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Mike Oxlong wrote:
wagyl wrote:Issuing an apology and trying to show contrition while avoiding the personal pronoun sounds like someone sayingSoz!!! Boo-boo!!
Seriously, how would you rewrite it?
Takechanpoo wrote:Mike Oxlong wrote:
this kind of thing is what j-variety tv shows has been doing overseas for ages.
if japanese blame him of the disrespectfullness, should mention it first and then blame in general terms.
Wage Slave wrote:More whataboutism. Always just about the weakest of all arguments.
Wallabies great George Smith has been arrested in Tokyo after he allegedly assaulted a taxi driver while drunk.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-01-17/g ... an/9337046
Smith, who played 111 Tests for Australia, has been charged with robbery resulting in bodily injury, which allegedly occurred on December 31 last year.
He denies the charges.
Tokyo Metropolitan Police allege that Smith took a taxi near his house in Fuchu city just after midnight and ran away without paying the 9830 yen ($110) fare.
A spokesman told the ABC that he tried to avoid paying the taxi fare just after midnight on December 31.
"He tried to run but the driver caught him," the officer told the ABC.
"He demanded him to pay the [fare] and after that he assaulted him and caused an injury.
"He is saying, 'I was drunk, I don't remember, I didn't do such a thing'."
The 37-year-old Smith is contracted to the Queensland Reds in Super Rugby, but he also plays with Japanese top-tier side Suntory Sungoliath during the Australian off-season.
In a statement to the ABC, Suntory confirmed he had been arrested but said it had not been able to find out any more information.
"We apologise from our heart to the victim and anyone affected," a spokesperson told the ABC.
"We're also very sorry for causing concern and trouble to many people.
"At the moment, he is under investigation and we have not been able to find out the details."
Wallabies legend George Smith arrested by Tokyo police for allegedly punching, refusing to pay taxi driver in late 2017.
Suntory Sungoliath
Takechanpoo wrote:
from around 17:30
wannabe amnesia gaijin dude, living in akita, insisting forgot his mother tongue(english) and his real name.
https://www.facebook.com/kyle.eames.7?ref=br_rs
https://www.facebook.com/kyle.eames.39?ref=br_rs
Russian curler Alexander Krushelnitckii, who won bronze in this year’s mixed doubles competition in South Korea, faces evidence that he cheated is way to third place. On Tuesday, the International Olympic Committee announced that his second urine sample also tested positive for at least one use of the banned performance-enhancing substance meldonium.
Krushelnitckii reportedly told Russian officials that he fears someone at a training camp in Japan spiked his drink with meldonium
Takechanpoo wrote:burmese man, living in shinjuku, tokyo, got arrested for drawing graffitis in hakkouda mountain in aomori
Takechanpoo wrote:could you stop to put responsibility to japan, you sir northern barbarian aka ruskie?
thank you
OSAKA (TR) – Investigative sources with the Hyogo Prefectural Police have revealed that a 26-year-old American male in custody over the the disappearance of a missing woman was seen in surveillance camera footage carrying a large bag out of his accommodation in Higashinari Ward, reports NHK (Feb. 24).
On Thursday, police arrested Yevgeniy Vasilievich Bayraktar for allegedly confining the woman, a 27-year-old resident of Sanda City, Hyogo Prefecture, in the apartment. The suspect denies the allegations, telling police he has no knowledge of the matter.
Tokyo has a number of services that allow customers to dress like characters in the popular Nintendo video game “Mario Kart” while piloting go-karts through the capital.
Takechanpoo wrote:burmese man, living in shinjuku, tokyo, got arrested for drawing graffitis in hakkouda mountain in aomori
http://www.sankei.com/affairs/news/1802 ... 33-n1.html
https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id ... 1519313119
“The worst thing about it was that there were no staff members or any information about what was going on. We didn’t even know what we were queuing for or whether we were queuing in the right place,” said Kim Yong-nam, who flew into Narita from South Korea on Sunday afternoon.
Kim, who has permanent residency, was told she had to wait in line with foreign visitors without visas. She waited for an hour before being told by a different employee that she could enter a separate, shorter line for permanent residents.
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