A 23-year-old construction worker on Tokyo’s Olympic Stadium killed
himself due to overwork, his family’s lawyer said on Wednesday, the
latest in a series of cases that have sparked alarm in the workaholic
nation.
The employee, whose name has not been released, began working on the
project in December and clocked around 200 hours of overtime in the
month before his body was found in April.
The official labour bureau has now concluded he had become mentally
ill “due to excessively long working hours at the Olympic stadium”,
lawyer Hiroshi Kawahito said in a statement sent to AFP.
The construction worker went missing in March, leaving a note saying he had “reached the physical and mental limit”.
His parents thanked the labour office for the ruling but said they were “extremely heartbroken” they could not save his son.
“The sorrow that we will never see his smile again will not be healed for the rest of our lives,” they said.
Authorities are hurrying to complete the showpiece venue for the 2020
Summer Games after initial plans sparked public anger over its $2
billion price tag.
Every year Japan’s notoriously long working hours are blamed for hundreds of deaths due to strokes, heart attacks and suicides.
Last week public broadcaster NHK apologised to the parents of a young
reporter who died of heart failure after logging 159 hours of overtime
in a month.
NHK reporter Miwa Sado, 31, who had been covering political news in
Tokyo, was found dead in her bed in July 2013, reportedly clutching her
mobile phone.
Also last week, a Tokyo court ordered Japan’s biggest advertising
agency Dentsu to pay a 500,000 yen ($4,445) fine for allowing its
employees to work excessive overtime.
Dentsu’s head resigned in December in response to the suicide of a
young employee, Matsuri Takahashi, who killed herself after logging more
than 100 hours of overtime a month.
Her death generated nationwide headlines, prompting the government to
come up with a plan asking employers to limit overtime to a maximum of
100 hours per month. But critics say this is still too high
His parents applied for compensation in July and asked the government
to recognise his suicide as a case of “karoshi” or death from overwork.
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