Safety probe after Japan road tunnel collapse kills 9
Japan ordered inspections of ageing highway tunnels on Monday after a fiery collapse that killed nine people, as suspicion over the cause of the accident centred on decaying ceiling supports.

Japan ordered inspections of ageing highway tunnels on Monday after a fiery collapse that killed nine people, as suspicion over the cause of the accident centred on decaying ceiling supports.
The government pledged a thorough review and said “significant investment” would likely be required in the motorway network, parts of which including the accident site were built during the economic boom of the 1960s and 1970s.
“As a major factor, we suspect ageing,” an official from highway operator Nexco said, referring to the tragedy at the Sasago tunnel, which passes through hills near Mount Fuji, 80 kilometres west of Tokyo.
Footage from inside the tunnel showed concrete panels had collapsed in a V-shape, possibly indicating some kind of weakness in the central supporting pillars suspended from the roof, experts said.
Engineers on Monday began inspections at three other tunnels in the region with the same design, as well as at Sasago.