Bangkok Post

World’s oldest living man passes away at age 112

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TOKYO: Chitetsu Watanabe, a 112-yearold Japanese man recognised by Guinness World Records as the world’s oldest living man earlier this month, died on Sunday at the nursing home where he resided, his family said.

Watanabe, who was born on March 5, 1907, died on Sunday night at the facility in Joetsu, Niigata Prefecture. A funeral will be held on Friday.

Eleven days earlier on Feb 12, Watanabe had pumped his fist and cited “laughter” as the secret to his longevity as he was handed a certificat­e by a Guinness World Records official at his nursing home.

According to his eldest son’s wife Yoko, 81, Watanabe fell ill soon after and became unable to eat. She said that when she told him to “hang in there” during a visit on Sunday afternoon, he opened his eyes slightly and nodded.

Watanabe was recognised as the oldest living man after the previous holder of the title, Masazo Nonaka from Japan’s northernmo­st main island of Hokkaido, died on Jan 20 last year at age 113.

Born to a family of farmers in Joetsu, Watanabe moved to Taiwan at the age of 20 and spent 18 years there. He returned to Japan after World War II and worked as a civil servant in his hometown until his retirement. He had five children, 12 grandchild­ren, 16 great-grandchild­ren and one great-great-grandchild, according to his family.

Following Watanabe’s death, there are currently no male supercente­narians recognised by the US-based Gerontolog­y Research Group.

Japan is one of the world’s top countries for longevity. Kane Tanaka, a 117-year-old resident of Fukuoka Prefecture, is recognised by Guinness World Records as the world’s oldest living person following the death in July 2018 of another Japanese woman, Chiyo Miyako from Kanagawa Prefecture, at 117.

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