Japan
hangs two men in latest of government's ‘secret executions’
Human
rights groups slam practice in which inmates are told they will die
just hours beforehand
Ryoji
Kagayama, seen here in 2008, has been hanged in Japan. It brings the
number of prisoners executed since the conservative government of
Shinzo Abe came to power a year ago to eight AFP/Getty Images
12
December, 2013
Two
men have been hanged in Japan as part of a campaign of “secret
executions” carried out by the government, media reports say.
Eight
prisoners have now been rushed through the country’s capital
punishment system since the right-wing nationalist Shinzo Abe became
prime minister a year ago.
Japan
is the only major democratic country other than the US to execute its
people. International human rights groups say the practice is
particularly cruel because inmates are held for years and then only
told about their impending death a few hours beforehand.
Amnesty
International Japan was quoted as saying that “the high-paced
executions under the Abe administration stand squarely against
repeated international calls for abolition of death penalty”.
Despite
this, capital punishment continues to attract widespread public
support in the country. Though no one was executed in the whole of
2011 – the first time this had happened in two decade – hangings
resumed in March 2012, and seven people were killed.
Announcing
the latest round of executions, which happened today, Justice
Minister Sadakazu Tanigaki said: “There are various criticisms of
the death penalty... but Japanese law allows for it and I believe we
have people's support in principle.”
According
to reports from the AFP news agency, one of those killed was Ryoji
Kagayama, 63, who stabbed to death a student from China after robbing
her in 2000 and was also convicted of knifing a man to death in 2008
in a failed robbery attempt.
The
other prisoner was Akira Morinaga, 55, who drowned a relative of his
former wife in a bath in 1986 and murdered one of her acquaintances
days later.
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