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  2. Japanese Used Motor Vehicle Exporting Association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_Used_Motor...

    Japanese Used Motor Vehicle Exporting Association (JUMVEA) is a trade association that began on September 14, 1995. On June 1, 1997, with the approval of the Ministry of International Trade and Industry, it was incorporated.

  3. Japanese used vehicle exporting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_used_vehicle...

    A Japanese-market Toyota Crown S170 in the United Kingdom.The model has never seen an official release in the country and was registered in May 2019. Japanese used vehicle exporting is a grey market international trade involving the export of used cars and other vehicles from Japan to other markets around the world since the 1980s.

  4. Ford Motor Company of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_Motor_Company_of_Japan

    Ford resumed importing cars to Japan in 1974. [4] [5] In addition, vehicles manufactured by Mazda and branded badge engineering have been sold with the Ford logo. [6] At least in the mid-1980s, this approach was a USP for American automotive brands in Japan. [7] A source lists Ford as a manufacturer, but refers to the headquarters of Mazda. [8]

  5. Vehicle registration plates of Tanzania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vehicle_registration...

    Earlier Zanzibar plates used a different number system from the rest of Tanzania. [1] By the 1970s plates had changed from the white-on-black style to the black-on-white and black-on-yellow system as used in Britain. Unlike the rest of Tanzania, white plates in Zanzibar were also used on personal vehicles.

  6. Autobacs Seven - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autobacs_Seven

    Autobacs was founded by Toshio Sumino in 1947 in Fukushima-ku, Osaka as Suehiro Shokai Co., Ltd., which was reorganized into Fuji Shokai Co., Ltd. a year later. [2]In 1960, Sumino opened the Fuji Drive Shop, Japan's first large-scale automotive goods store, and in 1969 he became involved in motorsport sponsorship by sponsoring a car in the Japanese Grand Prix.

  7. Isokichi Komine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isokichi_Komine

    A Japanese community leader in German New Guinea, [4] Komine set up Nanyō Sangyō Kaisha, [5] an independent business, there, [4] and employed up over a hundred Japanese workers. [3] An extensive collection of Komine's rare finds in his voyages comprised more than 3,000 "valuables", although it was noted that a few gold-lip ouster shells in ...

  8. Komine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Komine

    Komine may refer to: Komine Castle in Fukushima, Japan; Kominé, Mali, a village and the seat of the commune of Farakou Massa in the Cercle of Ségou in the Ségou Region of southern-central Mali; Komine, Montenegro, a village in Pljevlja Municipality in northern Montenegro; Shane Komine (born 1980), an American former Major League Baseball player

  9. Tengeru - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tengeru

    Tengeru is a market-town [1] in the Arusha Region of northern Tanzania. Located below Mount Meru on the eastern edge of the eastern branch of the Great Rift Valley, surrounding Lake Duluti, Tengeru has a temperate climate. The town is thirteen kilometres east of the city of Arusha. [2]