2016 in Japan
The following lists events that happened during 2016 in Japan.
- Year: Heisei 28
 
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| See also: | Other events of 2016 History of Japan • Timeline • Years  | ||||
Incumbents
    
- Emperor: Akihito[1]
 - Prime Minister: Shinzō Abe (L–Yamaguchi)
 - Chief Cabinet Secretary: Yoshihide Suga (L–Kanagawa)
 - Chief Justice of the Supreme Court: Itsurō Terada
 - President of the House of Representatives: Tadamori Oshima (L–Aomori)
 - President of the House of Councillors: Masaaki Yamazaki (L–Fukui) until July 25, Chūichi Date (L-Hokkaidō) from August 1
 - National Diets: 190th (regular session, January 4–June 1), 191st (extraordinary session, August 1–3), 192nd (extraordinary session, September 26–November 30 [unless extended or cut short by lower house dissolution])[2]
 
Governors
    
- Aichi Prefecture: Hideaki Omura
 - Akita Prefecture: Norihisa Satake
 - Aomori Prefecture: Shingo Mimura
 - Chiba Prefecture: Kensaku Morita
 - Ehime Prefecture: Tokihiro Nakamura
 - Fukui Prefecture: Issei Nishikawa
 - Fukuoka Prefecture: Hiroshi Ogawa
 - Fukushima Prefecture: Masao Uchibori
 - Gifu Prefecture: Hajime Furuta
 - Gunma Prefecture: Masaaki Osawa
 - Hiroshima Prefecture: Hidehiko Yuzaki
 - Hokkaido: Harumi Takahashi
 - Hyogo Prefecture: Toshizō Ido
 - Ibaraki Prefecture: Masaru Hashimoto
 - Ishikawa Prefecture: Masanori Tanimoto
 - Iwate Prefecture: Takuya Tasso
 - Kagawa Prefecture: Keizō Hamada
 - Kagoshima Prefecture: Satoshi Mitazono
 - Kanagawa Prefecture: Yuji Kuroiwa
 - Kochi Prefecture: Masanao Ozaki
 - Kumamoto Prefecture: Ikuo Kabashima
 - Kyoto Prefecture: Keiji Yamada
 - Mie Prefecture: Eikei Suzuki
 - Miyagi Prefecture: Yoshihiro Murai
 - Miyazaki Prefecture: Shunji Kōno
 - Nagano Prefecture: Shuichi Abe
 - Nagasaki Prefecture: Hōdō Nakamura
 - Nara Prefecture: Shōgo Arai
 - Niigata Prefecture: Hirohiko Izumida (until 27 October); Ryūichi Yoneyama (starting 27 October)
 - Oita Prefecture: Katsusada Hirose
 - Okayama Prefecture: Ryuta Ibaragi
 - Okinawa Prefecture: Takeshi Onaga
 - Osaka Prefecture: Ichirō Matsui
 - Saga Prefecture: Yoshinori Yamaguchi
 - Saitama Prefecture: Kiyoshi Ueda
 - Shiga Prefecture: Taizō Mikazuki
 - Shiname Prefecture: Zenbe Mizoguchi
 - Shizuoka Prefecture: Heita Kawakatsu
 - Tochigi Prefecture: Tomikazu Fukuda
 - Tokushima Prefecture: Kamon Iizumi
 - Tokyo: 
- until 21 June: Yōichi Masuzoe
 - 21 June-2 August: Tatsumi Ando
 - starting 2 August: Yuriko Koike
 
 - Tottori Prefecture: Shinji Hirai
 - Toyama Prefecture: Takakazu Ishii
 - Wakayama Prefecture: Yoshinobu Nisaka
 - Yamagata Prefecture: Mieko Yoshimura
 - Yamaguchi Prefecture: Tsugumasa Muraoka
 - Yamanashi Prefecture: Hitoshi Gotō
 
Events
    
    January
    
- Record snowfall and the first Sumo tournament win in a decade for a Japanese rikishi, amid turmoil on the Nikkei 225 and a political scandal involving Abe's cabinet. (See Akira Amari)
 - Filmmaker and dolphin activist Ric O'Barry was refused entry to the country and was held prior to deportation.
 
February
    
- February 17 - launch of Hitomi (satellite), ChubuSat-2, ChubuSat-3 and Horyu-4 using a H-IIA 202 space launch vehicle
 
March
    
- March 11 - Japan commemorates the fifth anniversary of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami and the subsequent of Fukushima nuclear disaster.
 - March 25 - Kyoto Tamba Kogen Quasi-National Park is established
 - March 25 - Asagishi, Hanasaki (Hokkaido), Higashi-Oiwake, Kami-Shirataki, Kanehana, Kyū-Shirataki, Ōshida, Shimo-Shirataki, Tomisato and Washinosu stations are closed
 - March 26 - Higashi-Himeji, Nishi-kumamoto, Ishinomakiayumino, Odasakae and Maya stations opens
 - March 26 - Hokkaido Shinkansen starts its service from Shin-Aomori Station to Shin-Hakodate-Hokuto Station
 - March 26 - Museum of Natural and Environmental History, Shizuoka opens
 - March 27 – Kumamoto gubernatorial election: Incumbent Ikuo Kabashima reelected for a third term[3]
 - March 27 - Democratic Party (Japan) is established
 
April
    
- April 2 - Tsuyama Railroad Educational Museum opens
 - April 16 – A 7.0 magnitude earthquake strikes Kumamoto prefecture, and kills at least 50 people and 3,129 injured.
 - April 24 – National Diet, House of Representatives: By-elections in Hokkaido 5th district and in Kyoto 3rd district
 
May
    
- May 1–2 - G7 Kitakyushu Energy Ministerial Meeting
 - May 23 - Akatsuki (spacecraft) begins a scientific mission at Venus after a troubled 5-years travel[4]
 - May 26–27 – The 42nd G7 summit was held on Kashiko Island
 
June
    
- IUPAC declared the element 113 Ununtrium as Nihonium, first element in the periodic table whose name is derived from Japan.[5]
 - June 5[6] – Okinawa assembly election: Governor Onaga's anti-base, left-wing supporters expand their majority
 
July
    
- July 10 – National Diet, House of Councillors: 24th regular election
 - July 10[7] – Kagoshima gubernatorial election
 - July 23 – Tatsuo Hirano, independent member of the House of Councillors from Iwate, joins the Liberal Democratic Party, giving the party the first majority of its own since the 1989 election defeat[8]
 - July 26 - A knife attack in Sagamihara kills 19 people and injures up to 50.
 - July 31[9] – Tokyo gubernatorial, assembly by-elections
 
August
    
- Japan at the 2016 Summer Olympics
 - August 21: Russell M. Nelson dedicates the Sapporo Japan Temple, the 151st LDS temple and third LDS temple in Japan.[10]
 
September
    
- July to September - According to Japan National Police Agency official confirmed report, 48 hospitalized patients were die, administer disinfectant liquid diamitol giving for hospitalized patients in hospital, Yokohama. On 7 July 2018, a nurse of the main criminal detained and confessed, according to JNPA.[11]
 
October
    
- October 16[12] – Niigata gubernatorial election
 - October 21 - A Richer Scale 6.2 earthquake, with aftershocks in Kurayoshi, Tottori Prefecture, according to Japan Fire and Disaster Management Agency official confirmed report, 30 persons were wounded.[13]
 - October 23[14] – Okayama gubernatorial election
 - October 23[15] – Toyama gubernatorial election
 - October 23 – National Diet, House of Representatives: By-elections in Fukuoka, 6th district[16] and in Tokyo, 10th district
 - October 25 - Two explosions in a park in the Japanese city of Utsunomiya, Tochigi Prefecture, kill at least one person and injure three others. Local media report that a 72-year-old ex-military officer is responsible for the blasts. A fire the same day destroyed the suspect's house. (The Guardian), (BBC)
 
November
    
- November 20[17] – Tochigi gubernatorial election
 
December
    
5th: Abe declares his historic plan to visit Pearl Harbor
- December 18 - A bottoming net fishing boat Daifuku Maru capsized off coast Matsue, Shimane Prefecture, according to Japan Coast Guard official confirmed report, nine people lost to lives.
 - December 22 - A massive fire in Itoigawa, Niigata Prefecture, according to Japanese Fire and Disaster Management Agency confirmed report, 17 person wounded.[18]
 
The Nobel Prize
    
- Yoshinori Ohsumi: 2016 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine winner.
 
Culture
    
    Arts and entertainment
    
- List of 2016 box office number-one films in Japan
 - March 4 - 39th Japan Academy Prize
 - March 12 - 10th Seiyu Awards
 
Arts and entertainment
    
    
Sports
    
- October 9 – 2016 Formula One World Championship is held at 2016 Japanese Grand Prix
 - October 16 – 2016 FIA World Endurance Championship is held at 2016 6 Hours of Fuji
 - October 16 – 2016 MotoGP World Championship is held at 2016 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix
 
Deaths
    
    
May
    
- May 5, Isao Tomita, composer (b. 1932)
 - May 17, Yūko Mizutani, voice actress (b. 1964)
 
June
    
- June 21, Kunio Hatoyama, politician (b. 1948)
 
July
    
- July 31, Chiyonofuji Mitsugu, sumo wrestler (b. 1955)
 
October
    
- October 20, Junko Tabei, mountaineer (b. 1939)
 - October 23, Mikijirō Hira, actor (b. 1933)
 
November
    
- November 29, Hiroshi Ogawa, announcer (b. 1926)
 
December
    
- December 29, Jinpachi Nezu, actor (b. 1947)
 
See also
    
    
References
    
- "Akihito | Biography, Reign, & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
 - House of Representatives: National Diet sessions (in Japanese)
 - Asahi Shimbun, March 27: 熊本県知事選、蒲島氏が3選 新顔2人を大差で破る
 - "JAXA | Venus Climate Orbiter "AKATSUKI" (PLANET-C)". JAXA | Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.
 - "IUPAC is naming the four new elements nihonium, moscovium, tennessine, and oganesson". IUPAC | International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry. June 8, 2016.
 - Asahi Shimbun, May 27: 71人が届け出、沖縄県議選告示 基地問題争点に
 - Kagoshima prefectural government, election commission: national, prefectural and municipal elections due in 2016
 - Asahi Shimbun Digital, July 24, 21016: 自民、27年ぶり参院単独過半数 平野・元復興相が入党
 - Tokyo metropolitan government, election commission: National, prefectural and municipal elections in 2016
 - Weaver, Sarah Jane (August 21, 2016). "President Russell M. Nelson dedicates Sapporo Japan Temple". Deseret News. Retrieved August 23, 2016.
 - ja:大口病院連続点滴中毒死事件 Japanese language Retrieved 12 July 2018.
 - Jiji press, May 17: 10月16日投開票=新潟知事選 Archived 2016-07-01 at the Wayback Machine
 - ja:鳥取県中部地震 (Japanese language) Retrieved date on March 30, 2017
 - Okayama prefectural government, election commission, May 25: 岡山県知事選挙等の日程を決定しました Archived 2016-06-02 at the Wayback Machine
 - Toyama prefectural government, election commission: Election schedules
 - Nishi-Nippon Shimbun, June 22, 2016 evening edition: 鳩山邦夫元総務相が死去 政治家一族、衆院福岡6区 Archived 2016-06-23 at the Wayback Machine
 - Jiji Press, August 26: 栃木知事選、11月20日投開票 Archived 2016-10-12 at the Wayback Machine
 - ja:糸魚川市大規模火災’’’ (Japanese language) ’’’ Retrieved date on March 21, 2016
 
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