The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Victims of 2008 Akihabara attack call for efforts to prevent recurrence

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Fourteen years have passed since an indiscrimi­nate attack in Tokyo’s Akihabara district le seven people dead and 10 injured. Tomohiro Kato was 25 when he drove a truck into pedestrian­s before going on a stabbing spree in a busy commercial district. Kato was executed Tuesday. He had become absorbed in an online forum before the attack.

Following his execution, some victims have expressed hope that e orts will be made to prevent a recurrence of such incidents.

“I don’t want an incident like this to happen again,” said Hiroshi Yuasa, 68, who was seriously injured in the attack.

Yuasa was a taxi driver in Tokyo at the time and was driving through Akihabara when he saw a truck plow into a crowd of people. He was stabbed by Kato when he got out of the car to help an injured person.

He was unable to continue working as a taxi driver a er the attack because his injury le him with numbness in his limbs.

Yuasa sent seven letters to Kato, repeatedly asking why he committed the crime. Kato replied to some of the letters, but failed to answer the question.

“I think that Kato himself did not understand why he committed the crime,” Yuasa said at his home in Miyazaki on Tuesday.

Naoki Miyamoto was 31 when he was killed in the attack. His friend Shigeru Akiyama, 44, said: “Miyamoto will never come back. I will always feel regret.”

Kato graduated from one of the most prestigiou­s schools in Aomori Prefecture and went on to complete an automotive-related course at a junior college in Gifu Prefecture. After graduation, he did temporary work, hopping from one job to the next.

In 2005, Kato began using an online forum on his mobile phone and became so absorbed that he spent most of his time outside of work on the messageboa­rd site. He began to feel more alienated the more time he spent alone, and said he committed the crime a er he was abused in the forum.

Kato has published four books about the attack since the end of the rst trial in July 2012, claiming he would “ful ll his accountabi­lity.”

Hideyuki Sato, 78, editor-in-chief of Tokyo-based Hihyo-sha Publishing Inc., which released Kato’s books, said he met Kato several times at the Tokyo Detention House and kept asking him why he couldn’t stop himself from committing the atrocity.

“If you don’t delve into your

inner thoughts to answer that question, you won’t be able to convey your feelings to the victims and their bereaved families,” Sato told Kato. But Sato said Kato’s reply indicated that he didn’t agree.

Kato’s side led a request for a retrial in August 2020.

On Tuesday, the Japan Federation of Bar Associatio­ns issued a statement “strongly protesting the execution.”

At a press conference to announce the execution, Justice Minister Yoshihisa Furukawa said: “In view of the continuing spate of violent crimes, the death penalty is unavoidabl­e. Abolishing capital punishment is not appropriat­e.”

ALIENATION

Indiscrimi­nate attacks carried out by alienated individual­s who claim to harbor resentment­s against society have occurred on a number of occasions in Japan.

In an arson attack on a clinic that killed 26 people in Osaka’s Kitashinch­i district last December, the perpetrato­r’s isolation and sense of inferiorit­y were highlighte­d.

On July 8, former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was fatally shot during an election campaign speech in Nara, again highlighti­ng the di culty of dealing with

“lone-wolf” assailants who become radicalize­d and commit violent crimes.

“A common denominato­r among the perpetrato­rs is a strong sense of loneliness and despair,” said Niigata Seiryo University Prof. Mafumi Usui, who specialize­s in social psychology.

“Other things they have in common include broken connection­s with family and friends, or lost jobs, factors that would normally dissuade them from committing a crime. ey also appear to be willing to end their own lives, and commit their crimes in broad daylight without fear of arrest.”

Usui added, “We have no

choice but to continue e orts to ensure that people who notice something unusual say something about it, and to consistent­ly provide a visible security presence.”

Isao Itabashi of the Council for Public Policy said, “Since the attack, cars, gasoline, and other items whose use is dif

cult to regulate have become deadly weapons, and the di culty of preventing such incidents remains to this day.”

Itabashi suggested the use of arti cial intelligen­ce to monitor criminal threats, and the installati­on of heavy-duty vehicle barriers in areas with large numbers of pedestrian­s. (July 28)

 ?? Yomiuri Shimbun file photo ?? Emergency services personnel treat victims following a stabbing attack in Tokyo’s Akihabara district on June 8, 2008.
Yomiuri Shimbun file photo Emergency services personnel treat victims following a stabbing attack in Tokyo’s Akihabara district on June 8, 2008.
 ?? The Yomiuri Shimbun ?? Officials of the Tokyo District Public Prosecutor­s Office’s special investigat­ive squad enter the home of Hironori Aoki, the former chairman of Aoki Holdings Inc., in Shibuya Ward, Tokyo, on Wednesday.
The Yomiuri Shimbun Officials of the Tokyo District Public Prosecutor­s Office’s special investigat­ive squad enter the home of Hironori Aoki, the former chairman of Aoki Holdings Inc., in Shibuya Ward, Tokyo, on Wednesday.

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