Tokyo - A region of Japan looking to use “ninja” warriors to boost 
tourism has made an American man the first foreigner to draw a salary 
for joining the ranks of the stealth assassins.
Aichi prefecture 
in central Japan had been seeking six full-time ninja - the covert 
martial arts masters and agents of sabotage who prowled the shadows in 
feudal times - and in a job posting last month said candidates of any 
nationality were welcome.
Of the 235 applicants eager to don the 
black costume of the deadly denizens of the night, an astonishing 85 
percent were foreigners, and 29-year-old Chris O'Neill impressed so much
 during auditions that officials created an extra spot just for him.
The
 Tokyo-based American “will be Japan's first salaried, full-time ninja 
paid by a local municipality,” Satoshi Adachi of the Aichi's tourism 
unit told AFP after O'Neill dazzled the panel with an array of acrobatic
 back flips.
“He was really amazing,” added Adachi. “He has great 
acrobatic skill and the ability to speak in front of the public. He's 
also passionate about promoting tourism.”
The new ninja squad will
 receive a one-year contract and earn a monthly salary of 180 000 yen 
(about R19 000) plus bonuses. O'Neill will work alongside six Japanese 
colleagues, including five men and one woman.
Their duties will 
include performing back flips, using the trademark “shuriken” ninja star
 weapon and posing for photographs with tourists.
Skilled in 
espionage and guerrilla warfare, the creeping ninjas became hired 
mercenaries during the turmoil of Japan's Sengoku period between the 
15th and 17th centuries and have since been immortalised in history 
books and period television dramas.
AFP
 
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