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First woman enters Japan's submarine academy
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Jan 22, 2020

The first female student was admitted to Japan's national naval submarine academy Wednesday after the end of a ban on women on the country's submarines.

Saki Takenouchi, 26, entered the academy in a western region of Hiroshima along with about 20 other men, after the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force overturned previous restrictions.

"I hope not to put too much pressure on myself as the first woman," she told reporters.

"Instead I hope to work with my classmates and train to become a submarine crew member."

The navy has long only allowed men to serve on submarines, citing the difficulty of accommodating gender privacy concerns.

But it changed the rules in late 2018, after assessing that gender-specific privacy needs can be met without major submarine remodelling, a navy spokesman told AFP.

"This is a part of our efforts for efficient use of human resources," he added.

Japan's military as a whole is attempting to expand the role of women in its ranks as the Self Defense Forces struggle to attract young talent, with local media saying the navy has had particular difficulty attracting candidates to serve on submarines.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has long advocated for expanding the role of women in the workplace, but the country remains stubbornly low in international gender rankings.


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FLOATING STEEL
Next two Virginia-class subs to be named for Pearl Harbor heroes
Washington DC (UPI) Dec 26, 2019
The acting secretary of the Navy this week announced that the next two Virginia-class submarines - the first two of Block V of the class - will be named for the sailors who during the Pearl Harbor attack. The USS Arizona and USS Oklahoma, currently referred to as SSN-802 and SSN-803, will be named for the USS Arizona and USS Oklahoma that were sunk in the Dec. 7, 1941, attack and the roughly 1,600 sailors who died on them, the Navy said on Tuesday. "It's an honor that the U.S. Navy wil ... read more

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