This is an interesting story. On September 26th, a bridge being constructed by Japanese construction gumis Taisei, Kajima, and Nippon Steel collapsed, killing 54 Vietnamese workers:
Vietnam's death toll from bridge collapse rises to 54
AP
HANOI, Vietnam (AP) - The death toll in a bridge collapse in southern Vietnam rose to 54 after rescue workers pulled the last known victim from the rubble on Wednesday, three weeks after the accident occurred. "According to the contractors and subcontractors, everybody is now accounted for," said Nguyen Van Cong, a Ministry of Transport spokesman. "We hope that he was the last victim." The Sept. 26 accident left about 80 others injured, many of them in serious condition. All the victims were Vietnamese workers helping construct the Japanese-financed bridge, a 2.75-kilometer (1.7-mile) span that will link the southern province of Vinh Long and Can Tho, the biggest city in the Mekong Delta.
You are probably thinking "gee, this sounds like a big deal, why didn't I hear about it?" Well, the Mainichi (now a dead link), Kyodo, and the IHT gave it small coverage here and here. But lucky for the J-gumis, a Japanese photographer was gunned down in Burma the following day, which as you know was the only story coming from outside of Japan. However, a recent wrinkle in the bridge collapse is that investigators suspect negligence and slipshod work, similar to Aneha's handiwork as found in this thread. Here is a news item explaining the findings thus far:
The ad hoc committee held a meeting in Can Tho last Friday, with transport ministry officials, project owner My Thuan Project Management Unit, main contractor TKN (Taisei-Kajima-Nippon Steel), sub-contractor VSL, consultants, supervisors and local authorities taking part. Quan said the investigation was focusing on whether the Japanese contractor TKN used secondhand steel for scaffoldings as alleged.
While that doesn't include Aneha's hallmarks, this does:
The contractor reported they had reinforced the steel structure to meet the safety requirements when the supervisor checked its capacity at only 1.15. The absolute safety threshold is at least 1.25.
So now that the Burma issue has quieted, perhaps it is time someone at a Japanese news agency got around to checking into this?