Man living at Mexico airport has a new home
Nohara is now clean-cut, freshly bathed and living in an apartment
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Oh, what a difference a bath can make.
A Japanese man with scraggly hair and a scruffy beard who had been sleeping
in Terminal 1 of Mexico City's Benito Juarez International Airport since
Sept. 2 — for no apparent reason — is now living in an apartment and has
become a new man.
Reforma newspaper Wednesday published photos of a clean-cut, freshly bathed
and shaved Hiroshi Nohara looking through the metal gate of a Mexico City
apartment.
It was unclear where exactly the apartment was located, and The Associated
Press wasn't able to contact Nohara.

Nohara left the airport Sunday with a woman identified only as Oyuki, who
invited him to her home, Reforma said. He has not said why he remained at
the airport after flying to Mexico on a tourist visa, nor has he said why he
suddenly left the terminal.
Reforma quoted him saying he will not return to the airport. But he refused
to reveal his future plans.
Oyuki also declined to give information, other than to say she invited him
to stay so he could sleep in a real bed. Reforma says the woman lives alone
and her husband works in Japan.
Nohara's three-month residency at the airport made him a local celebrity
whose life drew comparisons to that of Viktor Navorski, a character
portrayed by Tom Hanks in the 2004 movie "The Terminal." But there was one
major distinction: Navorski was forced to stay at a New York City airport
after war broke out in his Eastern European country and officials said they
could neither allow him into the U.S. nor deport him.
Nohara's visa allows him to stay in Mexico — anywhere in Mexico, not just
the airport — until early March. He also reportedly has a ticket home.
He speaks very little Spanish, and has lived largely off donations from
strangers.