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![]() by Staff Writers Tokyo (AFP) Aug 3, 2018
Officials in Japan have urged men to buck local gender stereotypes and carry parasols to protect themselves from the sun in the midst of a deadly national heatwave. At least 119 people across the country died from heat stress last month, while over 49,000 others were hospitalised. As record high temperatures dragged on, provincial officials north of Tokyo launched a campaign Wednesday encouraging men to beat back the heat by sporting parasols -- a fashion accessory commonly associated in Japan with skin-conscious women protecting against a summer tan. "I used to think a parasol was strictly for women. I didn't think of using it because no men did," Saitama prefecture official Ryoji Kurihara told AFP. "I realised using a parasol is like carrying the shade with me. I feel much cooler under it," he added. Tomomi Anzai, a Saitama government official in charge of the parasol campaign, said the initiative was designed to help reduce the risk of heat stroke in a city already known for its scorching summer temperatures. But for some men, the humiliation of carrying a traditionally female accoutrement was a bigger concern than the stifling heat. "I wouldn't use it. It's feminine... I wear a hat or use sunblock," 23-year-old student Shige Kato told AFP. The campaign comes as Saitama's capital Kumagaya set a new national heat record, with temperatures hitting 41.1 degrees Celsius (106 degrees Fahrenheit) last week. On the same day it reached more than 40 C for the first time in Tokyo. Japan's weather agency has warned that much of the country will continue baking in temperatures of 35 degrees or higher through early August.
![]() ![]() China could face deadly heat waves due to climate change Boston MA (SPX) Aug 01, 2018 A region that holds one of the biggest concentrations of people on Earth could be pushing against the boundaries of habitability by the latter part of this century, a new study shows. Research has shown that beyond a certain threshold of temperature and humidity, a person cannot survive unprotected in the open for extended periods - as, for example, farmers must do. Now, a new MIT study shows that unless drastic measures are taken to limit climate-changing emissions, China's most populous and agri ... read more
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