Imperial Valley Press

Abe’s killing haunts Japan with questions on homemade guns

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TOKYO ( AP) — The shooting sent shudders through low-crime, orderly Japan: A prominent politician was killed by a man emerging from a crowd, wielding a homemade firearm so roughly constructe­d it was wrapped in tape.

The 40-centimeter-long (16-inch) weapon used to kill former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Friday as he campaigned for his ruling party in western Japan, looked crude, more like a propellant made of pipes taped together and filled with explosives.

A raid of the suspect’s home, a one-room apartment in Nara, turned up several such guns, police said. Unlike standard weapons, homemade guns are practicall­y impossible to trace, making an investigat­ion difficult.

Firearms are rarely used in Japan, where most attacks involve stabbings or dousing a place with gasoline and setting it ablaze, or running haywire on the street in a vehicle.

Strict gun control laws likely forced the attacker to make his own weapon. Tetsuya Yamagami, who was arrested on the spot, was a former member of Japan’s navy and knew how to handle and assemble weapons.

Crime experts say instructio­ns on how to make guns are floating around on the internet and guns can be made with a 3D printer.

Some analysts characteri­zed the attack on Abe as “lone-wolf terrorism.” In such cases, the perpetrato­r plots and acts alone, with the solitary nature of the crime also making it difficult to detect in advance.

The motive for Abe’s assassinat­ion remains unclear. Police said Yamagami told investigat­ors he acted because of Abe’s rumored connection to an organizati­on he resented but had no problem with the former leader’s political views. Media reports said it was a religious organizati­on.

Japan has seen attacks on politician­s in the past. In 1960, Abe’s grandfathe­r, then-Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi, was stabbed but survived. In 1975, when then-Prime Minister Takeo Miki was assaulted at the funeral for former Prime Minister Eisaku Sato, Abe’s great-uncle, Japan set up a security team modeled after the American Secret Service.

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