World’s oldest person, a Japanese woman, dies at 117

Published July 28, 2018
In this Jan 2 photo provided by Goodtime Home 1, Kane Tanaka (right) is celebrating her 115th birthday at her nursing home in Fukuoka, southwestern Japan. Tanaka became the new oldest person in Japan after 117-year-old Japanese woman Chiyo Miyako, the world’s oldest person, died on Sunday.—AP
In this Jan 2 photo provided by Goodtime Home 1, Kane Tanaka (right) is celebrating her 115th birthday at her nursing home in Fukuoka, southwestern Japan. Tanaka became the new oldest person in Japan after 117-year-old Japanese woman Chiyo Miyako, the world’s oldest person, died on Sunday.—AP

TOKYO: The world’s oldest person, a 117-year-old Japanese woman, has died.

Chiyo Miyako died on Sunday. Her death was confirmed on Friday by Kanagawa prefecture, her home state south of Tokyo.

Miyako, born on May 2, 1901, became the world’s oldest person in April after Nabi Tajima from Kikai island in southern Japan died at the age of 117.

Miyako’s family called her “the goddess” and remembered her as a chatty person who was patient and kind to others, according to Guinness World Records, which had certified her title. Miyako enjoyed calligraphy, which she had practiced until recently, and eating sushi and eel, Guinness said. Guinness said the successor to her world record is yet to be confirmed.

The new oldest person in Japan is a 115-year-old woman, Kane Tanaka of Fukuoka on the southern island of Kyushu, the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare said.

The world’s oldest man, Masazo Nonaka on Japan’s northern island of Hokkaido, celebrated his 113rd birthday on Wednesday.

Published in Dawn, July 28th, 2018

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