TOKYO: The world’s tallest tower, the Tokyo Skytree, opened to the public yesterday with tens of thousands of visitors flocking to the Japanese capital’s newest attraction.
Despite rainy weather, residents and tourists gathered around the 634-meter (2,080-foot) tower and its adjacent shopping and amusement complex ,which also opened on Tuesday.
But those hoping for spectacular views from the observation deck 350 meters up were thwarted by the weather.
“I have long been looking forward to coming here,” said Ayumi Nakazawa, who won tickets to the opening ceremony of the tower, which ranks as the world’s second-tallest structure.
“I can’t see the view (because of the rain), but it was exciting,” Nakazawa told reporters after becoming the first official visitor to the observation deck.
Japan’s hard-hit tourism sector is hoping the tower will boost the number of visitors from abroad after figures plummeted in the wake of Japan’s quake-tsunami disaster last year.
The disaster, which sparked the worst nuclear crisis in a generation, saw the number of visitors to Japan fall 27.8 percent from the previous year to 6.22 million, according to the Japan National Tourist Organization.
Amid safety concerns, the tower’s operator said Tokyo Skytree was equipped with state-of-art technology to counter the earth tremors that regularly shake Japan, one of the world’s most seismically active nations.
The Tokyo Skytree is the world’s second-tallest manmade structure, topped only by the 828-meter Burj Khalifa in Dubai.
It stands taller than the 600-meter Canton Tower in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou and the 553-meter CN Tower in the Canadian city of Toronto.
In Japan’s capital the Tokyo Skytree overshadows landmarks in the upscale western district including the 333-meter Tokyo Tower, which was built in 1958 and became a byword for the country’s rapid post-war growth.
World’s tallest tower opens in Tokyo
World’s tallest tower opens in Tokyo
Sri Lanka court orders 84 Iranian sailors’s bodies be handed to Iran embassy, local media says
COLOMBO: A Sri Lankan court has ordered that the bodies of 84 sailors killed in an attack on an Iranian warship off the island nation’s coast last week be handed over to the embassy of Iran, local media reported on Wednesday.
The warship, IRIS Dena, was hit by a torpedo from a US submarine in the Indian Ocean while it was returning from a naval exercise organized by India, amid the US-Israeli war on Iran.
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