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    fox-news/world/world-regions/japan

    Japan confirms 39 new coronavirus cases on cruise ship

    Japan confirmed 39 new cases of the coronavirus, or COVID-19, on a cruise ship quarantined at one of its ports, bringing the total number infected on the vessel to 174, health officials said Tuesday.

    The Diamond Princess has been docked at the Yokohama port since Feb. 3 after it was determined some passengers had been sicked with the virus. Japan confirmed 66 new cases Monday and said officials may test everyone aboard the ship.

    The American-based ship had completed a 14-day cruise in which it stopped in Hong Kong and several other Asian ports.

    CORONAVIRUS-QUARANTINED COUPLE ON DIAMOND PRINCESS CRUISE REPORTEDLY ORDER WINE VIA DRONE

    Japanese government officials and the cruise line were told by Hong Kong officials that an 80-year-old male passenger who departed the ship tested positive for the virus.

    Coronavirus deaths worldwide have surpassed 1,100 and more than 45,000 have been sickened. The vast majority of those impacted are in mainland China, where the virus first began in the Hubei province in December.

    The virus has killed more people than the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) outbreak in China in 2003, when  774 people died and 8,000 were infected.

    Media gather outside the quarantined Diamond Princess cruise ship in Yokohama, near Tokyo, Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2020. Japan’s Health Minister Katsunobu Kato said the government was considering testing everyone remaining on board and crew on the Diamond Princess, which would require them to remain aboard until results were available. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

    Thirteen cases have been confirmed in the United States.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) announced on Tuesday said it hopes to have a vaccine for the virus ready within 18 months.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

    Tokyo Olympics chief says games will be ‘held as scheduled’ after saying they could be affected by coronavirus

    Tokyo Olympic CEO Toshiro Muto reassured the 2020 Games will be “held as scheduled” while walking back remarks he made this week about being “seriously worried” the sports event could be postponed or canceled because of the deadly coronavirus outbreak.

    At a news conference Thursday with International Paralympic Committee officials, Muto appeared to clarify what he called a “misunderstanding” regarding comments he made earlier about the summer games as they relate to the deadly outbreak of the coronavirus.

    SCOTLAND FINANCE CHIEF RESIGNS AFTER REPORTS OF INAPPROPRIATE TEXTING RELATIONSHIP WITH TEEN BOY, 16, EMERGE 

    “In order to avoid any misunderstanding, I would like to say that the Olympic and Paralympic Games will be held as scheduled,” he said, adding that people need to remain “cool-headed.”

    A poster promoting the Tokyo 2020 Olympics is posted next to a train door as a commuter wearing a mask looks at his phone on a train in Tokyo. Tokyo Olympic organizers are trying to shoot down rumors that this summer's games might be canceled or postponed because of the spread of a new virus. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

    A poster promoting the Tokyo 2020 Olympics is posted next to a train door as a commuter wearing a mask looks at his phone on a train in Tokyo. Tokyo Olympic organizers are trying to shoot down rumors that this summer’s games might be canceled or postponed because of the spread of a new virus. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

    But on Wednesday it was Muto who was losing his cool, saying “I am seriously worried that the spread of the infectious disease could throw cold water on the momentum toward the games.”

    On Thursday, Japan confirmed 45 cases of the virus but no deaths have been reported. Tokyo Olympic officials said they have established a task force to focus on the virus and have been repeating for a week that the games will go ahead as planned.

    Despite the assurances, questions keep coming, with organizers saying they are deferring to the World Health Organization for advice.

    UK WOMAN WHO JUMPED FROM CHINA APARTMENT LEFT PHONE PASSWORDS TO SUICIDE NOTE, INQUEST FINDS 

    “We need to put things into perspective, and until the World Health Organization tells us otherwise, we will proceed with business as usual,” IPC spokesperson Craig Spence said.

    The Olympics are slated to open on July 24 with the Paralympics beginning just a month later. Some qualifying events have been canceled or postponed in light of the global outbreak of the coronavirus.

    The outbreak, centered in Wuhan–the city in China that is the epicenter of the virus–has now infected over 28,200 people worldwide and killed more than 560.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    The Olympics have been canceled during wartime and faced boycotts in 1980 and 1984.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    At least 10 people– including American– test positive for coronavirus on cruise ship off Japan, 3,700 quarantined

    At least 10 people aboard a cruise ship off Japan have tested positive for the coronavirus, according to a statement Wednesday night from Princess Cruises. The news comes as infections outside of China continue to increase.

    All 2,666 guests and 1,045 crewmembers aboard the Diamond Princess have been quarantined for over a day and are likely to remain for “at least 14 days as required by the Ministry of Health,” according to the cruise line.

    The infected passengers include one from the U.S., two from Australia, three from Japan, three from Hong Kong and one crew member from the Philippines.

    “Princess Cruises can confirm that the first phase of health screening of all guests and crew onboard Diamond Princess, by the Japanese Ministry of Health, has been completed,” the statement said. “These 10 persons, who have been notified, will be taken ashore by Japanese Coast Guard watercraft and transported to local hospitals for care by shoreside Japanese medical professionals.”

    The confirmed cases — all over the age of 50 — were based on the results of 31 out of the 273 tested so far who had cough or fever symptoms, Japan’s state broadcaster NHK said, according to the BBC.

    The number of worldwide infections rose to 24,324 on Wednesday, with the death toll now at 490 — only two have died outside of China so far.

    CHINESE DOCTOR WHO SOUNDED ALARM ON CORONAVIRUS SAYS HE WAS DETAINED — THEN GOT SICK

    Cruise ship Diamond Princess is anchored off the shore of Yokohama, south of Tokyo, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2020. Japan said Wednesday 10 people on the cruise ship have tested positive for a new virus and were being taken to hospitals.  (Hiroko Harima/Kyodo News via AP)

    Cruise ship Diamond Princess is anchored off the shore of Yokohama, south of Tokyo, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2020. Japan said Wednesday 10 people on the cruise ship have tested positive for a new virus and were being taken to hospitals.  (Hiroko Harima/Kyodo News via AP)

    HOW HAS CORONAVIRUS AFFECTED CHINA’S AND THE WORLD’S ECONOMY COMPARED TO SARS OUTBREAK?

    Medical workers in protective suits lead a passenger tested positive for a new coronavirus from the cruise ship Diamond Princess at Yokohama Port in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2020. Japan said Wednesday 10 people on the cruise ship have tested positive for the new virus and were being taken to hospitals. (Hiroko Harima/Kyodo News via AP)

    Medical workers in protective suits lead a passenger tested positive for a new coronavirus from the cruise ship Diamond Princess at Yokohama Port in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2020. Japan said Wednesday 10 people on the cruise ship have tested positive for the new virus and were being taken to hospitals. (Hiroko Harima/Kyodo News via AP)

    The infection reportedly originated from one passenger who got on the ship in Yokohama on Jan. 20 and disembarked in Hong Kong on Jan. 25, according to the cruise line statement. Princess Cruises said he didn’t visit the ship’s medical center to report any symptoms or illness.

    HONG KONG SEES THOUSANDS OF MEDICAL WORKERS STRIKE AS CORONAVIRUS SPREADS

    Japan Coast Guard's patrol boat, left, is brought alongside the cruise ship Diamond Princess to take passengers tested positive for coronavirus to hospitals off Yokohama, south of Tokyo, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2020.  (Hiroko Harima/Kyodo News via AP)

    Japan Coast Guard’s patrol boat, left, is brought alongside the cruise ship Diamond Princess to take passengers tested positive for coronavirus to hospitals off Yokohama, south of Tokyo, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2020.  (Hiroko Harima/Kyodo News via AP)

    Officials began screening guests on Monday, with the vessel being placed in quarantine on Tuesday.

    “Princess Cruises has confirmed the turnaround of Diamond Princess has been delayed for approximately 24 hours to allow Japan public health authorities the opportunity to review the health status of all guests and crew on board,” an earlier Princess Cruises statement read.

    The Diamond Princess ship is part of the Princess Cruises line, which is owned by British-American Carnival Corporation.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    “Guests will continue to be provided complimentary internet and telephone to use in order to stay in contact with their family and loved ones, and the ship’s crew is working to keep all guests comfortable, the Wednesday statement read.

    The Associated Press contributed to the report

    At least 10 people– including American– test positive for coronavirus on cruise ship off Japan, 3,700 quarantined

    At least 10 people aboard a cruise ship off Japan have tested positive for the coronavirus, according to a statement Wednesday night from Princess Cruises. The news comes as infections outside of China continue to increase.

    All 2,666 guests and 1,045 crewmembers aboard the Diamond Princess have been quarantined for over a day and are likely to remain for “at least 14 days as required by the Ministry of Health,” according to the cruise line.

    The infected passengers include one from the U.S., two from Australia, three from Japan, three from Hong Kong and one crew member from the Philippines.

    “Princess Cruises can confirm that the first phase of health screening of all guests and crew onboard Diamond Princess, by the Japanese Ministry of Health, has been completed,” the statement said. “These 10 persons, who have been notified, will be taken ashore by Japanese Coast Guard watercraft and transported to local hospitals for care by shoreside Japanese medical professionals.”

    The confirmed cases — all over the age of 50 — were based on the results of 31 out of the 273 tested so far who had cough or fever symptoms, Japan’s state broadcaster NHK said, according to the BBC.

    The number of worldwide infections rose to 24,324 on Wednesday, with the death toll now at 490 — only two have died outside of China so far.

    CHINESE DOCTOR WHO SOUNDED ALARM ON CORONAVIRUS SAYS HE WAS DETAINED — THEN GOT SICK

    Cruise ship Diamond Princess is anchored off the shore of Yokohama, south of Tokyo, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2020. Japan said Wednesday 10 people on the cruise ship have tested positive for a new virus and were being taken to hospitals.  (Hiroko Harima/Kyodo News via AP)

    Cruise ship Diamond Princess is anchored off the shore of Yokohama, south of Tokyo, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2020. Japan said Wednesday 10 people on the cruise ship have tested positive for a new virus and were being taken to hospitals.  (Hiroko Harima/Kyodo News via AP)

    HOW HAS CORONAVIRUS AFFECTED CHINA’S AND THE WORLD’S ECONOMY COMPARED TO SARS OUTBREAK?

    Medical workers in protective suits lead a passenger tested positive for a new coronavirus from the cruise ship Diamond Princess at Yokohama Port in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2020. Japan said Wednesday 10 people on the cruise ship have tested positive for the new virus and were being taken to hospitals. (Hiroko Harima/Kyodo News via AP)

    Medical workers in protective suits lead a passenger tested positive for a new coronavirus from the cruise ship Diamond Princess at Yokohama Port in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2020. Japan said Wednesday 10 people on the cruise ship have tested positive for the new virus and were being taken to hospitals. (Hiroko Harima/Kyodo News via AP)

    The infection reportedly originated from one passenger who got on the ship in Yokohama on Jan. 20 and disembarked in Hong Kong on Jan. 25, according to the cruise line statement. Princess Cruises said he didn’t visit the ship’s medical center to report any symptoms or illness.

    HONG KONG SEES THOUSANDS OF MEDICAL WORKERS STRIKE AS CORONAVIRUS SPREADS

    Japan Coast Guard's patrol boat, left, is brought alongside the cruise ship Diamond Princess to take passengers tested positive for coronavirus to hospitals off Yokohama, south of Tokyo, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2020.  (Hiroko Harima/Kyodo News via AP)

    Japan Coast Guard’s patrol boat, left, is brought alongside the cruise ship Diamond Princess to take passengers tested positive for coronavirus to hospitals off Yokohama, south of Tokyo, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2020.  (Hiroko Harima/Kyodo News via AP)

    Officials began screening guests on Monday, with the vessel being placed in quarantine on Tuesday.

    “Princess Cruises has confirmed the turnaround of Diamond Princess has been delayed for approximately 24 hours to allow Japan public health authorities the opportunity to review the health status of all guests and crew on board,” an earlier Princess Cruises statement read.

    The Diamond Princess ship is part of the Princess Cruises line, which is owned by British-American Carnival Corporation.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    “Guests will continue to be provided complimentary internet and telephone to use in order to stay in contact with their family and loved ones, and the ship’s crew is working to keep all guests comfortable, the Wednesday statement read.

    The Associated Press contributed to the report

    Coronavirus: How are different countries responding to the outbreak?

    The deadly novel coronavirus has killed more than 420 people and infected at least 20,704 globally since it was first detected in the Chinese city of Wuhan in December.

    Though 99 percent of cases have been confined to mainland China, cases have been reported throughout Asia, Europe and North America.

    People pass by a screen warning about a new coronavirus in a subway station in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2020. 

    People pass by a screen warning about a new coronavirus in a subway station in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2020. 
    (AP)

    On Tuesday, the virus claimed a life in Hong Kong — the second outside mainland China. The first known fatality outside China was reported in the Philippines on Sunday.

    The World Health Organization (WHO), which declared a global emergency last week, has praised China for “setting a new standard for outbreak response,” despite others’ criticism of China’s draconian measures to contain the virus.

    China has put Wuhan on lockdown, having deployed 1,400 medical personnel and staff to a newly constructed hospital in the city. The hospital, which was constructed in less than 10 days, includes 1,000 beds, intensive care units, and sections for diagnosis and infection control, according to Chinese media.

    Around the world, governments have implemented various measures to stop the virus from spreading in their country. Here is a look at some of those efforts:

    Thailand

    Thailand has reported the highest number of cases outside mainland China, with 25 as of Tuesday. On Sunday, an infected 71-year-old patient tested negative for the virus 48 hours after Thai doctors treated her with a cocktail of anti-virals used to treat the flu and HIV, according to Thailand’s health ministry.

    Commuters wear face masks to protect themselves from air pollution and new virus in Bangkok, Thailand, Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2020. 

    Commuters wear face masks to protect themselves from air pollution and new virus in Bangkok, Thailand, Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2020. 
    (AP)

    “The lab result of positive on the coronavirus turned negative in 48 hours,” Dr. Kriengsak Attipornwanich said during a news conference. “From being exhausted before, she could sit up in bed 12 hours later.”

    Singapore

    Behind Thailand, Singapore has reported 24 confirmed cases of the coronavirus. The country’s health ministry said during a news conference Tuesday that Singapore is prepared to cancel mass gatherings, suspend schools and reduce non-essential care services should cases of human-to-human transmission escalate.

    “This is a scenario which we are prepared for,” said Health Minister Gan Kin Yong. “As the situation evolves, we will step up our posture accordingly to further contain the situation in Singapore.”

    Japan

    Unlike other countries that have enacted strict border controls on travelers from China, Japan’s response has been comparatively relaxed.

    A poster promoting the Tokyo 2020 Olympics is posted next a train door as a commuter wearing a mask looks at his phone in a train, Friday, Jan. 31, 2020, in Tokyo. 

    A poster promoting the Tokyo 2020 Olympics is posted next a train door as a commuter wearing a mask looks at his phone in a train, Friday, Jan. 31, 2020, in Tokyo. 
    (AP)

    On Friday, Japan barred foreign nationals who had visited China’s Hubei province — where Wuhan is located — from visiting the country. The cautionary measure extends to foreigners who had stayed in the province within two weeks before their arrival in Japan, even if they do not show symptoms of the coronavirus, Kyodo News reported.

    Prime Minister Shinzo Abe hinted Tuesday, however, that his country may expand those restrictions.

    “We are analyzing the data on patients within China to determine which regions have a high risk,” he said. “We remain open-minded on what measures to take, including the possibility of expanding the regions” subject to the travel ban.

    As of Tuesday, Japan had reported 22 confirmed cases of the virus.

    South Korea

    In South Korea, which has reported 16 cases, U.S. service members who returned from mainland China to South Korea on or after Jan. 19 are being subjected to a 14-day “directed self-quarantine.”

    A statement from U.S. Forces Korea (USFK) says the quarantine is “mandatory for U.S. service members, regardless if they reside on or off USFK installations, and is highly encouraged for family members,[Defense Department] civilians, contractors, United Nation Command military personnel and Korean National employees to follow, as well, in the interest of public health safety.”

    CHILD CORONAVIRUS EVACUEE TRANSPORTED TO CALIFORNIA HOSPITAL WITH FEVER, HEALTH OFFICIALS SAY

    Also on the Korean peninsula, Hyundai, the world’s fifth-largest automaker, said it was suspending production at its manufacturing plants because of supply chain problems caused by the outbreak.

    United States

    The United States as of Tuesday has reported 11 confirmed cases of coronavirus. Last week, nearly 200 U.S. citizens were evacuated from Wuhan to a military base in California where they remain quarantined.

    On Saturday, Secretary of Defense Mark Esper approved Department of Defense (DoD) housing at four military bases for 1,000 people who may have to be quarantined as the result of the coronavirus.

    Employee Cynthia Bao, who is pregnant wears a protective mask to avoid getting sick, as she interacts with customers at the Beyond Services notary in Alhambra, Calif., Friday, Jan. 31, 2020. 

    Employee Cynthia Bao, who is pregnant wears a protective mask to avoid getting sick, as she interacts with customers at the Beyond Services notary in Alhambra, Calif., Friday, Jan. 31, 2020. 
    (AP)

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta – which is the only place in the U.S. that can confirm whether a patient has the virus — announced Monday that it was working to provide local health departments with the tools needed to conduct tests themselves without sending in the results.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Also on Monday, Nancy Messonnier, the director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, which is a part of the CDC, said the U.S. is planning to evacuate more Americans from Wuhan, though it was not clear when those evacuations would occur.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Coronavirus: How are different countries responding to the outbreak?

    The deadly novel coronavirus has killed more than 420 people and infected at least 20,704 globally since it was first detected in the Chinese city of Wuhan in December.

    Though 99 percent of cases have been confined to mainland China, cases have been reported throughout Asia, Europe and North America.

    People pass by a screen warning about a new coronavirus in a subway station in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2020. 

    People pass by a screen warning about a new coronavirus in a subway station in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2020. 
    (AP)

    On Tuesday, the virus claimed a life in Hong Kong — the second outside mainland China. The first known fatality outside China was reported in the Philippines on Sunday.

    The World Health Organization (WHO), which declared a global emergency last week, has praised China for “setting a new standard for outbreak response,” despite others’ criticism of China’s draconian measures to contain the virus.

    China has put Wuhan on lockdown, having deployed 1,400 medical personnel and staff to a newly constructed hospital in the city. The hospital, which was constructed in less than 10 days, includes 1,000 beds, intensive care units, and sections for diagnosis and infection control, according to Chinese media.

    Around the world, governments have implemented various measures to stop the virus from spreading in their country. Here is a look at some of those efforts:

    Thailand

    Thailand has reported the highest number of cases outside mainland China, with 25 as of Tuesday. On Sunday, an infected 71-year-old patient tested negative for the virus 48 hours after Thai doctors treated her with a cocktail of anti-virals used to treat the flu and HIV, according to Thailand’s health ministry.

    Commuters wear face masks to protect themselves from air pollution and new virus in Bangkok, Thailand, Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2020. 

    Commuters wear face masks to protect themselves from air pollution and new virus in Bangkok, Thailand, Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2020. 
    (AP)

    “The lab result of positive on the coronavirus turned negative in 48 hours,” Dr. Kriengsak Attipornwanich said during a news conference. “From being exhausted before, she could sit up in bed 12 hours later.”

    Singapore

    Behind Thailand, Singapore has reported 24 confirmed cases of the coronavirus. The country’s health ministry said during a news conference Tuesday that Singapore is prepared to cancel mass gatherings, suspend schools and reduce non-essential care services should cases of human-to-human transmission escalate.

    “This is a scenario which we are prepared for,” said Health Minister Gan Kin Yong. “As the situation evolves, we will step up our posture accordingly to further contain the situation in Singapore.”

    Japan

    Unlike other countries that have enacted strict border controls on travelers from China, Japan’s response has been comparatively relaxed.

    A poster promoting the Tokyo 2020 Olympics is posted next a train door as a commuter wearing a mask looks at his phone in a train, Friday, Jan. 31, 2020, in Tokyo. 

    A poster promoting the Tokyo 2020 Olympics is posted next a train door as a commuter wearing a mask looks at his phone in a train, Friday, Jan. 31, 2020, in Tokyo. 
    (AP)

    On Friday, Japan barred foreign nationals who had visited China’s Hubei province — where Wuhan is located — from visiting the country. The cautionary measure extends to foreigners who had stayed in the province within two weeks before their arrival in Japan, even if they do not show symptoms of the coronavirus, Kyodo News reported.

    Prime Minister Shinzo Abe hinted Tuesday, however, that his country may expand those restrictions.

    “We are analyzing the data on patients within China to determine which regions have a high risk,” he said. “We remain open-minded on what measures to take, including the possibility of expanding the regions” subject to the travel ban.

    As of Tuesday, Japan had reported 22 confirmed cases of the virus.

    South Korea

    In South Korea, which has reported 16 cases, U.S. service members who returned from mainland China to South Korea on or after Jan. 19 are being subjected to a 14-day “directed self-quarantine.”

    A statement from U.S. Forces Korea (USFK) says the quarantine is “mandatory for U.S. service members, regardless if they reside on or off USFK installations, and is highly encouraged for family members,[Defense Department] civilians, contractors, United Nation Command military personnel and Korean National employees to follow, as well, in the interest of public health safety.”

    CHILD CORONAVIRUS EVACUEE TRANSPORTED TO CALIFORNIA HOSPITAL WITH FEVER, HEALTH OFFICIALS SAY

    Also on the Korean peninsula, Hyundai, the world’s fifth-largest automaker, said it was suspending production at its manufacturing plants because of supply chain problems caused by the outbreak.

    United States

    The United States as of Tuesday has reported 11 confirmed cases of coronavirus. Last week, nearly 200 U.S. citizens were evacuated from Wuhan to a military base in California where they remain quarantined.

    On Saturday, Secretary of Defense Mark Esper approved Department of Defense (DoD) housing at four military bases for 1,000 people who may have to be quarantined as the result of the coronavirus.

    Employee Cynthia Bao, who is pregnant wears a protective mask to avoid getting sick, as she interacts with customers at the Beyond Services notary in Alhambra, Calif., Friday, Jan. 31, 2020. 

    Employee Cynthia Bao, who is pregnant wears a protective mask to avoid getting sick, as she interacts with customers at the Beyond Services notary in Alhambra, Calif., Friday, Jan. 31, 2020. 
    (AP)

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta – which is the only place in the U.S. that can confirm whether a patient has the virus — announced Monday that it was working to provide local health departments with the tools needed to conduct tests themselves without sending in the results.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Also on Monday, Nancy Messonnier, the director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, which is a part of the CDC, said the U.S. is planning to evacuate more Americans from Wuhan, though it was not clear when those evacuations would occur.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    UC Berkeley removes ‘Boalt Hall’ name from law school after discovery of namesake’s racist speech

    The University of California, Berkeley removed the legend “Boalt Hall” from the facade of its main law school building Thursday, severing an association dating back more than 100 years.

    The decision to de-name the hall was the culmination of a process that lasted nearly three years and was launched after Charles Reichmann, a lecturer at the school, discovered a racist speech delivered in 1877 by the prominent Bay Area lawyer John Henry Boalt.

    In a statement, the university said Boalt was “instrumental in legitimizing anti-Chinese racism and in catalyzing support for the passage of the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 — the nation’s first immigration ban on a specific group of people solely on the basis of race or nationality.”

    “Yet,” they wrote, “until 2017 his views weren’t well known on campus.”

    According to the Berkeley Library News website, Reichmann discovered the speech in the university’s Bancroft Library while researching the debate on Chinese immigration. Boalt’s speech included remarks like: “Two non-assimilating races never yet lived together harmoniously on the same soil, unless one of these races was in a state of servitude to the other” and adds that “It would certainly seem that in an extreme case of divergence as between extermination and this kind of reconciliation, the former were the more agreeable alternative.”

    “This is a really racist document,” Reichmann told the Berkeley Library News, “and it’s not just a level-handed, prudential, ‘We should limit immigration for the good of the commonwealth.’ It’s way beyond that.”

    Boalt himself never attended or taught at the university. His name was attached to the law school after his widow, Elizabeth, allocated two parcels of San Francisco land valued at $100,000 into a trust to be sold for the university to construct a hall in her late husband’s honor. Those properties were destroyed in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, but in 1911 the university named the newly-erected Boalt Memorial Hall of Law in recognition of Elizabeth’s generosity.

    In 1951, the school moved to a larger facility and the regents changed the school’s name to the UC Berkeley School of Law from the School of Jurisprudence. The name Boalt Hall was given to the main classroom wing of the law school but for decades many of its students and graduates referred to the entire school as Boalt Hall.

    FREE SPEECH WINS AS CALIFORNIA DMV SAYS FULHAM SOCCER FAN’S ‘COME ON YOU WHITES’ VANITY PLATE IS OK

    Only one other de-naming is known to have occurred in the 10-campus University of California system. In 2018, UC Irvine removed donor Francisco J. Ayala’s name from its biological sciences school and central science library after sexual harassment claims against him were substantiated.

    “I am saddened to see my great university following the herd of other colleges that are selectively editing American history,” UC Berkeley Professor of Law John Yoo told Fox News. “The answer to the sad moment of the past is not to remove people and events from our collective memory, but to remember them and learn from them.”

    “Shall we next re-sculpt Mount Rushmore because Washington and Jefferson owned slaves and Roosevelt liked war — closer to home, shall we end the Jefferson lectures at Berkeley for the same reason?” Yoo asked. “Shall we edit out the names of the chancellors and university leaders who worked on the nuclear bomb because the politically sensitive on campuses today reject that WWII ended with Hiroshima and Nagasaki?”

    A 2018 report by a law school committee tasked by Berkeley Law Dean Erwin Chemerinsky to assess whether the name should still be used concluded that Boalt’s  “principal public legacy is…one of racism and bigotry.”

    “John Boalt’s positive contributions to the university do not appear to outweigh this legacy of harm,” the report read.

    A 13-member Building Name Review Committee, assembled by UC Berkeley Chancellor Carol Christ, voted to recommend the removal of Boalt’s name from the building. The decision was then approved by Christ and UC system President Janet Napolitano.

    In a letter to Napolitano, Christ wrote that “Removing the Boalt name from our campus — as well as acknowledging our historical ties to John Boalt — will help Berkeley recognize a troubled part of our history, while better supporting the diverse membership of today’s academic community.”

    For decades, many of the UC Berkeley School of Law's students and graduates referred to the entire school as Boalt Hall.

    For decades, many of the UC Berkeley School of Law’s students and graduates referred to the entire school as Boalt Hall.

    However, in accordance with the vote to strip the name, the committee recommended that the law school “present the relevant history as part of a commitment to restorative justice.”

    “This cannot be about erasing a difficult history or forgetting all of the years that the name Boalt was used and why it was changed,” Chemerinsky agreed.

    Boalt Hall will now be known as The Law Building. The law school complex includes three other buildings — Simon Hall, North Addition, and South Addition.

    “Campuses across the country are dealing with similar questions,” Chemerinsky said, “and I think that our careful investigation and civil discussion hopefully can be a model for others grappling with these difficult issues.”

    CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

    “Institutions dedicated to the search for truth should not find it in their mission to add and delete from that truth for reasons of current political correctness,” Yoo stated.

    Instead, he argued that Berkely should have used Boalt’s name as the “starting point” for further “debate and discussion of his attitude toward the Chinese, the late 19th-century treatment of immigrants, and questions of race then and today.”

    “It is only by remembering and discussing these events, rather than pretending they never happened, that we will make sure they don’t happen again,” Yoo concluded.

    Japanese fashion house accused of cultural appropriation for putting models in cornrow wigs: ‘Racist show!’

    Critics didn’t care for this “hair”-brained idea.

    Commes des Garçons, a Japanese fashion house, is being accused of cultural appropriation after sending models down the runway in wigs designed to look like cornrows.

    The show took place on Friday at Paris Fashion Week and showcased several different male models, many of whom were white, strutting down the runway modeling the brand’s latest Homme Plus menswear collection. Nearly all of them were seen sporting what appeared to be ill-fitting cornrow wigs.

    ‘REAL-LIFE RAPUNZEL’ DISCUSSES DAILY LIFE WITH 6 FEET OF HAIR

    The criticism was swift on social media, with some deeming it a “racist” show, and others declaring that Commes des Garçons was “canceled.”

    Japanese fashion label Comme Des Garçons faced backlash for the look, which appeared on the runway at its Paris Fashion Week show on Friday.

    Japanese fashion label Comme Des Garçons faced backlash for the look, which appeared on the runway at its Paris Fashion Week show on Friday.
    (Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP via Getty Images)

    “I’m outraged and disgusted by your models’ choice of hairstyle knowing where it originated from. Where is the real representation?!?” one user wrote on Instagram.

    “Cancel culture incoming y’all really messed up on this one, man,” another user said.

    “They wanna make money off the culture but don’t wanna show love and respect to the people,” someone else commented.

    “Racist show!” another simply wrote.

    CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER

    Others, still, appeared to be just as offended by the placement and quality of the lace-front wigs.

    Critics on social media called the move

    Critics on social media called the move “racist,” while others declared that Commes des Garçons was “canceled.”
    (Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP via Getty Images)

    “Cornrow forehead wigs?” one asked.

    “I can’t even be mad because I know y’all did this for attention but come on … the lace? At least do it right,” someone else added.

    FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK FOR MORE FOX LIFESTYLE NEWS

    On Friday, Canadian fashion designer and model Tani also called out the brand in a Twitter post that has been liked more than 3,300 times.

    “Lmaoooo why?!” she wrote.

    Commes des Garçons has not publicly commented on the backlash, nor shared any photos from the show on its Instagram page as of Saturday afternoon. The fashion house, however, had once come under similar scrutiny in 2018, following accusations from fashion writer Marin Lerma that it had not hired a black model in the two decades prior.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    That same year, Kim Kardashian also faced criticism for arriving at the 2018 MTV Movie and TV Awards with her hair in cornrows.

    “It’s not cute to appropriate my culture,” one critic wrote on social media at the time. “Your privilege is really showing.”

    Japanese fashion house accused of cultural appropriation for putting models in cornrow wigs: ‘Racist show!’

    Critics didn’t care for this “hair”-brained idea.

    Commes des Garçons, a Japanese fashion house, is being accused of cultural appropriation after sending models down the runway in wigs designed to look like cornrows.

    The show took place on Friday at Paris Fashion Week and showcased several different male models, many of whom were white, strutting down the runway modeling the brand’s latest Homme Plus menswear collection. Nearly all of them were seen sporting what appeared to be ill-fitting cornrow wigs.

    ‘REAL-LIFE RAPUNZEL’ DISCUSSES DAILY LIFE WITH 6 FEET OF HAIR

    The criticism was swift on social media, with some deeming it a “racist” show, and others declaring that Commes des Garçons was “canceled.”

    Japanese fashion label Comme Des Garçons faced backlash for the look, which appeared on the runway at its Paris Fashion Week show on Friday.

    Japanese fashion label Comme Des Garçons faced backlash for the look, which appeared on the runway at its Paris Fashion Week show on Friday.
    (Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP via Getty Images)

    “I’m outraged and disgusted by your models’ choice of hairstyle knowing where it originated from. Where is the real representation?!?” one user wrote on Instagram.

    “Cancel culture incoming y’all really messed up on this one, man,” another user said.

    “They wanna make money off the culture but don’t wanna show love and respect to the people,” someone else commented.

    “Racist show!” another simply wrote.

    CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER

    Others, still, appeared to be just as offended by the placement and quality of the lace-front wigs.

    Critics on social media called the move

    Critics on social media called the move “racist,” while others declared that Commes des Garçons was “canceled.”
    (Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP via Getty Images)

    “Cornrow forehead wigs?” one asked.

    “I can’t even be mad because I know y’all did this for attention but come on … the lace? At least do it right,” someone else added.

    FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK FOR MORE FOX LIFESTYLE NEWS

    On Friday, Canadian fashion designer and model Tani also called out the brand in a Twitter post that has been liked more than 3,300 times.

    “Lmaoooo why?!” she wrote.

    Commes des Garçons has not publicly commented on the backlash, nor shared any photos from the show on its Instagram page as of Saturday afternoon. The fashion house, however, had once come under similar scrutiny in 2018, following accusations from fashion writer Marin Lerma that it had not hired a black model in the two decades prior.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    That same year, Kim Kardashian also faced criticism for arriving at the 2018 MTV Movie and TV Awards with her hair in cornrows.

    “It’s not cute to appropriate my culture,” one critic wrote on social media at the time. “Your privilege is really showing.”

    Fugitive Carlos Ghosn’s escape from Japan remains a mystery as investigation continues

    Former Nissan Chairman Carlos Ghosn’s dramatic escape from Japan last week remains a mystery as Japanese officials continue to investigate how he jumped bail and boarded an illegal flight to Lebanon while awaiting trial on financial misconduct charges.

    Ghosn, who remains on the lam, sparked wild speculation over how he fled the country while under surveillance, including a report that said he escaped by hiding inside the case of a musical instrument. Japan’s public broadcaster NHK later reported that video footage showed Ghosn walking out of his Tokyo home alone shortly before he left Japan.

    CARLOS GHOSN ON JAPAN ESCAPE: ‘MY FAMILY HAD NO ROLE’

    Turkish airline MNG Jet said Ghosn was then able to board two of its jets with the help of an airline employee who has admitted to falsifying flight records so Ghosn’s name didn’t appear. Ghosn first flew from Osaka, Japan, to Istanbul, and then on to Beirut, where he arrived on Dec. 30 and has not been seen since.

    It was unclear how Ghosn was able to make the 300-mile trip from his home in Tokyo to get on his flight in Osaka without arousing suspicion.

    A private security guard stood outside the house of ex-Nissan chief Carlos Ghosn in Beirut, Lebanon, on Sunday. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

    A private security guard stood outside the house of ex-Nissan chief Carlos Ghosn in Beirut, Lebanon, on Sunday. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

    Japan’s Justice Minister Masako Mori said Sunday that she had ordered an investigation into Ghosn’s stunning flight from the country after he announced his arrival in Lebanon on Dec. 31. Mori vowed to beef up immigration checks but didn’t elaborate on any specific action Japan might take to get Ghosn back.

    “Our nation’s criminal justice system protects the basic human rights of an individual and properly carries out appropriate procedures to disclose the truth of various cases, and the flight of a suspect while out on bail is never justified,” she said in a statement.

    Ghosn was arrested in November 2018 on financial misconduct charges of under-reporting his future compensation and breach of trust. His trial was not expected to begin until April at the earliest.

    Ghosn, the former CEO of Nissan, was awaiting trial in Japan on financial misconduct charges. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara, File)

    Ghosn, the former CEO of Nissan, was awaiting trial in Japan on financial misconduct charges. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara, File)

    Ghosn issued a statement last week saying he had fled from what he called Japan’s “rigged” justice system.

    The conviction rate is higher than 99 percent in Japan. The country’s justice system has come under fire from human rights advocates for its long detentions, the reliance on confessions and prolonged trials.

    FLIGHT RECORDS OF GHOSN ESCAPE FALSIFIED TO HIDE AUTO EXEC’S TRAVEL, JET FIRM SAYS

    Even if Ghosn had been found not guilty, the prosecutors could have appealed, and the appeals process could have lasted years.

    Interpol has since issued a wanted notice for Ghosn. However, since Japan has no extradition treaty with Lebanon, it is unlikely he will be sent back, according to attorney Page Pate, who handles international extradition matters.

    “He’s unlikely to have to go back to Japan – as long as he stays in Lebanon,” Page Pate told FOX Business last week. “He could be arrested if he tries to leave Lebanon [but] it’s highly unlikely the government in Lebanon will send him back.”

    CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

    Ghosn, who has yet to make a public appearance, has said he will speak to reporters Wednesday.

    Fox Business’ Stephanie Pagones and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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