Albuquerque Journal

17 passengers hurt as man pulls knife, starts fire on Tokyo train

- BY MARI YAMAGUCHI

TOKYO — A man dressed in a Joker costume and brandishin­g a knife stabbed at least one passenger on a Tokyo commuter train before starting a fire, injuring passengers and sending people scrambling to escape and jumping from windows, police and witnesses said.

The Tokyo Fire Department said 17 passengers were injured, including three seriously. Not all of them were stabbed and most of the other injuries were not serious, the fire department said.

The attacker, whom police identified as 24-year-old Kyota Hattori, was arrested on the spot after Sunday’s attack and was being investigat­ed on suspicion of attempted murder, the Tokyo metropolit­an police department said Monday.

The attacker, riding an express train headed to Tokyo’s Shinjuku station, abruptly took out a knife and stabbed a seated passenger — a man in his 70s — in the right chest, police said. Injury details of the other 16 passengers are still being investigat­ed, police said.

Police said he told authoritie­s that he wanted to kill people and get the death penalty. Nippon Television said he also said that he used an earlier train stabbing case as an example.

Witnesses told police that the attacker was wearing a bright outfit — a green shirt, a blue suit and a purple coat — like the Joker villain in Batman comics or someone going to a Halloween event, according to media reports.

A video posted by a witness on social media showed the suspect seated, with his leg crossed and smoking in one of the train cars, presumably after the attack.

Tokyo police officials said the attack happened inside the Keio train near the Kokuryo station.

Television footage showed a number of firefighte­rs, police officials and paramedics rescuing the passengers, many of whom escaped through train windows. In one video, passengers were running from another car that was in flames.

NHK said the suspect, after stabbing passengers, poured a liquid resembling oil from a plastic bottle and set fire, which partially burned seats.

Shunsuke Kimura, who filmed the video, told NHK that he saw passengers desperatel­y running and while he was trying to figure out what happened, he heard an explosive noise and saw smoke wafting. He also jumped from a window but fell on the platform and hurt his shoulder.

“Train doors were closed and we had no idea what was happening, and we jumped from the windows,” Kimura said. “It was horrifying.”

The attack was the second involving a knife on a Tokyo train in three months.

In August, the day before the Tokyo Olympics closing ceremony, a 36-yearold man stabbed 10 passengers on a commuter train in Tokyo.

 ?? KYODO NEWS VIA AP ?? Emergency workers and police officers at a train station in Tokyo on Sunday after a man brandishin­g a knife on a commuter train stabbed at least one passenger before starting a fire, which sent people scrambling to escape.
KYODO NEWS VIA AP Emergency workers and police officers at a train station in Tokyo on Sunday after a man brandishin­g a knife on a commuter train stabbed at least one passenger before starting a fire, which sent people scrambling to escape.

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