Teller Report

Tokyo Fire Department: Water rescue training at sports facilities at Olympic Games

11/1/2023, 7:39:28 AM

Highlights: The Tokyo Olympics are being held in Japan this year. The event is being held on the island of Honshu in the East of Japan. It is the first time the Olympics have been held in the east of Japan, which is home to the majority of the country's population. The city has a long history of hosting the Olympics, dating back to the first one in 1896. The Olympics are the first Olympics to be held in a country that has not been a member of the Olympics since 1964, when it was founded.

At a sports facility in Tokyo, which was the venue for the canoeing competition at the Tokyo Olympics, the rescue team of the Tokyo Fire Department conducted a training to rescue people swept away by the river ...


At a sports facility in Tokyo that was the venue for the canoe competition at the Tokyo Olympics, rescue teams from the Tokyo Fire Department and others conducted training to rescue people who were swept away by the river.

The training was held at the Canoe Slalom Center in Edogawa Ward, Tokyo, and more than 60 people, including the Tokyo Fire Department's water rescue team, participated.

This facility is the venue for the canoe competition at the Tokyo Olympics, and it is possible to artificially create a steep stream of water, which means that more practical training can be performed.

In the training to rescue people who were swept away by the river, the team members worked in pairs to check the procedures for securing people who had been swept away and pulling them to the shore.

After that, the team members were divided into groups and rode rubber boats, where they were taught how to use oars by the instructor and practiced how to go down the rapids by avoiding obstacles that resembled rocks.

Fire Commander Tomoya Matsuura of the Tokyo Fire Department's Rescue Division said, "This is a valuable opportunity to experience the rapid flow, so we want to continue training to ensure that we can rescue people while ensuring our own safety."