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ttjereth wrote:Very convienent to overlook the fact that their cries for help will most likely be ignored even in Japanese.
I was involved in an incident on a train a few years back where a guy attacked the conductor with a hammer and other than me not a single one of the 40-50 some odd other people on the train even tried to help.
Had to tell them to hit the emergency button and tell the driver what had happened while the conductor and myself wrestled with the guy...
Mike Oxlong wrote:And then you got accused of being a violent individual for using force (in any situation - attacker & hammer, etc. not relevant), right?
Unbelievable that not a single person would assist a man under attack (other than a lowly gaijin). The whole Hokuriku train rape thing may possibly have been slightly ambiguous as to what was going on in the passenger's eyes, but this doesn't seem that way. Crazy!
jingai wrote:I don't know what movie you're living in, but Takakura Ken would never let that happen in mine.
:confused:Melissa Brouard had been three months into her new life in Ulsan when on the night of July 7 a Korean national broke into her apartment and raped her. Like so many other English speakers who come here for employment, Brouard had come here to work as a teacher and to save some money.
"Being from South Africa, I am very cautious and never thought that sleeping alone in my apartment that this would happen to me. I always double lock the doors," she said.
On the night of her assault, the perpetrator entered her apartment through the laundry room window, handcuffed and raped her. The attack was premeditated, and it was later found out that the man had been observing her from his apartment for quite some time. Following the assault, Brouard contacted a coworker who called the police.
Takechanpoo wrote::confused:
This kind of raping gaijin events often happened in Japan too?
Takechanpoo wrote:Re: Lost her Vargin
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