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The world’s oldest man, a Japanese, died Tuesday at the age of 112 after suffering chronic heart problems, officials said.
Yasutaro Koide had said his secret to a long life was not to smoke, drink or overdo it.
Mr. Koide, who was born on March 13, 1903, died two months short of his 113th birthday.
Born during historical events
In
the year he was born, the Wright brothers made their historic first
flight in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, and a modernising Japan was
embroiled in a dispute with Russia over Manchuria that would erupt into
the Russo-Japanese War in early 1904.
Mr. Koide (pronounced “Ko-ee-deh”) worked as a tailor when he was younger. He was recognised by the Guinness Book of World Records as the world’s oldest man last August.
The
Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare said he died at a hospital in
Nagoya, central Japan, where he had been treated for heart problems.
Now, will the title go to another Japanese?
Japan’s
oldest man is now Masamitsu Yoshida, a 111-year-old Tokyo native who
was born on May 30, 1904. It was not immediately known whether Mr.
Yoshida is also the world’s oldest male.
Japan, a
rapidly aging country, has more than 61,000 centenarians, according to
the nation’s family registration records. Nearly 90 per cent are women.
Oldest is an American woman
The world’s oldest person is an American woman, 116-year-old Susannah Mushatt Jones of Brooklyn, New York.