Search  
 
    
 
 

    

Home page > News > Japan: 5,000 suicides per year are caused by overwork, says journalist

News

Japan: 5,000 suicides per year are caused by overwork, says journalist

06/06/2008
Can overwork kill you by driving you to suicide? It can in the land of Karoshi. By the word "Karoshi", the Japanese mean "death from overwork", a serious and profound issue in a country where more than 5,000 suicides per year are the result of depression caused by overwork.

Japan has the highest proportion of employees working more than 50 hours per week. However, after too many victims of Karoshi, Japanese workers are starting to claim their rights and families are starting to claim compensation.

The Japanese journalist Misako Hida investigated the issue of Karoshi from the perspective of international labour standards concerning hours and conditions of work. "When it comes to working hours in Japan, nothing in the way of international labour standards exists, and in recent years an increasing number of temporary workers have been forced to work as long as full-time employees do," writes Hida.

The Japanese writer’s article "The Land of Karoshi" won the journalistic prize for the best story on labour rights, awarded by the International Training Centre of the ILO (ITC-ILO), the training arm of the UN tripartite agency mandated to promote social justice and internationally recognized human and labour rights. Hida’s article was selected from 15 stories, all written by professional journalists who attended the first training course on "Communicating Labour Rights", organized by the ITC-ILO, based in Turin, Italy. The course introduced journalists and media professionals, especially ones from developing countries, to international labour standards, with the aim of raising public awareness of their relevance to local labour and social issues.

Back Top
 

Last updated: 10/11/2008
 
 
   
   
 
 
   
   
     
 
Contact  -  Copyright  -  Webmaster