The world's oldest person, a Japanese woman on the southern island of Okinawa, has died a week before her 115th birthday, a spokeswoman said Wednesday.
Kama Chinen, who witnessed three centuries, died Sunday, according to  Kaoru Shijima, a spokeswoman at her care facility.
Petite and gray-haired, Chinen spent her final years at a  care center in Nanjo on southeastern Okinawa. She was born on May 10,  1895, according to the Gerontology Research Group , which tracks  individuals of extremely old age.
Her family guarded her privacy closely, and details regarding her  death were not released to the press – many Japanese newspapers didn't  even give her name.
Chinen became the world's oldest known person when Gertrude Baines  died in a Los Angeles hospital at age 115 in September.
The oldest human is now 114-year-old Eugenie Blanchard, a French  woman born on Feb. 16, 1896, according to the research group. The group  has validated 75 "supercentenarians" worldwide who are at least 110  years old, according to its website.Japan has a high percentage of the world's centenarians, many of whom  are from the southern Okinawa region.
There were more than 40,000 Japanese over 100 years old when the  government released its annual report in September. Over 86 percent of  them were women.
By 2050, Japan's centenarian population is expected to reach nearly 1  million, according to U.N. projections.
Kama Chinen - Guinness World Records - World's Oldest Person dies in Japan at 114 Video
Kama Chinen - Guinness World Records - World's Oldest Person dies in Japan at 114 Video
