Former chairman of Seven & i Holdings Toshifumi Suzuki, credited for the global success of 7-Eleven convenience stores, had died at the age of 93, according to the company.
Suzuki – known as the “father of the convenience store” in Japan – died due to heart failure on May 18, the company said in a statement on Monday.
“We would like to express our deepest gratitude for the kindness shown to him during his lifetime and respectfully inform you of his passing,” the statement said.
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Suzuki is known for opening the first 7-Eleven in Japan in 1974 and growing the business into the world’s largest convenience store chain, including through turning the struggling US headquarters into a subsidiary of the Japanese company and rebuilding it.

The stores, now numbering more than 80,000 worldwide, are the biggest convenience-store chain in Japan. Busy people can hop in the seemingly ubiquitous “conbini” outlets to grab sandwiches, rice balls, drinks, chips and other meals on the run, use ATMs, pay utility bills and copy documents.
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Suzuki told the Asahi Shimbun in an interview that he personally came up with the idea of selling rice balls, or onigiri, at 7-Eleven stores. More than 2 billion of the snacks are now sold annually in branches around Japan, according to the newspaper.

