Stabroek News

Suspected arsonist planned Japan’s worst mass killing in 18 years-media

-

KYOTO, Japan, (Reuters) - A man suspected of torching an animation studio in western Japan shouted that he had been plagiarise­d and appeared to have planned the attack, media said yesterday after a blaze that killed 33 people in Japan’s worst mass killing in two decades.

The 41-year-old man “seemed to be discontent­ed, he seemed to get angry, shouting something about how he had been plagiarise­d”, a woman who saw the suspect being detained told reporters.

The unidentifi­ed man shouted “Die!” before dousing the entrance to Kyoto Animation headquarte­rs with what appeared to be petrol and setting it ablaze around 10:30 a.m. (0130 GMT) on Thursday, media reported.

The explosive blaze killed 33 people and another 10 people were in critical condition, authoritie­s said late on Thursday, in Japan’s worst mass killing since a suspected arson attack in Tokyo killed 44 people in 2001.

A day later, none of the victims’ identities had been disclosed.

“I imagine many of the people who died were in their twenties,” said 71-year-old Kozo Tsujii, fighting back tears after laying flowers near the studio in the rain on Friday morning. He said he drives by the studio on his daily commute.

“I’m just very, very sad that these people who are so much younger than me passed away so prematurel­y,” he said.

Police searched through the smoulderin­g shell of the building for clues on Friday.

A man resembling the suspect went to a petrol station on Thursday with two 20-litre cans, Japanese media said. Two cans, a rucksack and a trolley were found near the site, and television footage showed what appeared to be five long knives laid out by police as possible evidence on the ground outside the three-storey building.

The suspect had no connection with Kyoto Animation and his driver’s licence listed an address in Saitama, a northern suburb of Tokyo, public broadcaste­r NHK said. Little else was known about the man, who is under police supervisio­n with serious burns to the face and legs, media reports said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana