At 116, Japanese woman set to be named world’s oldest person


A Japanese girl aged 116 is about to be named the world’s oldest individual by Guinness World Information.

The US-based Gerontology Analysis Group introduced on Wednesday that former mountaineer Tomiko Itooka, born on Could 23, 1908, would assume the title.

Itooka was subsequent in line to carry the report after Spain’s Maria Branyas Morera died on Tuesday, aged 117, in a nursing dwelling in Catalonia, in accordance with her household.

 

A resident of the western Japanese metropolis of Ashiya in Hyogo prefecture, Itooka was born in the identical yr the Wright Brothers made their first public flights in Europe and America. That yr, the primary long-distance radio message was despatched from the Eiffel Tower.

The mother-of-three nonetheless went climbing into her 70s and twice scaled Japan’s 3,067-metre (10,062-ft) Mount Ontake, stunning her information by climbing the mountain in sneakers as an alternative of mountain climbing boots.

On the age of 100, she walked up the prolonged stone steps of Japan’s Ashiya Shrine with out utilizing a cane, stated the group, which claims to have the world’s “largest supercentenarian database”.

Earlier report holder Branyas, who lived by means of the 1918 flu, two world wars and Spain’s civil struggle, contracted COVID-19 in 2020, simply weeks after ringing in her 113th birthday – however made a full restoration.

Born in the US, she had beforehand posted on an X account run by her household that the “time is close to”.

“Don’t cry, I don’t like tears. And above all, don’t endure for me. Wherever I’m going, I might be glad,” she stated.

Guinness World Information formally acknowledged Branyas’s standing because the world’s oldest individual in January 2023 following the loss of life of French nun Lucile Randon aged 118.

The oldest verified individual to have ever lived was Frenchwoman Jeanne Louise Calment who died in 1997 on the age of 122 years and 164 days.

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