The Scotsman

Two dead in bullet train horror after man sets fire to himself

- KEN ARAGKI

A MAN riding a Japanese highspeed bullet train set himself on fire yesterday, killing himself and another passenger as the coach filled with smoke, a fire official said.

At least 26 other people were injured, three seriously, mostly from smoke inhalation, Odawara fire department official Ikutaro Torii said. The man’s motive wasn’t clear. The passenger poured an oil-like substance over his head before setting himself on fire, authoritie­s said. Kyodo News service reported that he used a lighter. Officials said the fire was at the front of the first car in the train, which was heading from Tokyo to Osaka.

“I said to myself, ‘This is bad!”’ said Takeo Inariyama, 54, a businessma­n travelling in the second carriage.

“I saw everyone running toward me and smoke coming. Also the smell [of smoke] filled the car. So I felt my life was in danger.”

The train came to a halt on the outskirts of Odawara city, about 50 miles west of Tokyo, when a passenger pressed an emergency button after finding someone collapsed on the floor near a restroom at the back of the first car, a transport ministry official said.

The passenger on the floor, a woman, was later pronounced dead, reportedly from inhaling smoke.

Crew members rushed to

Emergency workers

carry

a

passenger extinguish the fire, said Kengo Sasaoka, a spokesman for Central Japan Railway Company, which operates the bullet train between Tokyo and Osaka.

TBS television broadcast a video of passengers evacuating the smoke-filled coach, some

from

the

bullet

train

in

the coughing, others covering their faces with towels and handkerchi­efs.

Witnesses provided somewhat varying accounts to Japanese networks.

One passenger, in a telephone interview with TBS, said that the man approached him when he was standing outside the driver’s compartmen­t and told him to stay away because it would be dangerous, then poured an orange-coloured liquid over himself.

Public broadcaste­r NHK quoted a 58-year-old businessma­n as saying the man walked up and down the aisle a few times before returning with a plastic container that splashed a liquid on the businessma­n’s shoulder as he walked by the other passengers.

The man then started dumping the liquid on the floor, and the businessma­n quickly left as he smelled gasoline, he said.

Bringing hazardous materials on public transporta­tion is prohibited in Japan but there is no way of checking, railway analyst

Japanese

city

of

Odawara Ryozo Kawashima told NHK. The bullet train service between Tokyo and Osaka was suspended for about two-and-a-half hours while rescue workers helped some of the injured off the train. The train then moved slowly to Odawara station, where about 1,000 passengers got off.

The 16-car bullet train, called the Shinkansen in Japanese, travels the 343 miles between Tokyo and Osaka in two hours and 33 minutes.

Japan is no stranger to suicide, especially among young men.

Last year the country again reported the highest rate of suicide in the world, and it is now the leading cause of death for men between the ages of 20 and 44.

There is also a history of people setting themselves on fire in protest.

Last year a man died after setting himself on fire in a park in the centre of Tokyo.

He was protesting at proposed government plans to overturn Japan’s post-war pacifist constituti­on.

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