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Japanese cult leader and followers executed for 1995 gas attack

Author
Daily Mail,
Publish Date
Fri, 6 Jul 2018, 1:20PM
Japanese doomsday cult leader Shoko Asahara following his arrest in Tokyo in 1995. (Photo: AP)
Japanese doomsday cult leader Shoko Asahara following his arrest in Tokyo in 1995. (Photo: AP)

Japanese cult leader and followers executed for 1995 gas attack

Author
Daily Mail,
Publish Date
Fri, 6 Jul 2018, 1:20PM

Shoko Asahara, the doomsday cult leader who masterminded the Tokyo subway sarin attack in 1995, has been executed alongside several of his followers.

Thirteen people were killed and thousands more injured when members of the Aum Shinrikyo cult dumped bags of sarin on packed rush hour trains, piercing the pouches with sharpened umbrella tips before fleeing.

The nerve agent caused horrendous deaths and injuries, and prompted mass panic, turning Japan's busy capital city into something resembling a war zone.

Born Chizuo Matsumoto, Asahara, 63, had been on death row for nearly 14 years, while as many as 12 of his followers were still awaiting execution. He and a number of the others were hanged today.

He was sentenced to death in 2004 with his cult held responsible for the deaths of 29 people in total.

After years of legal proceedings, the prosecution of 13 Aum Shinrikyo members on death row for the attacks and other crimes finally concluded in January, clearing the way for their execution.

Passengers streamed out of stations vomiting after the attack, coughing and struggling to breathe, with emergency services administering life-saving treatment by the side of the road.

Ambulances screamed through the streets, and helicopters landed on major roads to assist the evacuation of those affected, while passengers convulsed on platforms.

The Japanese Self-Defense Force was called in and descended into the depths in hazmat suits and gas masks to assist the injured and deal with the poison.

The sarin had been released in liquid form on five subway carriages at different points throughout the network.

It was one of many attacks carried out by the Aum Supreme Truth cult, which mixed Buddhist and Hindu meditation with apocalyptic teachings.

Asahara developed an obsession with sarin, becoming paranoid that his enemies would attack him with it. He was arrested at a commune near Mount Fuji two months after the subway attack.

He talked incoherently, occasionally babbling in broken English, during his eight-year trial and never acknowledged his responsibility or offered meaningful explanations.

In 2016 Seiichi Endo, Satoru Hashimoto, Kiyohide Hayakawa, Yasuo Hayashi, Kenichi Hirose, Yoshihiro Inoue, Kazuaki Miyamae, Tomomasa Nakagawa, Tomomitsu Niimi, Toru Toyota, Masami Tsuchiya and Masato Yokoyama were all on death row for their role in the gas attack, according to Amnesty International.

The Aum cult was also responsible for an attack on the mountain resort city of Matsumoto in central Japan a year earlier, when sarin was used to kill eight people.

Lawyer Tsutsumi Sakamoto, who had been working on a case against the group, was one of its earliest victims when he, his wife and child were murdered in 1989.

Asahara was born Chizuo Matsumoto in 1955 on the southwestern island of Kyushu and changed his name in the 1980s, when the Aum cult was being developed.

Virtually blind, he was seen as a charismatic speaker who cloaked himself in mysticism to draw recruits to the doomsday cult he developed in the 1980s.

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