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heron: Miyazaki's long-awaited "The Boy and the Heron" reveals English cast and premiere dates

Studio Ghibli's Hayao Miyazaki has revealed his latest animated film, "The Boy and the Heron," after a decade of anticipation. The English voice cast includes Christian Bale, Dave Bautista, Gemma Chan, Willem Dafoe, Karen Fukuhara, Mark Hamill, Robert Pattinson, Florence Pugh, Luca Padovan, Mamoudou Athie, Tony Revolri, and Dan Stevens.

Disclaimer-statement , Economic-times , Heron , Miyazaki-s , Miyazaki-enthusiasts , Shoichi-maki , Shoichi , Natsuko , Mamoudou-athie , Robert-pattinson , Karen-fukuhara

Newsday-20210903-00:20:00

she was born with brittle bone disease and that means she cannot stand and has repeatedly broken numerous bones. but natsuko has given birth to two children, something almost unheard of for someone with her disability in japan. and something she says many people here still do not accept or approve of. many people are surprised and do not believe that i have children. if people say their honest feelings, they think it is not good. many people think it is not good to have children for disabled people. natsuko's experience shows how farjapan has to go, but also how far it has come. because last time the paralympics was held here in tokyo back in 196a, japan was still forcibly

Japan , Something , Children , Natsuko , Disability , Someone , Brittle-bone-disease , Bones , Birth , Two , People , Feelings

Newsday-20210903-00:19:00

worried that people who wore masks might also be at another behaviours, so it is not clear whether the masks were really responsible. so by doing a randomised controlled trial, this is really the gold standard for evaluating health interventions, we show, no, it is the mask that makes a difference. so i think for policymakers, this makes it very clear that improving mask intake that uptake will improve covid—i9 outcomes. japan is the first country in olympic history to host the paralympic games twice, but what is it like to be a disabled person living injapan today? it is one of the few countries that requires companies by law to hire a certain percentage of employees with disabilities. but, as our tokyo correspondent rupert wingfield—hayes discovers, prejudice against people with disabilities is still widespread. natsuko calls herself the tiny 100cm mum.

People , Masks , Behaviours , Health-interventions , Gold-standard , Doinga-randomised-controlled-trial , Japan , Mask , Country , Difference , Covid-i9 , Mask-intake

BBC News-20210903-12:30:00

them, they ignore me. because they don't have the chance to live with people with disabilities. natsuko says all she really wants is to be given the same rights and to be treated the same way as any other mum. for that, she says japan still has some way to go. cricket now, and on day two of the fourth test match at the oval england have made steady progress in chasing india first innings score of 190. at lunch they were 139—5. time for a look at the weather, here's louise lear. thank you. good afternoon, change, cloudier and cooler in north and west. but this is the isle of wight this morning, glorious and i'm sure it is coming as welcome news, it has

People , Chance , Disabilities , Natsuko , Way , Rights , Mum , Cricket , Japan , Two , Weather , North-west-england

BBC News at One-20210903-12:29:15

BBC News at One-20210903-12:29:15
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Learning , Paralympic-village-japanese , School-kids , Natsuko , Wheelchair , Start , Barrier , People , Way , Person , Children , Japan

Newsday-20210903-00:22:00

to make sure it never happens again. i want disabled people to be treated equally. we are not things. we are human beings. close to the paralympic village, japanese schoolkids are learning what it's like to have to use a wheelchair to get around. this is a start. but natsuko thinks the real barrier to acceptance for people like her is that mostjapanese people have never actually met a disabled person. i use a wheelchair and people just walk the other way. many people see me and look at me strangely. and if i watch them, they ignore me because they don't have the chance to live with people with disabilities. all she really wants us to be given the same rights and be treated the same way as any other mum.

People , Japan , Things , Start , Natsuko , It , Schoolkids , Wheelchair , Human-beings , Learning , Paralympic-village , Way

BBC News at One-20210903-12:27:00

naskoi calls herself "the tiny 100 centimetre mum". she was born with brittle bone disease. that means she cannot stand and has repeatedly broken numerous bones. but she has given birth to two children, something almost unheard of for someone with her disability injapan and something she says many people here do not accept or approve of. many people are surprised. they do not believe i have got children. if people say honest feelings, they think it is not good. honestly, many people think it's not good way to have children for disabled people. natsuko's experience shows how far japan has still has to go,

Brittle-bone-disease , The-tiny-100-centimetre-mum , Naskoi , 100 , People , Children , Someone , Something , Disability , Bones , Birth , Two

Newsday-20210902-23:21:00

natsuko's experience shows how farjapan has to go, but also how far it has come. because last time the paralympics was held here in tokyo back in 1964, japan was still forcibly sterilising disabled people to prevent them from having children of their own. that so—called eugenics protection law was finally repealed in 1996. and to this day, the japanese government is not fully recognised the role it played in violating the rights of more than 20,000 disabled people. yumi is one of those victims. she was born with cerebral palsy. and she was 12—year—old, her womb was removed without her knowledge or consent. when i found out i can never be

People , Japan , Natsuko , Experience , Tokyo , Paralympics , Farjapan , 1964 , Children , Eugenics-protection-law , 1996 , Government

Newsday-20210902-23:20:00

but, as our tokyo correspondent rupert wingfield—hayes discovers — prejudice against people with disabilities is still widespread. nasuko calls herself the tiny 100 cm mum. she was born with brittle bone disease and that means she cannot stand and is repeatedly broken numerous bones. but natsuko has given birth to two children, something almost unheard of for someone with her disability injapan. and something she says many people here still do not accept or approve of. many people are surprised and do not believe that i have children. if people say their honest feelings, they think it is not good. many people think it is not good to have children for disabled people.

People , Nada-tawfik , Disabilities , Tokyo , Rupert-wingfield-hayes , Children , Something , Natsuko , Mum , Someone , Bones , Disability-injapan

Newsday-20210902-23:22:00

a mother, it broke my heart. yumi and others are suing. i do not want money, i want people to know what happened to us. to make sure it never happens again. i want disabled people to be treated equally. we are not things. we are human beings. close to the paralympic village, japanese school kids are learning what it's like to have to use a wheelchair to get around. this is a start. but natsuko thinks the real barrier to acceptance for people like her is that mostjapanese people have never actually met a disabled person. i use a wheelchair and people just walk the other way. many people see me and look at me strangely. and if i watch them, they ignore me because they don't have the chance to live with people with disabilities.

People , It , Mother , Yumi , America , Heart , Others , Money , Things , Japan , Start , Wheelchair