Local officials are searching for a Ugandan athlete who went missing in western Japan on Friday in a case raising questions over Japanese organizers’ oversight of  Olympic  participants amid local  coronavirus concerns .

The missing 20-year-old man was training as part of the nine-member Ugandan team in Izumisano, Osaka prefecture, city officials said.

Teammates realized the athlete was absent around noon Friday when his saliva test sample was not delivered and they found his hotel room empty, city officials said. There was no training Friday morning and he was last seen in his room in the early hours of Friday.

After failing to find him inside the hotel, officials notified police for a broader search. There was no 24-hour monitoring at the hotel, and exactly when or how he got out of the hotel was unknown, officials said.

Local officials are searching for a Ugandan athlete who went missing in western Japan on Friday in a case raising questions over Japanese organizers’ oversight of  Olympic  participants amid local  coronavirus concerns .

The missing 20-year-old man was training as part of the nine-member Ugandan team in Izumisano, Osaka prefecture, city officials said.

Teammates realized the athlete was absent around noon Friday when his saliva test sample was not delivered and they found his hotel room empty, city officials said. There was no training Friday morning and he was last seen in his room in the early hours of Friday.

After failing to find him inside the hotel, officials notified police for a broader search. There was no 24-hour monitoring at the hotel, and exactly when or how he got out of the hotel was unknown, officials said.

 

On their arrival on June 19 at Narita International Airport, a member of the team tested positive and was quarantined there, while the remaining eight members were allowed to travel more than 500 kilometers (300 miles) on a chartered bus to Izumisano, their pre-Olympics camp in the western prefecture of Osaka.

Days later, a second member of the team from East Africa tested positive for the virus, forcing seven town officials and drivers who had close contact with the team to self-isolate. Health officials said both infected Ugandans had the delta variant.

Both team members have since ended their quarantine requirement and the team has been training since July 7.

Olympics organizers are banning all spectators from the games this year after Japan declared a state of emergency that is meant to curb a wave of new Covid-19 infections.

The state of emergency will begin Monday and run through August 22, while the games are scheduled from July 23 to August 8.

Organizers had already banned international spectators from attending and set a cap on domestic crowds at 50% of capacity, or up to 10,000 people.

There’s immense pressure to curb the spread of the virus at the games, protecting both athletes and neighboring regions.

More than 11,000 competitors are expected to travel to Japan to compete, along with thousands of officials and staff also set to attend.

The Uganda Olympics team arrived in Japan on 20th June.

The eight member team was warmly received by officials in Japan.

 

However, a member of the team later tested positive and was put in isolation. 

The rest of the team traveled ahead to their training base in Osaka, where they put themselves in quarantine at their hotel until July 3.

King Kouki Ray, age 12, is a student at a junior school in Shibuya. Back in April, he graduated from elementary school at a simple ceremony at the school gym. He is very happy with how his school life is going.

 

 

The basic school system in Japan is composed of elementary school (lasting six years), middle school (three years), high school (three years), and university (four years). Education is compulsory only for the nine years of elementary and middle school, but 98.8% of students go on to high school.

Japanese children enter the first grade of elementary school in the April after their sixth birthday. There are around 30 to 40 students in a typical elementary school class. The subjects they study include Japanese, mathematics, science, social studies, music, crafts, physical education, and home economics.

Students also learn traditional Japanese arts like Shodo (calligraphy) and haiku. Shodo involves dipping a brush in ink and using it to write kanji (characters that are used in several East Asian countries and have their own meanings) and kana (phonetic characters derived from kanji) in an artistic style.

There are many school events during the year, such as sports day when students compete in events like tug-of-war and relay races, excursions to historical sites, and arts and culture festivals featuring dancing and other performances by children. Students in the highest grades of elementary, middle, and high schools also take trips lasting up to several days to culturally important cities like Kyoto and Nara, ski resorts, or other places.

King Kouki Ray, taking part in his school’s track and field events.

There may be other good places to go to school, but for King Kouki, there’s no place like home.

The Meiji Jingu Stadium is a baseball stadium in Shinjuku, Tokyo,
Japan.

It opened in 1926, and is the home field of the Tokyo Yakult Swallows
professional baseball team.

Holding a capacity of 37,933 spectators, the stadium is suitable for hosting large athletic events. as such, it was chosen to be one of the venues for the Tokyo @020 Olympics – set to start  in July after a postponement last year due to the Covid-19 breakout.

Tokyo 2020 Olympics

Jingu Stadium also has the privilege of hosting the Japan Olympic Museum, having history from as far back as 1920, when Japan won its first medal in the Summer Olympics in Antwerp.

Misoshiru Family is excited to be able to witness these Olympic Games in person, and will be sharing our experiences through it all.

Join us as we Witness the launch of the of the Tokyo Olympic Torch Relay in Japan. This marks the countdown tot the start of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic games that were postponed last year due to the COVID pandemic.

After a brief opening ceremony on a football pitch inside the J-Village training complex, members of the  Japan  women’s football team began the torch’s 120-day journey through 859 locations, culminating in the opening ceremony at the Olympic stadium on 23 July.

 

Seiko Hashimoto, the head of the Games’ organising committee, said the start of the Olympic flame’s journey was a sign of hope. “For the past year, as the entire world went through a difficult period, the Olympic flame was kept alive quietly but powerfully,” she said at the opening ceremony, which was attended by a small number of dignitaries.

 

“The small flame did not lose hope, and just like the cherry blossom buds that are ready to bloom, it was waiting for this day.”

Click on the video to watch

 

 

だんだんと外国人の方の来客も増えてきました。 拙いながらも英語圏の方ですと、まだ意思疎通ができるのですが、それ以外の国の方だと歌詞カードを頂いても…? って時があります。 でも、プログラムが終了する頃には何となくコミュニケーションも取れてくるので不思議ですよね。 先日はウガンダ出身のラッパーさんの録音。 野太く乾いた、セクシーな声質。 なかなかこう言う声って、東洋人には出せない。 声質、リズム感、判断基準。 国が違えば常識も違う。 良い刺激をもらい、楽しく作業させていただきました。 ちなみにこの方は日本語もお上手で、助かりました笑 今日のボーカル録音も張り切ってまいります! ボーカル・ナレーション・ラップ録音は 名古屋市北区のレコーディングスタジオ ワンダラースタジオへ