Lanterns Floated for Victims of JAL Jet Crash 40 Years Ago

Lanterns Floated for Victims of JAL Jet Crash 40 Years Ago

A lantern-floating event held on Monday on the Kanna River at the foot of the Osutaka Ridge in the village of Ueno in Gunma Prefecture, the crash site of a JAL passenger jet 40 years ago.
A lantern-floating event held on Monday on the Kanna River at the foot of the Osutaka Ridge in the village of Ueno in Gunma Prefecture, the crash site of a JAL passenger jet 40 years ago.

   Ueno, Gunma Pref., Aug. 11 (Jiji Press)--Abut 200 lanterns were lit up and released into a river at the foot of a ridge in eastern Japan on Monday where a passenger jet crash killed more than 500 people 40 years ago.
   Bereaved relatives and others observed a moment of silence and floated the handmade lanterns with messages for the victims on the Kanna River, praying for them and the safety of air travel.
   On Aug. 12, 1985, a Japan Airlines jet crashed into the Osutaka Ridge in the village of Ueno in Gunma Prefecture, claiming the lives of 520 people aboard.
   Asato Kawaguchi, a 24-year-old company employee from Tokyo, lost his grandfather, Hirotsugu, who was 52 at the time of the crash. In a will left on the plane, Hirotsugu expressed gratitude, saying, "I had a happy life."
   "I also want to live a life where I can say so," Kawaguchi said. Safety in the sky is "protected by efforts that can't be seen. Don't forget the cost," he added.

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