More than three decades have passed since one of the darkest mornings in postwar Japan. Yet for many survivors of the sarin nerve gas attack on Tokyo’s subway system, the horror has never truly ended.
FILE - Subway passengers affected by sarin nerve gas in the central Tokyo subway trains are carried into St. Luke's International Hospital in Tokyo on March 20, 1995. (AP Photo/Chiaki Tsukumo, File) ...
The problem with Tokyo Metro is that it might just be too much of a railroad, some analysts argue. Shares in the subway company started trading on the Tokyo Stock Exchange on Wednesday following the ...
Tokyo (AFP) – Every day six and a half million people ride Tokyo Metro's nine lines, part of a dizzyingly complex transport network serving the Japanese megacity and its sprawling suburbs. Tokyo Metro ...
When you look for iconic images of public transportation in Tokyo, this is the first one that comes to mind: During rush hour, people on a subway platform are pushed into far too full carriages by men ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Japanese woman in front of moving train Navigating the Tokyo railway and train network can be daunting at first. With careful ...
Plans are in the works to extend two Tokyo Metro subway lines, out of its network of 13, to relieve congestion in key areas and make it easier for tourists to travel around the capital. The last time ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results