2019年3月10日日曜日

at 20:00 (JST), March 10 AS

sample エラー 2042

The Chinese central bank governor says China will never manipulate the yuan to make its exports more competitive.


エラー 2042

https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/upld/medias/en/radio/news/20190310200000_english_1.mp3


Key words : people in memorial
#N/A


Key words : high school
https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/20190310_12/

Buildings of a high school in northeastern Japan that were heavily damaged in the 2011 tsunami have opened to the public as a memorial to the disaster.

About 60 people, including city officials, took part in a ceremony in the city of Kesennuma on Sunday. They observed a moment of silence for the victims of the disaster.

In 2011, the tsunami reached the top floor of the four-story school building. City officials have been working to preserve the school as a reminder of what happened.

City mayor Shigeru Sugawara said he is hoping that the memorial will continue to remind people of the threat of tsunami, as the disaster-hit areas are changing from moment to moment.

Visitors are allowed to enter the school buildings to see classrooms where debris and books remain scattered about. They can also see an automobile that was washed into a third-floor room.

Visitors closely listened to their guides while viewing the school buildings that bear scars from the disaster.

A woman in her 20s from western Japan said what she saw left her lost for words. She added she wants to tell her acquaintances back home how she felt at the school.


Key words : earthquake tsunami survivor
https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/20190310_11/

Earthquake and tsunami survivors are divided over what to do with damaged structures that show the devastation caused by the disaster in 2011.

Monday marks the eighth anniversary of the earthquake and tsunami that caused massive damage to northeastern Japan.

NHK conducted a survey between December and January, asking more than 4,400 people to take part.

They included residents of Iwate, Miyagi and Fukushima prefectures in northeastern Japan, as well as people who evacuated their homes due to the nuclear power station accident in Fukushima.

1,608 people, or 36 percent, responded.

60.7 percent of the respondents said that the public's memories of the disaster are fading, while 19.1 percent did not think so.

The respondents were split on the question of whether to preserve more buildings in a damaged state as reminders of what happened.

28.2 percent said that more preservation is needed while 35.4 percent did not agree.

Seventy-nine percent of those who support more preservation said that they feel it is necessary to talk about the disaster and their experience with the next generation.

And 50.4 percent of those who disagree said that they do not want to be reminded of the disaster.

A 60-year-old resident of Ofunato, Iwate Prefecture, said that if damaged buildings were not preserved, it deprives future mankind of lessons from the earthquake and tsunami. He said it is more important than the feelings of individuals.

An 86-year-old woman form Ishinomaki, Miyagi Prefecture, said that it is a good thing to think about the horrors of earthquakes and tsunami, but survivors find it hard to embrace such preservation as they have had sad and difficult experiences.


Key words : chinese central
https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/20190310_15/

The Chinese central bank governor says China will never manipulate the yuan to make its exports more competitive.

People's Bank of China Governor Yi Gang indicated on Sunday that the currency issue was discussed in trade talks with the United States.

He also told reporters that China had reached a consensus with the US on many crucial issues.

US President Donald Trump has said he wants to finalize a trade deal at his summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping later this month. But the two countries remain at odds over China's preferential treatment of state-owned firms.


Key words : Tibetan
#N/A


Key words : north election
https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/20190310_03/

North Korea will hold an election for its national legislature on Sunday. Voters will be asked to either approve or disapprove candidates.

The election for the Supreme People's Assembly takes place every five years.

The nearly 700-member organ sets matters such as budgets, personnel affairs for national institutions, and legal revisions.

The assembly's first session after the election will likely convene next month.

Rebuilding the domestic economy will be one of the key issues for the assembly. The US-North Korea summit last month ended without agreement to lift sanctions on Pyongyang.

The election will be the second of its kind after leader Kim Jong Un took power. The average age of assembly members is expected to be lower than that of current legislators. This may make it easier for the young leader to cement his grip on power.


Key words : government financial support space
https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/20190310_17/

The Japanese government is to consider providing financial support for the development of technologies to remove space debris.

The government has set up a panel of officials from the relevant ministries to deal with concerns that space debris could collide with satellites and the International Space Station.

The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency and private firms are trying to develop ways to deal with the rapid increase in defunct satellites and other kinds of debris that are orbiting the Earth at high speeds.

The government plans to compile a basic plan this year and hopes to begin tests in fiscal 2022.


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