
Zwei Menschen kamen ums Leben, als Zement ein 12 Meter tiefes unterirdisches Rohr in Kusatsu Shiga überschwemmte. Bei beiden Opfern handelte es sich vermutlich um Auszubildende des Technical Intern Training Program
https://news.yahoo.co.jp/articles/2e9e778026b741ca9f2db5d6cbcf334ae54b43a4
13 Kommentare
Should interns really be 12 meter unground? I’m confused.
RIP,what an awful way to go. Why put trainees in 12m deep underground ? Sounds like a risky process which experienced workers should handle.
Prolly a ‚black kigyou‘ with lax osha measures.Must come with severe punishments but wouldn’t hold my breath
So many unknowns. Was there a language barrier? Did someone take safety shortcuts? Could the accident be prevented if all the workers were Japanese veterans?
I suppose we’ll know soon enough
The amount of people being thrown into jobs they weren’t supposed to be doing is alarmingly “there’s something deeply wrong in the hiring and companies system feeding from this business and no one is actually doing something about it because there are bigger interests from bigger fishes who have big friendships with big politicians”. Or something around those lines.
The worksite heads and trainers should be investigated and/or prosecuted
Drowning in cement is a terrible way to die.
And how do they reclaim the bodies and then clean them up for the family?
Poor bastards.
Kind of like when Vietnamese trainees were allegedly misled into cleanup work related to Fukushima. Exploiting poor foreign workers has always been easier.
The fact that this tragedy not even being on main pages , not having the fraction of coverage of the crappy baseball coach slapping his daughter , shows the real journalism is dead in this country
Not a lot about this in the Japanese print media. Mostly YT videos.
kamikaze interns
Headline should be Japan exploits foreign workers in worst way..
TIT-P trainees?
**If Sanseito wants to gain more votes, they should probably compete for these tough manual labor jobs themselves, or find ways to recruit more Japanese people into these kinds of jobs, instead of driving around in cars or sitting comfortably in air-conditioned rooms.**