Suicides above 30,000 for 13th year
Joblessness, family troubles increasingly cited as causes
Kyodo News
Suicides eased to 31,690 last year but stayed above the 30,000 mark for the 13th year running, meaning an average of nearly 90 people took their lives each day, the National Police Agency said Thursday.
While the rate is down 3.5 percent from 2009, the number who killed themselves because they couldn't find a job jumped 19.8 percent to 424.
Suicides triggered by family troubles also surged, climbing 9.2 percent to 4,497 compared with 2009.
The NPA said it will step up efforts to offer counseling and other services because the persistently high suicide rate is apparently linked to a "deep freeze" in the job market, as well as to the weakening of interpersonal relationships in society.
The number of suicides caused by reasons that could be deduced from notes and other materials left behind totaled 23,572, with the bulk of the deaths (15,802) laid to mental and physical health problems, followed by economic reasons (7,438).
A total of 1,207 people killed themselves over strained relations with spouses, while 575 did so because of poor ties with parents or children. Another 157 committed suicide over worries about how to raise children and 317 due to exhaustion from caring for relatives or others requiring nursing care.
Suicides caused by economic reasons, however, fell 11.2 percent, indicating that debts, personal bankruptcies and other financial distress caused by the global financial crisis that erupted in autumn 2008 might have eased a bit as the economy began to recover, the agency said.
But it also said the enforcement of more stringent regulations on loan-sharking was another reason for the drop in finance-related suicides.
I am walking through Aokigahara Jukai forest, the light rapidly fading on a mid-winter afternoon, when I am stopped dead in my tracks by a blood-curdling scream. The natural reaction would be to run, but the forest floor is a maze of roots and slippery rocks and, truth be told, I am lost in this vast woodland whose name, in part, translates as "Sea of Trees."
挿入写真Remnants: Shoes for a man, a woman and a child left in the Aokigahara Jukai forest on the flank of Mount Fuji in Yamanashi Prefecture. The name in part translates as "Sea of Trees," though with good reason it is often referred to as "Suicide Forest." ROB GILHOOLY PHOTOS
挿入写真Rites of remembrance: At a point overlooking a section of the 30-sq.-km Aokigahara Jukai forest, Buddhist priest Showzen Yamashita offers prayers for the untold number of people who have entered that "Sea of Trees" wilderness but failed to make it out alive.
Inexplicably, I find myself moving toward the sound, searching for signs of life. Instead, I find death.
The source of that scream remains a mystery as, across a clearing, I see what looks like a pile of clothes. But as I approach, it becomes apparent it's more than just clothes I've spotted.
In a small hollow, just below a tree, and curled up like a baby on a thick bed of dead leaves, lies a man, his thinning gray hair matted across his balding cranium. His pasty upper torso is shirtless, while his legs are covered only by black long johns — with blue-striped boxers sticking out above the waistband — and a pair of woolly socks.
Under his bent legs a pair of slacks, a white shirt and a jacket have been spread out as a cushion at his final resting place. Scattered around are innumerable documents, a briefcase and other remnants of a former life. Nearer to him are items more closely related to his demise: empty packets of prescription pills, beer cans, and bottles of liquor.
Seemingly this man, who looks to be in his mid-50s, had drawn his last breath before I heard that unsourced, chilling cry.
That I came across a body in this forest was a shock, but not a surprise. For half a century, thousands of life-weary Japanese have made one-way trips to this sprawling, 30-sq.-km tract of woodland in Yamanashi Prefecture on the northwest flank of 3,776-meter Mount Fuji, the nation's highest peak. It's a dark place of stark beauty, long associated with demons in Japanese mythology — and one that has earned itself the unfortunate appellation of "Suicide Forest."
Evidence of such pilgrimages is strewn amid the dense undergrowth. Four pairs of moss-covered shoes are lined up on the gnarled roots of a tree — two adult-size pairs and two children's pairs.
挿入写真Signs of life and death : Tape left following sweeps of the forest.
Further on there's an envelope of photos, one showing a young man, another two small children dressed in colorful kimonos and elementary school uniform. Together with the photos there's a typed note "To Hide" (most likey the name of a man), including the final stanza of "Song of the Open Road," Walt Whitman's poem from 1900 that ends with the line: "Shall we stick by each other as long as we live?"
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