Japan vows tougher measures after record bear attack deaths
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Bears have attacked tourists, entered stores and appeared near schools and parks, particularly in northern regions.
PHOTO: PIXABAY
Follow topic:
TOKYO - Japan’s new Environment Minister vowed tougher measures on Oct 22 after bear attacks in the country killed a record nine people in 2025.
Bears have been increasingly encroaching into towns where the human population is ageing and dwindling.
New Environment Minister Hirotaka Ishihara called the attacks “a big problem, a serious problem”.
“We are committed to further strengthening various measures, including securing and training government hunters and managing the bear population,” he told a news conference on Oct 22.
Mr Ishihara was appointed to his post late on Oct 21 when new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi launched her government
The numbers in 2025 have far surpassed the previous high of five human fatalities recorded in the 2023-2024 fiscal year.
The latest victims include a man in his 70s who was found dead
Another Iwate resident was found dead last week in a forest near a hot spring facility where he worked.
A bear attacked a couple in their 80s in Fukushima prefecture outside their house on Oct 22, causing injuries to their faces and necks, local media reported.
Bears have attacked tourists, entered stores and appeared near schools and parks, particularly in northern regions.
Japan has two types of bear: Asian black bears – also known as moon bears – and bigger brown bears that live on the main northern island of Hokkaido.
Thousands of bears are shot every year, although Japan’s ageing human population means that the number of hunters is declining. AFP