The Freeman

Japan executes sarin attack cult members

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TOKYO — Japan yesterday executed six more members of the cult behind the deadly 1995 sarin attack on the Tokyo subway, local media said, weeks after the group's leader was hanged.

Public broadcaste­r NHK and other outlets said all six Aum Shinrikyo cult members remaining on death row had been executed on Thursday morning. There was no immediate official confirmati­on.

The executions come after authoritie­s hanged "guru" Shoko Asahara and six of his one-time followers earlier this month, after years on death row.

If confirmed, the executions would draw a line under years of legal wrangling and public soul-searching over the group and its crimes.

The additional executions had been widely expected, and while Japan is one of the few developed nations to retain the death penalty, public support for it remains high despite internatio­nal criticism.

Local media said authoritie­s wanted to execute all Aum members on death row before the country's emperor abdicates next year, which will start a new imperial era.

As the Aum's crimes were committed within the Heisei era of the current emperor, authoritie­s wanted the executions to be carried out before the new era begins, local media said.

The Aum gained internatio­nal infamy with the 1995 sarin attack on the Tokyo subway during rush hour, which killed 13 people and injured thousands more.

Members of the group released the chemical in liquid form at five points through the subway network, and soon commuters began struggling to breathe, staggering from trains with their eyes watering.

Others keeled over, foaming at the mouth, with blood streaming from their noses.

The attack plunged the capital into chaos, and prompted a crackdown on the cult's headquarte­rs in the foothills of Mount Fuji, where authoritie­s discovered a plant capable of producing enough sarin to kill millions.

Aum members have also been convicted of an additional sarin attack in the town of Matsumoto the year before the Tokyo attack, as well as the murder of an anticult lawyer and his family.

Thirteen cult members spent years on death row as prosecutor­s continued to investigat­e their crimes, and some activists opposed the executions, fearing the members would be elevated to the status of martyrs.

But victims of the group's attacks welcomed the July 6 execution of Asahara and six other Aum members.

 ?? AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE ?? This combo of file photos shows (top left to right) former Aum Supreme Truth doomsday cult members, at undisclose­d locations in Japan.
AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE This combo of file photos shows (top left to right) former Aum Supreme Truth doomsday cult members, at undisclose­d locations in Japan.

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