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19-year-old university student missing in Shimane since Oct 26

Miyako Hiraoka

19-year-old university student missing in Shimane since Oct 26

SHIMANE —

Police announced Monday that a 19-year-old university student has been missing since Oct 26. Miyako Hiraoka from Kagawa Prefecture had been living in a student dormitory in Shimane Prefecture’s Hamada City, and was reported missing by her parents after they couldn’t contact her. Police have made public photos of the girl and are trying to collect as much information as possible regarding her whereabouts.

According to police, Hiraoka attended a lecture on Oct 26, then showed up at the restaurant where she worked from 4:30 p.m. She was last seen leaving the restaurant at 9:15 p.m.

Hiraoka is 147 cm tall with medium-long hair. Anyone with information regarding her whereabouts is asked to call the Hamada police at 0855-22-0110.

Wire reports

Latest 15 of 17 Total Comments Show All

  • bobbafett at 10:34 AM JST - 3rd November

    Poor kid.

  • timeon at 11:22 AM JST - 3rd November

    LoveUSA, my classmates looked like that, I always felt kinda weir in Japanese uni. let's hope she's out there with the boyfriend or so

  • meloveulongtime at 11:39 AM JST - 3rd November

    dang she does look young!

  • Conrad at 12:09 PM JST - 3rd November

    She looks like my sister! My thoughts and prayers are with her family as well as my hope for Hiraoka-san to be returned soon.

  • Katsuro1000 at 01:41 PM JST - 3rd November

    Whats up with the missings and killings lately??

  • numbskull at 02:44 PM JST - 3rd November

    People go "missing" all the time. They usually turn up safe. Hopefully, she is and will.

  • Feekalmatter at 07:06 PM JST - 3rd November

    Her parents must be beside themselves...

  • TeruSensei at 07:35 PM JST - 3rd November

    I hope she is alright. I worked once in Hamada and it really doesn't seem like the kind of place where a horrible crime could happen, but I guess you can never tell until it happens.

    Let's hope nothing of the sort has happened.

  • farhaan at 08:48 PM JST - 3rd November

    I dont understand why in Japan so many people go missing.

  • sillygirl at 08:52 PM JST - 3rd November

    two weeks later we are hearing about this? when did it hit the japanese news. don`t the japanese police watch law and order? the first twenty-four hours are crucial.

  • numbskull at 10:09 PM JST - 3rd November

    the first twenty-four hours are crucial.

    Yes they are, but sillygirl, if the police responded to every case of someone not turning up for a few hours, they would not have time to do any other police work, or even sleep, and still not get finished.

    So, some advice. If any one you love goes missing, by all means contact the police, and then get everyone you can to get on the trail or even contact a P.I. Everybody says their little girl would never arrive late. How are the police supposed to know who is telling the truth, because you know most are full of it. So don't sit on your hands waiting for them to do something.

  • Apsara at 10:23 PM JST - 3rd November

    two weeks later we are hearing about this?

    I think you'll find there are 9 days between Oct 26 and Nov 3, not 14, and October 26 was when she was last seen, not when she was reported missing. For all we know her parents only reported her missing yesterday.

  • nandakandamanda at 10:34 PM JST - 3rd November

    According to the TV they (ht eparents and police) allowed the standard week for her to turn up to pass, before officially declaring that there is now a serious possibility that a crime might have occurred.

    There are many possibilities, such as that she ran away but did not want her parents to know about it, so made a clean break.

  • mnemosyne23 at 04:09 AM JST - 4th November

    I certainly hope she's found safe and sound, just kicking back at an onsen with a bunch of friends or something similar.

    And I'd like to echo what others have said -- what is with the delay between the date she was last seen and now having this story in the news? Even if her parents didn't report her missing (and I imagine they did), her employer, her university instructors, or her friends must have noticed that she wasn't around. A week is a ridiculously long period of time to wait before declaring someone officially missing. Twenty-four hours should be the minimum -- less if it's a case of a child going missing. In all this intervening time, who knows what might have happened to her? If it's foul play, there's a good chance that any hard evidence has already been degraded. And if it's not foul play but rather a case of a 19 year old wanting to skip ahead to her 20th birthday and independence without telling anyone, then it's a gross misuse of police resources and an inexcusable emotional drain on her family and loved ones, and she needs to be brought to task for it. I sincerely hope it's the latter, not the former.

  • franz75 at 08:41 AM JST - 4th November

    North-Korea is renewing its stock of abductees

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