Kuwait Times

Japanese sentenced to death for murder of 19 at care home

-

YOKOHAMA: A Japanese man was sentenced to death yesterday for the stabbing murder of 19 disabled people at a care home, in one of the country’s worst mass killings. Satoshi Uematsu never disputed his involvemen­t in the grisly rampage but his lawyers entered a plea of not guilty, arguing the 30-year-old was suffering a “mental disorder” linked to his use of marijuana. The court ruled that the former employee of the facility deserved no leniency over the 2016 attack, which shocked the country. “The lives of 19 people were taken away. This is profoundly grave,” chief judge Kiyoshi Aonuma told the court.

Uematsu planned the murders and had “an extreme intention to kill”, he added. Prosecutor­s had sought the death penalty — which in Japan is carried out by hanging — and argued that the defendant was capable of taking

responsibi­lity for the violence at the Tsukui Yamayuri-en centre, just outside Tokyo. Uematsu was impassive as the verdict was announced, looking straight ahead at the judge as he was sentenced. He wore a black suit with his hair in a long ponytail down to his waist, and was flanked by six uniformed court officers wearing surgical masks. Uematsu, who faced six charges including murder, reportedly said before the trial that he would not appeal any verdict, though he argued he did not deserve the death penalty. He has reportedly said he wanted to eradicate all disabled people in the horrifying attack that also left 26 people wounded.

‘I hate you so much’

He turned himself in to police after the assault, carrying bloodied knives. It later emerged he had left his job at the home just months earlier and been forcibly hospitaliz­ed after telling colleagues he intended to kill people at the centre. But he was discharged after just 12 days when a doctor decided he was not a threat. He had also written a letter outlining plans to attack the home, claiming “disabled people only create unhappines­s”. Among the few victims to be identified publicly was a 19-year-old woman, Miho, whose mother said Uematsu “didn’t need a future”.

“I hate you so much. I want to rip you apart. Even the most extreme penalty is light for you. I will never forgive you,” the mother said before the verdict, according to public broadcaste­r NHK. “Please bring back my most precious daughter... You’re still alive. It’s not fair. It’s wrong.” “I demand capital punishment,” she added. —AFP

 ??  ?? YOKOHAMA: Journalist­s gather outside the Yokohama district court yesterday after the court sentenced Satoshi Uematsu, accused of murdering 19 disabled people at a care facility in the town of Sagamihara in 2016, to death. —AFP
YOKOHAMA: Journalist­s gather outside the Yokohama district court yesterday after the court sentenced Satoshi Uematsu, accused of murdering 19 disabled people at a care facility in the town of Sagamihara in 2016, to death. —AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait