Sunday, January 13, 2013

Worker runs over people at Mazda plant, 1 dead (0 Votes) 1 2 3 4 5 Bookmark and Share Bookmark AP 0 Investigators check a scene at Mazda Motor Corp.'s Ujina plant in Hiroshima, western Japan Tuesday, June 22, 2010. (AP Photo) Related News Jan 13 2013 World's oldest woman dies at 115 Jan 06 2013 Japan finance minister says won't insist on policy accord with BOJ Dec 27 2012 New Japan PM: Saving economic crisis top mission Dec 26 2012 Japan's Abe gets second term, to tap allies for cabinet Dec 25 2012 Japan's policy veteran Motegi likely to serve as trade minister: media Dec 17 2012 Japan's next PM Abe must deliver on economy, cope with China Dec 16 2012 Japan votes in election seen returning LDP to power Dec 13 2012 Japan's LDP, partner on track for two-thirds majority in polls Dec 09 2012 Raw: Powerful Earthquake Hits Japan Dec 07 2012 Strong quake hits off Japan near Fukushima disaster zone Useful Links epaper image » A new way to read online, exact replica of your daily and magazine twitter image » For all you tweety fans out there! archive image » Allows you to find only those news from any date you choose! advanced search image » Search any news/ articles by author/ category/ date/ keyword TOKYO, JUN 22 - A disgruntled worker drove over people at a Mazda factory on Tuesday, killing one and injuring 10, stunning Japan just two years after an auto worker went on a deadly rampage in central Tokyo. Toshiaki Hikiji, 42, was arrested about an hour later on attempted murder charges after fleeing in his car from Mazda's Ujina plant in Hiroshima Prefecture, southwestern Japan , police said. Japan ese media reports said Hikiji was a contract worker who had been let go in April. He bore a grudge against the automaker and went there with a knife with the intention to kill, they said. But Mazda Motor Corp. spokesman Kotaro Minagawa said he had quit in April on his own, citing personal reasons, after working just eight days at the plant, and there had been no reports of troubles. The rampage has revived memories of a stabbing spree in Tokyo's jam-packed electronics shopping district two years ago, also by an angry auto worker, that killed seven people when he slammed a truck into a crowd and then stabbed onlookers. Hikiji ignored security at the gate and drove into the plant as workers were arriving in the morning. Killed was Hiroshi Hamada, 39, a permanent employee, known as "seishain," the company said. One male worker remained in critical condition, although details weren't available, Minagawa said. "I pray for the spirit of the man who was killed, and pray for the recovery of the 10 who were injured," Mazda President Takashi Yamanouchi said in a statement. For decades during Japan 's modernization, its major companies guaranteed jobs for life and offered relatively good benefits in return for loyalty. But automakers, pinched by cost cutting efforts amid globalization, are increasingly relying on workers called "haken," who are hired on less attractive contracts than regular workers, often through job-referral companies. The manufacturers can better respond to changes in market demand with haken workers because they cannot generally dismiss regular employees. At Hiroshima-based Mazda, contract workers like Hikiji are hired on a six-month basis, but have contracts directly with Mazda and not with referral companies, which the automaker stopped using last year, Minagawa said. "They help us when things get busy because production fluctuates," he said of the contract workers, but declined to disclose details of the wage differences. The Ujina plant is Mazda's main auto assembly plant, churning out popular models like the Demio, known as the Mazda2 overseas, and the Roadster. The plant, which employs 7,000 people — 400 of them under temporary contracts — was operating as normal after the rampage, Minagawa said. In the 2008 case, 25-year-old Tomohiro Kato, who worked at a Toyota Motor Corp. affiliate, had posted angry messages on the Internet about his job and is believed to have carried out the killings in a fit of rage. Such crimes are rare but rising in number in Japan after years of lackluster economic growth have widened the gap between the have's and have-not's. Disaffection among marginalized individuals can grow intense because of unrealistic expectations about success. Japan has extremely strict gun-control laws and its culture encourages conformity and passivity. (0 Votes) 1 2 3 4 5 Bookmark and Share Bookmark AP 0 Investigators check a scene at Mazda Motor Corp.'s Ujina plant in Hiroshima, western Japan Tuesday, June 22, 2010. (AP Photo) Related News Jan 13 2013 World's oldest woman dies at 115 Jan 06 2013 Japan finance minister says won't insist on policy accord with BOJ Dec 27 2012 New Japan PM: Saving economic crisis top mission Dec 26 2012 Japan's Abe gets second term, to tap allies for cabinet Dec 25 2012 Japan's policy veteran Motegi likely to serve as trade minister: media Dec 17 2012 Japan's next PM Abe must deliver on economy, cope with China Dec 16 2012 Japan votes in election seen returning LDP to power Dec 13 2012 Japan's LDP, partner on track for two-thirds majority in polls Dec 09 2012 Raw: Powerful Earthquake Hits Japan Dec 07 2012 Strong quake hits off Japan near Fukushima disaster zone Useful Links epaper image » A new way to read online, exact replica of your daily and magazine twitter image » For all you tweety fans out there! archive image » Allows you to find only those news from any date you choose! advanced search image » Search any news/ articles by author/ category/ date/ keyword TOKYO, JUN 22 - A disgruntled worker drove over people at a Mazda factory on Tuesday, killing one and injuring 10, stunning Japan just two years after an auto worker went on a deadly rampage in central Tokyo. Toshiaki Hikiji, 42, was arrested about an hour later on attempted murder charges after fleeing in his car from Mazda's Ujina plant in Hiroshima Prefecture, southwestern Japan , police said. Japan ese media reports said Hikiji was a contract worker who had been let go in April. He bore a grudge against the automaker and went there with a knife with the intention to kill, they said. But Mazda Motor Corp. spokesman Kotaro Minagawa said he had quit in April on his own, citing personal reasons, after working just eight days at the plant, and there had been no reports of troubles. The rampage has revived memories of a stabbing spree in Tokyo's jam-packed electronics shopping district two years ago, also by an angry auto worker, that killed seven people when he slammed a truck into a crowd and then stabbed onlookers. Hikiji ignored security at the gate and drove into the plant as workers were arriving in the morning. Killed was Hiroshi Hamada, 39, a permanent employee, known as "seishain," the company said. One male worker remained in critical condition, although details weren't available, Minagawa said. "I pray for the spirit of the man who was killed, and pray for the recovery of the 10 who were injured," Mazda President Takashi Yamanouchi said in a statement. For decades during Japan 's modernization, its major companies guaranteed jobs for life and offered relatively good benefits in return for loyalty. But automakers, pinched by cost cutting efforts amid globalization, are increasingly relying on workers called "haken," who are hired on less attractive contracts than regular workers, often through job-referral companies. The manufacturers can better respond to changes in market demand with haken workers because they cannot generally dismiss regular employees. At Hiroshima-based Mazda, contract workers like Hikiji are hired on a six-month basis, but have contracts directly with Mazda and not with referral companies, which the automaker stopped using last year, Minagawa said. "They help us when things get busy because production fluctuates," he said of the contract workers, but declined to disclose details of the wage differences. The Ujina plant is Mazda's main auto assembly plant, churning out popular models like the Demio, known as the Mazda2 overseas, and the Roadster. The plant, which employs 7,000 people — 400 of them under temporary contracts — was operating as normal after the rampage, Minagawa said. In the 2008 case, 25-year-old Tomohiro Kato, who worked at a Toyota Motor Corp. affiliate, had posted angry messages on the Internet about his job and is believed to have carried out the killings in a fit of rage. Such crimes are rare but rising in number in Japan after years of lackluster economic growth have widened the gap between the have's and have-not's. Disaffection among marginalized individuals can grow intense because of unrealistic expectations about success. Japan has extremely strict gun-control laws and its culture encourages conformity and passivity.



(0 Votes)
Investigators check a scene at Mazda Motor Corp.'s Ujina plant in Hiroshima, western Japan Tuesday, June 22, 2010. (AP Photo)
TOKYO, JUN 22 - A disgruntled worker drove over people at a Mazda factory on Tuesday, killing one and injuring 10, stunning Japan just two years after an auto worker went on a deadly rampage in central Tokyo.
Toshiaki Hikiji, 42, was arrested about an hour later on attempted murder charges after fleeing in his car from Mazda's Ujina plant in Hiroshima Prefecture, southwestern Japan , police said.
Japan ese media reports said Hikiji was a contract worker who had been let go in April. He bore a grudge against the automaker and went there with a knife with the intention to kill, they said.
But Mazda Motor Corp. spokesman Kotaro Minagawa said he had quit in April on his own, citing personal reasons, after working just eight days at the plant, and there had been no reports of troubles.
The rampage has revived memories of a stabbing spree in Tokyo's jam-packed electronics shopping district two years ago, also by an angry auto worker, that killed seven people when he slammed a truck into a crowd and then stabbed onlookers.
Hikiji ignored security at the gate and drove into the plant as workers were arriving in the morning. Killed was Hiroshi Hamada, 39, a permanent employee, known as "seishain," the company said.
One male worker remained in critical condition, although details weren't available, Minagawa said.
"I pray for the spirit of the man who was killed, and pray for the recovery of the 10 who were injured," Mazda President Takashi Yamanouchi said in a statement.
For decades during Japan 's modernization, its major companies guaranteed jobs for life and offered relatively good benefits in return for loyalty.
But automakers, pinched by cost cutting efforts amid globalization, are increasingly relying on workers called "haken," who are hired on less attractive contracts than regular workers, often through job-referral companies.
The manufacturers can better respond to changes in market demand with haken workers because they cannot generally dismiss regular employees.
At Hiroshima-based Mazda, contract workers like Hikiji are hired on a six-month basis, but have contracts directly with Mazda and not with referral companies, which the automaker stopped using last year, Minagawa said.
"They help us when things get busy because production fluctuates," he said of the contract workers, but declined to disclose details of the wage differences.
The Ujina plant is Mazda's main auto assembly plant, churning out popular models like the Demio, known as the Mazda2 overseas, and the Roadster.
The plant, which employs 7,000 people — 400 of them under temporary contracts — was operating as normal after the rampage, Minagawa said.
In the 2008 case, 25-year-old Tomohiro Kato, who worked at a Toyota Motor Corp. affiliate, had posted angry messages on the Internet about his job and is believed to have carried out the killings in a fit of rage.
Such crimes are rare but rising in number in Japan after years of lackluster economic growth have widened the gap between the have's and have-not's. Disaffection among marginalized individuals can grow intense because of unrealistic expectations about success.
Japan has extremely strict gun-control laws and its culture encourages conformity and passivity.

Own-goals deny Japan historic victory over England (0 Votes) 1 2 3 4 5 Bookmark and Share Bookmark AFP 0 England's Wayne Rooney (R) and Japan's Yuto Nagatomo vie for the ball during their friendly international in Graz, Austria, on May 30 prior to the FIFA World Cup 2010 in South Africa. (AFP Photo) Related News Jan 13 2013 World's oldest woman dies at 115 Jan 06 2013 Japan finance minister says won't insist on policy accord with BOJ Dec 27 2012 New Japan PM: Saving economic crisis top mission Dec 26 2012 Japan's Abe gets second term, to tap allies for cabinet Dec 25 2012 Japan's policy veteran Motegi likely to serve as trade minister: media Dec 17 2012 Japan's next PM Abe must deliver on economy, cope with China Dec 16 2012 Japan votes in election seen returning LDP to power Dec 13 2012 Japan's LDP, partner on track for two-thirds majority in polls Dec 09 2012 England win third Test against India Dec 09 2012 Raw: Powerful Earthquake Hits Japan Useful Links epaper image » A new way to read online, exact replica of your daily and magazine twitter image » For all you tweety fans out there! archive image » Allows you to find only those news from any date you choose! advanced search image » Search any news/ articles by author/ category/ date/ keyword GRAZ, AUSTRIA, MAY 30 - Two own goals saved England from embarrassment in their final World Cup warm-up match as they came from behind to beat Japan 2-1 on Sunday. But the unconvincing victory threw up as many questions as answers for manager Fabio Capello just 48 hours before he must cut his squad for South Africa from 30 to 23. The unfortunate Yuji Nakazawa and Marcus 'Tulio' Tanaka, who put his side ahead after six minutes, both turned the ball into their own net in the second half - just when it looked as though Japan were heading for the first victory over England in their history. Capello admitted that the first-half had left him cold. "The first-half we were too slow, and allowed them to outpace us and create more than we did," said the Italian, who admitted he knew the final 23 but would not comment on that or about his own future after the World Cup. "In the second we had more pace and more creativity and gave the Japan ese more of a match and stopped them from playing." Although Capello can be pleased with the result there is no hiding the fact that his experimental side under-performed for large sections of the match and needed five second-half substitutions to bring them to life. At times until then England were outplayed by a Japan side who went into the friendly fixture low on confidence following three defeats in four games and with manager Takeshi Okada said to be under intense pressure. Okada's side were ahead after only six minutes when Glen Johnson lost his man from a Yasuhito Endo corner and Tulio swept home. The Japan ese visibly grew in confidence after that, shaking off memories of recent defeats, including a 2-0 home reverse against South Korea earlier in the week, to dominate possession in areas that England would normally expect to call their own. The closest Capello's side came to an equaliser was when Wayne Rooney cleverly found Aaron Lennon inside the area, only for the Tottenham winger's shot to be well saved by Eiji Kawashima. But in truth Japan were comfortable for most of the opening 45 minutes, even threatening a second when Rio Ferdinand slipped and Shinji Okazaki fired over the bar when well placed to score. It was no surprise when Capello made five changes at half-time, bringing on Joe Cole, Shaun Wright-Phillips, Jamie Carragher, Joe Hart and Steven Gerrard coming on. The changes, with Cole playing behind Rooney in a 4-5-1 formation, reaped almost immediate dividends when Frank Lampard earned England a penalty as Honda foolishly handled the Englishman's free-kick. But Lampard's 55th minute effort from the spot was superbly saved by Kawashima, sparking real celebration in the Japan side and leaving Capello with yet another headache. Lampard has enjoyed an outstanding season for Chelsea, scoring 27 goals in all competitions, but he has now missed two penalties in a row, having also shot wide in the FA Cup Final. Japan showed tenacity and energy in all positions, with substitute Daiki Iwamasa coming close to doubling their lead with an excellent left-foot shot that was well saved by Hart after 66 minutes. Only Rooney kept England going but Kawashima enjoyed an excellent day, saving one long-range effort comfortably from the Manchester United man and then acrobatically tipping another curling effort over the bar. However, just when it seemed the Japan ese were set to celebrate a landmark victory they finally cracked, Joe Cole's near-post cross headed into his own net after 71 minutes by the unfortunate Tanaka. Then when Joe Cole fed Ashley Cole down the left 10 minutes later the Chelsea left-back's cross was turned into his own net by a sliding Nakazawa, sealing Japan 's fate. Even then there was time for Hart to save well from Makoto Hasebe and for Ujki Abe to head against the crossbar. (0 Votes) 1 2 3 4 5 Bookmark and Share Bookmark AFP 0 England's Wayne Rooney (R) and Japan's Yuto Nagatomo vie for the ball during their friendly international in Graz, Austria, on May 30 prior to the FIFA World Cup 2010 in South Africa. (AFP Photo) Related News Jan 13 2013 World's oldest woman dies at 115 Jan 06 2013 Japan finance minister says won't insist on policy accord with BOJ Dec 27 2012 New Japan PM: Saving economic crisis top mission Dec 26 2012 Japan's Abe gets second term, to tap allies for cabinet Dec 25 2012 Japan's policy veteran Motegi likely to serve as trade minister: media Dec 17 2012 Japan's next PM Abe must deliver on economy, cope with China Dec 16 2012 Japan votes in election seen returning LDP to power Dec 13 2012 Japan's LDP, partner on track for two-thirds majority in polls Dec 09 2012 England win third Test against India Dec 09 2012 Raw: Powerful Earthquake Hits Japan Useful Links epaper image » A new way to read online, exact replica of your daily and magazine twitter image » For all you tweety fans out there! archive image » Allows you to find only those news from any date you choose! advanced search image » Search any news/ articles by author/ category/ date/ keyword GRAZ, AUSTRIA, MAY 30 - Two own goals saved England from embarrassment in their final World Cup warm-up match as they came from behind to beat Japan 2-1 on Sunday. But the unconvincing victory threw up as many questions as answers for manager Fabio Capello just 48 hours before he must cut his squad for South Africa from 30 to 23. The unfortunate Yuji Nakazawa and Marcus 'Tulio' Tanaka, who put his side ahead after six minutes, both turned the ball into their own net in the second half - just when it looked as though Japan were heading for the first victory over England in their history. Capello admitted that the first-half had left him cold. "The first-half we were too slow, and allowed them to outpace us and create more than we did," said the Italian, who admitted he knew the final 23 but would not comment on that or about his own future after the World Cup. "In the second we had more pace and more creativity and gave the Japan ese more of a match and stopped them from playing." Although Capello can be pleased with the result there is no hiding the fact that his experimental side under-performed for large sections of the match and needed five second-half substitutions to bring them to life. At times until then England were outplayed by a Japan side who went into the friendly fixture low on confidence following three defeats in four games and with manager Takeshi Okada said to be under intense pressure. Okada's side were ahead after only six minutes when Glen Johnson lost his man from a Yasuhito Endo corner and Tulio swept home. The Japan ese visibly grew in confidence after that, shaking off memories of recent defeats, including a 2-0 home reverse against South Korea earlier in the week, to dominate possession in areas that England would normally expect to call their own. The closest Capello's side came to an equaliser was when Wayne Rooney cleverly found Aaron Lennon inside the area, only for the Tottenham winger's shot to be well saved by Eiji Kawashima. But in truth Japan were comfortable for most of the opening 45 minutes, even threatening a second when Rio Ferdinand slipped and Shinji Okazaki fired over the bar when well placed to score. It was no surprise when Capello made five changes at half-time, bringing on Joe Cole, Shaun Wright-Phillips, Jamie Carragher, Joe Hart and Steven Gerrard coming on. The changes, with Cole playing behind Rooney in a 4-5-1 formation, reaped almost immediate dividends when Frank Lampard earned England a penalty as Honda foolishly handled the Englishman's free-kick. But Lampard's 55th minute effort from the spot was superbly saved by Kawashima, sparking real celebration in the Japan side and leaving Capello with yet another headache. Lampard has enjoyed an outstanding season for Chelsea, scoring 27 goals in all competitions, but he has now missed two penalties in a row, having also shot wide in the FA Cup Final. Japan showed tenacity and energy in all positions, with substitute Daiki Iwamasa coming close to doubling their lead with an excellent left-foot shot that was well saved by Hart after 66 minutes. Only Rooney kept England going but Kawashima enjoyed an excellent day, saving one long-range effort comfortably from the Manchester United man and then acrobatically tipping another curling effort over the bar. However, just when it seemed the Japan ese were set to celebrate a landmark victory they finally cracked, Joe Cole's near-post cross headed into his own net after 71 minutes by the unfortunate Tanaka. Then when Joe Cole fed Ashley Cole down the left 10 minutes later the Chelsea left-back's cross was turned into his own net by a sliding Nakazawa, sealing Japan 's fate. Even then there was time for Hart to save well from Makoto Hasebe and for Ujki Abe to head against the crossbar. (0 Votes) 1 2 3 4 5 Bookmark and Share Bookmark AFP 0 England's Wayne Rooney (R) and Japan's Yuto Nagatomo vie for the ball during their friendly international in Graz, Austria, on May 30 prior to the FIFA World Cup 2010 in South Africa. (AFP Photo) Related News Jan 13 2013 World's oldest woman dies at 115 Jan 06 2013 Japan finance minister says won't insist on policy accord with BOJ Dec 27 2012 New Japan PM: Saving economic crisis top mission Dec 26 2012 Japan's Abe gets second term, to tap allies for cabinet Dec 25 2012 Japan's policy veteran Motegi likely to serve as trade minister: media Dec 17 2012 Japan's next PM Abe must deliver on economy, cope with China Dec 16 2012 Japan votes in election seen returning LDP to power Dec 13 2012 Japan's LDP, partner on track for two-thirds majority in polls Dec 09 2012 England win third Test against India Dec 09 2012 Raw: Powerful Earthquake Hits Japan Useful Links epaper image » A new way to read online, exact replica of your daily and magazine twitter image » For all you tweety fans out there! archive image » Allows you to find only those news from any date you choose! advanced search image » Search any news/ articles by author/ category/ date/ keyword GRAZ, AUSTRIA, MAY 30 - Two own goals saved England from embarrassment in their final World Cup warm-up match as they came from behind to beat Japan 2-1 on Sunday. But the unconvincing victory threw up as many questions as answers for manager Fabio Capello just 48 hours before he must cut his squad for South Africa from 30 to 23. The unfortunate Yuji Nakazawa and Marcus 'Tulio' Tanaka, who put his side ahead after six minutes, both turned the ball into their own net in the second half - just when it looked as though Japan were heading for the first victory over England in their history. Capello admitted that the first-half had left him cold. "The first-half we were too slow, and allowed them to outpace us and create more than we did," said the Italian, who admitted he knew the final 23 but would not comment on that or about his own future after the World Cup. "In the second we had more pace and more creativity and gave the Japan ese more of a match and stopped them from playing." Although Capello can be pleased with the result there is no hiding the fact that his experimental side under-performed for large sections of the match and needed five second-half substitutions to bring them to life. At times until then England were outplayed by a Japan side who went into the friendly fixture low on confidence following three defeats in four games and with manager Takeshi Okada said to be under intense pressure. Okada's side were ahead after only six minutes when Glen Johnson lost his man from a Yasuhito Endo corner and Tulio swept home. The Japan ese visibly grew in confidence after that, shaking off memories of recent defeats, including a 2-0 home reverse against South Korea earlier in the week, to dominate possession in areas that England would normally expect to call their own. The closest Capello's side came to an equaliser was when Wayne Rooney cleverly found Aaron Lennon inside the area, only for the Tottenham winger's shot to be well saved by Eiji Kawashima. But in truth Japan were comfortable for most of the opening 45 minutes, even threatening a second when Rio Ferdinand slipped and Shinji Okazaki fired over the bar when well placed to score. It was no surprise when Capello made five changes at half-time, bringing on Joe Cole, Shaun Wright-Phillips, Jamie Carragher, Joe Hart and Steven Gerrard coming on. The changes, with Cole playing behind Rooney in a 4-5-1 formation, reaped almost immediate dividends when Frank Lampard earned England a penalty as Honda foolishly handled the Englishman's free-kick. But Lampard's 55th minute effort from the spot was superbly saved by Kawashima, sparking real celebration in the Japan side and leaving Capello with yet another headache. Lampard has enjoyed an outstanding season for Chelsea, scoring 27 goals in all competitions, but he has now missed two penalties in a row, having also shot wide in the FA Cup Final. Japan showed tenacity and energy in all positions, with substitute Daiki Iwamasa coming close to doubling their lead with an excellent left-foot shot that was well saved by Hart after 66 minutes. Only Rooney kept England going but Kawashima enjoyed an excellent day, saving one long-range effort comfortably from the Manchester United man and then acrobatically tipping another curling effort over the bar. However, just when it seemed the Japan ese were set to celebrate a landmark victory they finally cracked, Joe Cole's near-post cross headed into his own net after 71 minutes by the unfortunate Tanaka. Then when Joe Cole fed Ashley Cole down the left 10 minutes later the Chelsea left-back's cross was turned into his own net by a sliding Nakazawa, sealing Japan 's fate. Even then there was time for Hart to save well from Makoto Hasebe and for Ujki Abe to head against the crossbar.



(0 Votes)
England's Wayne Rooney (R) and Japan's Yuto Nagatomo vie for the ball during their friendly international in Graz, Austria, on May 30 prior to the FIFA World Cup 2010 in South Africa. (AFP Photo)
GRAZ, AUSTRIA, MAY 30 - Two own goals saved England from embarrassment in their final World Cup warm-up match as they came from behind to beat Japan 2-1 on Sunday.
But the unconvincing victory threw up as many questions as answers for manager Fabio Capello just 48 hours before he must cut his squad for South Africa from 30 to 23.
The unfortunate Yuji Nakazawa and Marcus 'Tulio' Tanaka, who put his side ahead after six minutes, both turned the ball into their own net in the second half - just when it looked as though Japan were heading for the first victory over England in their history.
Capello admitted that the first-half had left him cold.
"The first-half we were too slow, and allowed them to outpace us and create more than we did," said the Italian, who admitted he knew the final 23 but would not comment on that or about his own future after the World Cup.
"In the second we had more pace and more creativity and gave the Japan ese more of a match and stopped them from playing."
Although Capello can be pleased with the result there is no hiding the fact that his experimental side under-performed for large sections of the match and needed five second-half substitutions to bring them to life.
At times until then England were outplayed by a Japan side who went into the friendly fixture low on confidence following three defeats in four games and with manager Takeshi Okada said to be under intense pressure.
Okada's side were ahead after only six minutes when Glen Johnson lost his man from a Yasuhito Endo corner and Tulio swept home.
The Japan ese visibly grew in confidence after that, shaking off memories of recent defeats, including a 2-0 home reverse against South Korea earlier in the week, to dominate possession in areas that England would normally expect to call their own.
The closest Capello's side came to an equaliser was when Wayne Rooney cleverly found Aaron Lennon inside the area, only for the Tottenham winger's shot to be well saved by Eiji Kawashima.
But in truth Japan were comfortable for most of the opening 45 minutes, even threatening a second when Rio Ferdinand slipped and Shinji Okazaki fired over the bar when well placed to score.
It was no surprise when Capello made five changes at half-time, bringing on Joe Cole, Shaun Wright-Phillips, Jamie Carragher, Joe Hart and Steven Gerrard coming on.
The changes, with Cole playing behind Rooney in a 4-5-1 formation, reaped almost immediate dividends when Frank Lampard earned England a penalty as Honda foolishly handled the Englishman's free-kick.
But Lampard's 55th minute effort from the spot was superbly saved by Kawashima, sparking real celebration in the Japan side and leaving Capello with yet another headache.
Lampard has enjoyed an outstanding season for Chelsea, scoring 27 goals in all competitions, but he has now missed two penalties in a row, having also shot wide in the FA Cup Final.
Japan showed tenacity and energy in all positions, with substitute Daiki Iwamasa coming close to doubling their lead with an excellent left-foot shot that was well saved by Hart after 66 minutes.
Only Rooney kept England going but Kawashima enjoyed an excellent day, saving one long-range effort comfortably from the Manchester United man and then acrobatically tipping another curling effort over the bar.
However, just when it seemed the Japan ese were set to celebrate a landmark victory they finally cracked, Joe Cole's near-post cross headed into his own net after 71 minutes by the unfortunate Tanaka.
Then when Joe Cole fed Ashley Cole down the left 10 minutes later the Chelsea left-back's cross was turned into his own net by a sliding Nakazawa, sealing Japan 's fate.
Even then there was time for Hart to save well from Makoto Hasebe and for Ujki Abe to head against the crossbar.

Japan launches 5th spy satellite

TOKYO , NOV 28 - Japan launched its fifth spy satellite into orbit Saturday in a bid to boost its ability to independently gather intelligence, the government said.
The domestically developed H-2A rocket carrying the $565 million satellite lifted off from a space center on the southern island of Tanegashima, said Hisashi Michigami, an official at the Cabinet Office.
"The satellite will gather intelligence for our defense and diplomatic purposes," Michigami said. "We hope to upgrade our ability to gather intelligence on our own. Intelligence gathering is vital to our national security."
Michigami said the launch was successful.
Japan has long relied on the United States for intelligence. But it launched its first pair of spy satellites in 2003, prompted by concerns over North Korea's missile program.
North Korea shocked Tokyo in 1998 when it test-fired a missile over Japan . Since then, Japan has launched spy satellites primarily to watch developments in North Korea.
In April this year, a North Korean long-range rocket flew over Japan and landed in the Pacific Ocean.
Michigami said Japan has three working spy satellites. The fourth spy satellite become unresponsive in 2007 due to apparent electrical problems. Each spy satellite will last around five years, he said.
Japan has long been one of the world's leading space-faring nations, having launched its first satellite in 1970. But it has been struggling to get out from under China's shadow in recent years.
While China put its first men into orbit in 2003, Japan has yet to send astronauts on its own, though Japan ese have joined U.S. space missions.
Last year, Japan 's parliament voted to allow the nation's space programs to be used for defense for the first time as part of Tokyo's push to give its military a greater international role.
In January this year, Japan launched its first satellite to monitor greenhouse gases, a tool to help scientists better judge where global warming emissions are coming from, and how much is being absorbed by the oceans and forests.
The country also plans to have a two-legged robot walk on the moon by around 2020.