POLICE IN JAPAN HAVE NO WORK TO DO THESE DAYS!!!

ituglobal

Master Trader
Apr 17, 2013
548
35
69
Yes you read that right.



The Japanese police have been doing literally nothing these days.



The reason behind this is the ever decreasing crime rate in Japan.



Let me tell you some facts here:



The crime rate in Japan has decreased to negligible amount in last 13 years.

On an average, there is less than 1% chance of crime for every 100,000 people in Japan.

There was only one incident of murder last year in Japan. Yes just one!

The most important element of police power, though, is not authority to search, but authority in the community. Like school teachers, Japanese policemen rate high in public esteem, especially in the countryside.

The police in Japan are trained in calligraphy and Haiku composition.

Police in Japan do carry a gun but they rarely use it. Instead they use their black belts in judo or police sticks. In an average year, the entire Tokyo police force only fires six shots.

15,000 koban "police boxes" are located throughout the cities.

Police koban box officers spend time teaching neighborhood youth judo or calligraphy.

The officers even hand- write their own newspapers, with information about crime and accidents, "stories about good deeds by children, and opinions of

residents."

Tokyo is the safest city in the entire world.

From: Vishal Bhatia, Quora

Source: https://www.quora.com/What-do-you-know-that-most-people-don’t
 

Phill88

Banned
Dec 17, 2023
106
14
24
Germany
The number of reported crimes in Japan had fallen for two decades following a peak in 2002 with 2.85 million. Since 2022 though, it has been on the rise again. The number in 2023 did show a slight drop of 6.0% compared with 2019, the year prior to the pandemic. However, the number of “street crimes” (including street robberies, purse snatchings, bicycle thefts, physical assaults, and extortion) was 21.0% higher than the previous year. The National Police Agency believes this is due to more active flow of people since the downgrading of COVID-19’s disease category.
Source: https://www.nippon.com/en/japan-data/h01924/
 
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