The Borneo Post

After storms, quakes, Japan picks ‘disaster’ as symbol for 2018

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TOKYO: Japan yesterday selected the Chinese character for ‘ disaster’ as its ‘ defining symbol’ for 2018, a year that saw the country hit by deadly f loods, earthquake­s and storms.

Japanese TV stations broadcast the annual announceme­nt live, with Seihan Mori, master of the ancient Kiyomizu temple in Kyoto, writing the character on a huge white panel with an inksoaked calligraph­y brush.

“Many people experience­d the threat of natural disasters such as earthquake­s, heavy rain, typhoons and heatwaves,” the Japan Kanji Aptitude Testing Foundation, which organises the event, said in a press release.

At the end of every year, the general public votes for the Chinese character they think embodies the key news and events of the previous 12 months.

A total of 20,858 people out of 193,214 chose the character ‘disaster’.

The country was hit by a series of natural disasters in 2018, starting with massive f looding in western regions that killed over 200 people.

It was also battered by a typhoon that inundated a major internatio­nal airport, and an earthquake in the north that triggered landslides and disrupted supply lines.

An ‘ unpreceden­ted’ heatwave also struck the country over the summer, causing more than 150 deaths, with over 80,000 people hospitalis­ed.

The series of disasters hit GDP, with the country’s economy shrinking in the three months to September.

“I was reminded of how scary

Many people experience­d the threat of natural disasters such as earthquake­s, heavy rain, typhoons and heatwaves. Japan Kanji Aptitude Testing Foundation

natural disasters are,” said a 42-year- old woman from quakebatte­red northern Hokkaido, who was cited in a statement from the organiser.

“The power went out immediatel­y after the quake and I spent days for the first time without electricit­y,” she said.

Last year, Japan picked ‘ North’ following a series of North Korean missile launches, and the year before the choice was ‘gold’, in celebratio­n of the success of Japanese athletes at the Rio Olympics.

Chinese characters, or Kanji, are widely used in Japanese, along with other types of alphabets. — AFP

 ??  ?? Seihan Mori uses an ink-soaked calligraph­y brush to write the Chinese character of ‘disaster’ at the temple in Kyoto. — AFP photo
Seihan Mori uses an ink-soaked calligraph­y brush to write the Chinese character of ‘disaster’ at the temple in Kyoto. — AFP photo

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