NHK reporter Miwa Sado, 31,
who had been covering political news in Tokyo, was found dead in her bed in
July 2013, reportedly clutching her mobile phone.
Japan’s public broadcaster
apologised Friday to the parents of a young reporter who died of heart failure
after logging 159 hours of overtime in a month.
A government inquest a year
after her death ruled that it was linked to excessive overtime. She had taken
two days off in the month before she died.
NHK eventually made the
case public four years later, bowing to pressure from Sado’s parents to take
action to prevent a recurrence.
The case has again
highlighted the Japanese problem of “karoshi” — meaning death from overwork —
and is an embarrassing revelation for NHK, which has campaigned against the
nation’s long-hours culture.
Sato covered Tokyo assembly
elections for the broadcaster in June 2013 and an upper-house vote for the
national parliament the following month.
She died three days after
the upper-house election.
“My heart breaks at the
thought that she may have wanted to call me” in her last moments, her mother
told the Asahi daily.
“With Miwa gone, I feel
like half of my body has been torn off. I won’t be able to laugh for real for
the rest of my life.”
The revelation shocked the
nation as NHK has actively reported tragic deaths at other companies, including
the 2015 suicide of a young woman at major advertising agency Dentsu who logged
more than 100 hours of overtime in one month.
A Tokyo court on Friday
ordered Dentsu to pay 500,000 yen ($4,430) as a penalty for allowing its
employees, including the young woman, to illegally work excessive overtime
hours.
– ‘Physical and mental
limit’ –
NHK’s chief has pledged to
improve work conditions at the broadcaster.
“We are sorry that we lost
an excellent reporter and take seriously the fact that her death was recognised
as work-related,” president Ryoichi Ueda said Thursday.
“We will continue to work
for reform in cooperation with her parents,” he told reporters.
Labour minister Katsunobu
Kato on Friday urged the public broadcaster to reduce long working hours.
“We urge NHK to manage work
hours and cut long working hours… so that such incidents will never happen,”
Kato told reporters, according to the Asahi Shimbun.
Every year in Japan, long
working hours are blamed for dozens of deaths due to strokes, heart attacks and
suicides.
In July, the parents of an
unnamed 23-year-old worker on Tokyo’s Olympic stadium who killed himself
applied for compensation and asked the government to recognise his suicide as a
case of death from overwork.
The construction firm
employee, who began working on the project in December, clocked 200 hours of
overtime in the month before his body was found in April with a note that said
he had “reached the physical and mental limit”.
According to a government
report on death from overwork released on Friday, there were 191 “karoshi”
cases in the year ending March 2017.
The report also showed that
7.7 percent of employees in Japan regularly log more than 20 hours of overtime
a week.
In an attempt to tackle the
problem, the government in May released its first nationwide employer
blacklist, naming-and-shaming more than 300 companies including Dentsu and an
arm of Panasonic for breaching labour laws.
In February, Japan launched
“Premium Friday”, calling on employees to knock off early on the last Friday of
the month.
But critics slammed the
plan as it was not mandatory and several companies simply opted out.
AFP
Which kin work bi dat self
ReplyDeletewasted life boss life continues the news did not stop why kill yourself
ReplyDelete