and the other near Chengdu, capital of the southwestern Sichuan Province.

Monkey King stars as world's largest Legoland opens in Shanghai
Monkey King stars as world's largest Legoland opens in Shanghai

Kyodo News

time05-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Kyodo News

Monkey King stars as world's largest Legoland opens in Shanghai

SHANGHAI - The world's largest Legoland opened in Shanghai on Saturday, featuring eight areas themed on such characters as the Monkey King from the classic Chinese novel "Journey to the West" as well as an expansive replica of the local cityscape made of Lego bricks. The amusement park spanning 318,000 square meters in the suburbs of Shanghai is the first Legoland resort in China and the 11th globally. Visitors can enjoy more than 75 interactive rides, shows and attractions in addition to thousands of models made with over 85 million Lego bricks. The Lego models include pandas and the Bund, Shanghai's iconic waterfront promenade. The resort also features a hotel with 250 Lego-themed rooms. Shi Shuyi, 32, who traveled two hours from Changzhou in Jiangsu Province to reach Shanghai Legoland during a trial opening in late June, rode the same attraction three times with her 4-year-old son. "I want to go to a Legoland in Nagoya as well," Shi said. The other Legoland resorts are located in Britain, Denmark, Germany, South Korea, Malaysia, the United Arab Emirates and the United States. In China, two more Legoland resorts are under construction, one in Shenzhen in the southern Guangdong Province and the other near Chengdu, capital of the southwestern Sichuan Province.

Dazu Rock Carvings: The Last Monument of World Grotto Art
Dazu Rock Carvings: The Last Monument of World Grotto Art

Yahoo

time12-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Dazu Rock Carvings: The Last Monument of World Grotto Art

CHONGQING, China, June 12, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Located in southwest China's Chongqing Municipality, the Dazu Rock Carvings have held UNESCO World Heritage status since 1999. Sprawled across 75 recognized cultural relics protection zones, the site shelters over 50,000 breathtaking statues. As one of the eight great grottoes of the world, Dazu Rock Carvings epitomize the pinnacle of world grotto art dating from the 9th to the mid-13th century from different aspects. Celebrated as "the last monument of world grotto art," Dazu, together with Mogao, Yungang, Longmen and other grottoes, constitute the complete history of Chinese grotto art. Recent initiatives have rejuvenated Dazu's cultural presence. In an 8K dome theater, the Thousand‑Armed Guanyin's benevolent gaze fills the screen, inviting viewers into a celestial embrace. The dance‑drama Tian Xia Dazu (For an Eternal Homeland — Dazu Rock Carvers' Legacy) animates the carvers' epic tale with immersive stagecraft. Even video games now feature Dazu's statues, their contours and stories woven into virtual adventures. This thousand‑year‑old sanctuary is stepping firmly into the present. The 8k full-dome film Dazu Rock Carvings awakens all 50,000 statues in layered streams of live footage and CG animation, transforming the physical space into a digital world. Reclined within the dome, audiences look up through a canopy of digital stars, accompanied by haunting Buddhist chants and soulful light interplay. Time‑weathered halos reform around sculpted robes — reborn in pixels yet rooted in antiquity. In Black Myth: Wukong, the Monkey King cleaves through primordial chaos with his magical staff, the thousand-armed Guanyin of Dazu Rock Carvings smiles serenely amid dimensional rifts — holding a flower between her fingers. In the digital Buddhist world, gamers traverse a meticulously rendered Dazu, encountering Buddhist iconography amid mythic quests — an interactive bridge to Eastern philosophy. Meanwhile, CCTV's China in Intangible Cultural Heritage devoted its Chongqing episode to Dazu, describing the site's living legacy as "like stars falling all over mountains and rivers in Chongqing," rekindling collective memory through the screen. On stage, dancers echo the chiseling rhythms of bygone artisans. Silk‑flowing costumes swirl as performers burst from stone walls, transforming history into kinetic art. This isn't a static reenactment — it's a cultural translation, transmitting the carvers' spirit through flesh, motion, and emotion. The Dazu Rock Carvings are being revitalized through digital technology and cultural innovation. Digital projection breathes new life into carvings in the virtual spaces, enabling dialogues across time and space; Stage arts, meanwhile, imbue them with contemporary vitality. Technology extends their reach, while culture revitalizes their essence. Through this symbiosis, this millennium-old treasure resonates with the modern era, radiating timeless splendor. Photo - - - View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Dazu Rock Carvings

Tourism ministry shares details of Cambodia-China Tourism Year events
Tourism ministry shares details of Cambodia-China Tourism Year events

The Star

time11-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Star

Tourism ministry shares details of Cambodia-China Tourism Year events

PHNOM PENH: In a bid to strengthen cultural and tourism ties between Cambodia and China, the Ministry of Tourism has laid out ambitious plans for the 'Cambodia-China Tourism Year 2025'. The initiative, a result of Chinese President Xi Jinping's state visit to Cambodia in mid-April, aims to attract a larger number of Chinese tourists and deepen bilateral relationship between the two nations. Chuk Chumno, director-general of Tourism Development and International Cooperation at the Ministry of Tourism, confirmed the launch of this significant campaign. He shared details about the lineup of major events that will be organised as part of the 'Cambodia-China Tourism Year 2025'. The events will showcase the rich cultural heritage and tourism potential of both countries. 'These include an international music festival, an international street art festival, a mixed martial arts festival, food diplomacy promotion and the Cambodia-China International Tourism Conference, among others,' said Chumno. One of the highlights of this extensive programme is the tourism business matching forum, which is expected to facilitate deeper collaboration in the tourism sector. The initiative will also feature the exchange of tourism goodwill ambassadors and promote Cambodia-China film tourism through targeted activities, including a planned visit by a Chinese media delegation. Plans have also been laid out for an overland expedition from China which will culminate with a tour of the Kingdom, although details of the route were not available. Chumno elaborated on the planned international music festival, which will be held either in Siem Reap province or Phnom Penh. 'It will serve as a cultural exchange between the two countries, showcasing the diversity of our artistic traditions,' he said. In addition, a street art festival will feature a variety of performances, including traditional Cambodian Bassac theatre and Chinese opera, to engage audiences with both cultures. A unique element of this collaboration is the special performance planned between two iconic characters from both nations' folklore: the Monkey King Hanuman from Cambodia and the Monkey King Sun Wukong from China. 'We are curious to learn about the Chinese Monkey King and they are interested to know more about Hanuman,' Chumno explained, emphasising the shared cultural heritage. In addition to the arts, martial arts will also play a key role in the exchange. Cambodia and China both boast rich traditions in martial arts, including Cambodia's kun lbokator, yuthakun khom and Kun Khmer, and China's kung fu, Shaolin, and tai chi. These traditions will be highlighted throughout the year as part of the ongoing cultural dialogue. To further attract Chinese tourists, the tourism ministry has aligned these events with China's major holidays, such as the Chinese New Year and the October Golden Week. Tourism minister Huot Hak, the governor of China's Jiangsu province and other Chinese officials chose the third quarter of the year for the events to ensure that the Chinese public has the opportunity to explore Cambodia during their vacation period. A key aspect of the campaign will be food diplomacy, with both countries exchanging regional culinary delights. 'Cambodia will showcase its traditional dishes, including amok noodles, Khmer desserts and a variety of Khmer cakes,' said Chumno. China will present its eight regional dishes, providing a unique opportunity to celebrate and promote both cultures' food traditions. The cultural exchange and tourism collaboration was officially inaugurated at the Chaktomuk Conference Hall in Phnom Penh on May 23. The opening ceremony included a special art performance, 'The Beauty of Cambodia-Jiangsu', which was held from May 23-25. This event marked the beginning of a series of planned cultural showcases, strengthening the tourism links between the two nations. The event aims to build on the existing relationship between the two countries, which has seen a notable rise in tourist exchanges. In the first four months of 2025, Cambodia welcomed 380,000 Chinese visitors — a 48 per cent increase from the same period in 2024. Last year saw Cambodia welcome a total of 6,610,592 international tourists, including 848,952 from China, marking a 55 per cent rise compared to the previous year. - The Phnom Penh Post/ANN

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