Deccan Chronicle

112-yr-old longevity Guinness record holder dies

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Tokyo, Feb. 25: A Japanese man who received his certificat­e as the world’s oldest man with a raised fist and big smiles earlier this month has died at 112. Guinness World Records had given the certificat­e to Chitetsu Watanabe on February 12. The organisati­on and the funeral home handling his services confirmed Tuesday he had died Sunday.

No cause was given. He had not been able to eat recently and developed a fever and difficulty breathing a couple of days before his death, Japan’s nationally circulated newspaper Mainichi reported, citing family sources.

Watanabe is survived by his five children, 12 grandchild­ren, 16 great-grandchild­ren and one greatgreat-grandchild, Mainichi said.

Watanabe’s family did not immediatel­y answer calls to their home. Watanabe was born in 1907 and worked in Taiwan for 18 years. After returning to Niigata, northern Japan, he worked for the prefectura­l government until retirement.

He grew fruit and vegetables on the family farm and loved cream puffs and bonsai, the Japanese traditiona­l art of raising small sculpted trees. He used to say the secret to longevity was to keep smiling.

Guinness in Japan offered its condolence­s to his family. The oldest living person is also Japanese, Kane Tanaka, a 117-year-old woman.

● JAPANESE MAN Chitetsu Watanabe had received his certificat­e as the world’s oldest man with a raised fist and big smiles earlier this month.

 ?? AFP ?? A file photo of 112-year-old Japanese man Chitetsu Watanabe as he poses next to a calligraph­y in Japanese that reads ‘Number One’ after he was awarded as the world’s oldest living male, in Joetsue. —
AFP A file photo of 112-year-old Japanese man Chitetsu Watanabe as he poses next to a calligraph­y in Japanese that reads ‘Number One’ after he was awarded as the world’s oldest living male, in Joetsue. —

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