Eastern seaboard development expected with the 4.2 km Yonabaru Bypass between Nishihara and Haibaru. (7mr22)

Both lanes of the National Route 329 Yonabaru Bypass stretching the 2.2 km from Yonabaru in the Yonabaru District to Yonaha in the Haebaru District were provisionally opened for traffic at 4 P.M. on 6 March. The bypass, with a total length of 4.2 km including the section already open for traffic from Onaha in the Nishihara District to Yonaha in the Haebaru District, has now become provisionally open for traffic in all lanes. Relief of congestion around the Yonabaru and other intersections can be expected.


The same day, an opening ceremony was held. About 500 people participated, including dignitaries from the three districts and the Combined Office of the Okinawa Southern District National Traffic Bureau. Festivities included tape-cutting and bursting festive paper balloons.


Work began on the Yonabaru Bypass in 1992. In 2004, actual road construction started. Currently one lane in each direction has been provisionally opened for traffic. A plan for 2 lanes each way  sometime in the future has not yet been concluded. 


At the opening ceremony, Vice-Governor Yoshimi Teruya stood in for Governor Denny Tamaki to read his congratulatory speech.  He noted, “We are confident that opening this bypass for traffic will ease the traffic jams along National Route 329 and contribute to the improvement of access to Naha. Leaders from the three districts also offered greetings and expectations of relief from chronic traffic jams and development of the eastern seaboard.


After the ceremony, with police cars in the lead, the dignitaries took the first ride along the route.


Original Japanese article: Ryukyu Shimpo, published Monday 7 February 2022 at 08:28. Byline: Daitetsu Teruya

https://news.yahoo.co.jp/articles/05bae83ebe1e6e10dbeab4f6dc93080c12cef489


Translator’s note:

Denny in the News: news about Okinawan Governor Denny Tamaki.

Denny Tamaki is the governor of Okinawa Prefecture in Japan. Although Okinawa is important as an international tourist destination and a key element in strategic US Military Forces, its governor receives very little coverage in the Japanese press and almost none in the English language media. 

  1. This blog hopes to  translate one news article a day on the governor.  It is unsponsored and unauthorized. The translator simply hopes to improve his skills and perhaps give the governor an English speaking audience. 

  2. Any suggestion on improving the translation will be gratefully accepted. However, please leave political comments for another forum.

  3. Where they occur, words and phrases in Ryukyuan (the Okinawan language) are rendered in italics and translated in parentheses. Names  whose readings are uncertain are rendered as Name (=Kanji?) as in Nagayuki (=長行?). Any corrections in such instances would be gratefully appreciated.


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