HOME > NATIONAL > Article

Text Size

small

medium

large


Former Vietnamese Refugee Thankful for Japan after 45 Years

Former Vietnamese Refugee Thankful for Japan after 45 Years

Takashi Hashimoto, one of former Vietnamese boat people, has been living in Japan since he was rescued by an Okinawan fishing boat 45 years ago.
Takashi Hashimoto, one of former Vietnamese boat people, has been living in Japan since he was rescued by an Okinawan fishing boat 45 years ago.

   Tokyo, April 30 (Jiji Press)--A 63-year-old man who fled Vietnam 45 years ago as part of the boat people thanks Japan for helping him survive and build his life without fear of a war.
   The native of now-defunct South Vietnam, whose Japanese name is Takashi Hashimoto, took a small bamboo boat crowded with 24 people in total including children on a beach in the central city of Da Nang in March 1980, after the Southeast Asian country was reunited by North Vietnam following the fall of Saigon, the then capital of the U.S.-backed South, to mark the end of Vietnam War on April 30, 1975.
   "My father was jailed (after the war) as a political criminal, and I couldn't go to school much," he recalls. "I had no human rights or freedom."
   Before Hashimoto left the beach, his mother gave him 30 U.S. dollars, half of his family's entire money, telling him to get by on it.
    The journey to seek refuge was extremely tough. Parched and starved, all people on the boat managed to survive by catching and eating birds.

To read a full story, please click here to find out how to subscribe.

NATIONAL

HEADLINES

POLITICS
Ishiba Visits Philippine Coast Guard, Inspects Patrol Vessels Provided by Japan
ECONOMY
Only 1.4 Pct of Japan Govt-Stockpiled Rice Reaches Retailers: Farm Min. Survey
SPORTS
NHL Playoffs: Hurricanes Advance to East Semifinals, Defeating Devils 5-4
OTHER
Celebrations in Ho Chi Minh City Mark 50th Anniversary of End of Vietnam War

AFP-JIJI PRESS NEWS JOURNAL


Photos