The Borneo Post

Japan marks sarin attacks anniversar­y as executions near

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TOKYO: Japan yesterday marked the 23rd anniversar­y of a deadly sarin attack on the Tokyo metro, as speculatio­n grows that members of the cult behind it could soon be executed.

At a solemn ceremony at Kasumigase­ki station, one of the targets of the 1995 attacks which is surrounded by key government buildings, Tokyo subway staff gathered to observe a moment of silence and offer flowers.

Thirteen people were killed and thousands more injured when members of the Aum Shinrikyo cult dumped bags of sarin on packed rush hour trains, piercing the pouches with sharpened umbrella tips before fleeing.

The nerve agent caused horrendous deaths and injuries, and prompted mass panic, turning Japan’s busy capital city into something resembling a war zone.

Passengers streamed out of stations vomiting, coughing and struggling to breathe, with emergency services administer­ing life- saving treatment by the side of the road.

Ambulances screamed through the streets, and helicopter­s landed on major roads to assist the evacuation of those affected.

On that day, Tokyo Metro worker Kazumasa Takahashi unwittingl­y picked up a punctured packet of the nerve gas from the floor of one of the trains at Kasumigase­ki station. He and another colleague died. “I came here today, with the same feeling I have every year,” his widow Shizue told reporters at the station after paying tribute to her late husband.

“The health of some victims is deteriorat­ing and some families are also going through a tremendous­ly difficult time,” she said, adding that the passage of time had not healed the pain suffered by victims’ families.

After years of legal proceeding­s, the prosecutio­n of 13 Aum Shinrikyo members on death row for the attacks and other

We as a company will continue to strive as one to ensure customer safety so that passengers continue to use the subway without any worries. Tokyo metro

crimes finally concluded in January, clearing the way for their execution.

Last week, authoritie­s began separating and transferri­ng them to different detention facilities equipped with the infrastruc­ture to carry out executions by hanging.

The transfers have prompted speculatio­n that cult leader Shoko Asahara and the 12 of his followers on death row could soon be executed, though there has been no official indication.

Japanese authoritie­s usually announce executions after the fact, with no advance warning.

Shizue Takahashi said the fast speed of transfers initially startled her, but stressed that the executions must proceed in due course.

“The death penalty came as the result of long trials, and it has entered the next phase,” said Shizue Takahashi.

“It is not at a phase where I can say or do anything about it. I feel that steps should be taken in accordance with the law,” she said.

Some experts however oppose the executions — with the exception of Asahara — saying authoritie­s risk transformi­ng the other 12 into ‘martyrs’ that will help the Aum’s successor cults to recruit new members.

Ten are on death row for the subway attack with the other three sentenced for other crimes.

The attack shook the usually safe Japanese capital and Tokyo metro pledged to maintain the security of its network.

“We as a company will continue to strive as one to ensure customer safety so that passengers continue to use the subway without any worries,” the company said in a statement. — AFP

 ??  ?? Kasumigase­ki subway station manager Toyohiko Otomo walks with a bouquet of flowers towards an alter to mourn the victims of the 1995 sarin gas attack by Aum Supreme Truth doomsday cult at the station in Tokyo. — AFP photo
Kasumigase­ki subway station manager Toyohiko Otomo walks with a bouquet of flowers towards an alter to mourn the victims of the 1995 sarin gas attack by Aum Supreme Truth doomsday cult at the station in Tokyo. — AFP photo

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