Japanese Province Where People Fall Asleep on Roads, The Reasons Will Stun You

When you are driving through the province of Okinawa in Japan you don’t just keep your eyes on the road, you literally keep your eyes on the floor in order not to run over a sleeping adult.

This is a province struggling to stop people from using the roads as beds. So what’s the reason behind this? Here’s the story.

Police in the Japanese province of Okinawa have been struggling with a phenomenon called rojo-ne, which translates literally as “sleeping on the road”.

You frequently see people sleeping on the road in Okinawa, with provincial police reporting over 7,000 cases recorded in 2019 alone. Some of those unfortunately resulted in the loss of human lives, and authorities are desperate to put an end to rojo-ne, a phenomenon that has been on the rise in Okinawa for years.

The sad news is that despite the efforts of the police to reduce this trend it seems to be getting worse.

“First of all, I think we’re the only ones collecting statistics on rojo-ne,” prefectural police chief Tadataka Miyazawa told the Mainichi newspaper. “I didn’t even know the term ‘rojo-ne’ before coming to Okinawa. I think it’s a phenomenon unique to Okinawa.”

On the reasons why people to fall asleep on the roads of Okinawa, the first suspect is alcohol. It probably has something to do with alcohol, as the vast majority of offenders are heavily inebriated, reports Oddity Central.

Another major reason which people think could be behind this behaviour is that the province’s warm climate all year round, with the annual average surpassing 20 degrees Celsius, might have something to do with it.

A quick Google search of rojo-ne cases reveals hundreds of photos of people sleeping on the road, as cars pass them by. Those are the lucky ones, but there have been cases of these people being run over, some of them killed. Last year alone there have been 16 reported auto accidents, and three recorded fatalities.

According to local reports, some people simply lie on the road to cool off, using the curb as a pillow, and there have been cases of female offenders taking off their clothes, allegedly thinking that they’ve arrived home.

Waking up rojo-ne offenders can be dangerous, as there have been cases where people under the influence of alcohol started fights with those trying to help them. It is for this reason that police advise drivers to simply turn on their cars’ emergency lights and call the police, instead of trying to wake up offenders themselves.

Okinawa police have been trying to prevent rojo-ne cases by raising awareness about the phenomenon through local media and radio, they’ve been fining offenders up to 50,000 yen (about $470), and even held a rojo-ne-themed photo exhibition last year. Nothing has worked, as data shows that rojo-ne cases are on the rise.

(Oddity Central)

 

About Saxon

Saxon is a prolific writer with passion for the unusual. I believe the bizarre world is always exciting so keeping you up to date with such stories is my pleasure

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