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News in Easy English: Tokyo police teach Nepalese students about how to avoid crime
News in Easy English: Tokyo police teach Nepalese students about how to avoid crime

The Mainichi

time11 hours ago

  • The Mainichi

News in Easy English: Tokyo police teach Nepalese students about how to avoid crime

TOKYO -- Police in Tokyo held a special class on May 31 to help foreign students stay away from crime and other dangers. Around 40 students from Nepal who now live in Tokyo's Nakano Ward came to the class. Police talked about "dark gigs." Dark gigs are dangerous part-time jobs. Criminal groups sometimes ask people online to do these jobs. Police showed students social media posts asking young people to help with crimes. Officers said, "These jobs seem easy and pay a lot of money, but the jobs are not clear. Do not say yes to these offers." Police also said giving criminals your bank card or bank information is a crime. Officers asked students to stay safe by following Japan's rules. The workshop also taught students about traffic rules and how to get ready for earthquakes and fires. A Nepali speaker from Tokyo's police explained everything clearly so students could understand easily. One student, 20, from Nepal said, "I came to Japan recently. I learned a lot today to stay away from crime." Police officer Hiroshi Maeda said, "Life in Japan has different rules and ways. I want students to have a safe and good life without trouble." (Japanese original by Suga Kengo, Tokyo City News Department) Vocabulary criminal: a person who does things against the law dark gigs: dangerous part-time jobs that criminals offer online social media posts: words or pictures put on the internet for others to see earthquakes: when the ground moves strongly, often dangerous

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