Japan hangs 2 on death row, including man who burned 6 to death, in 1st executions in a year
By APTuesday, July 27, 2010
Japan hangs 2 on death row; 1st executions in year
TOKYO — Japan hanged two convicted killers Wednesday, including a man who burned six women to death, in the country’s first executions in a year, and the justice minister said she wants renewed debate on whether to continue the punishment.
The justice ministry said Kazuo Shinozawa, 59, was hanged at the Tokyo Detention Center. Shinozawa set fire on a jewelry shop in 2000, burning six women to death.
The second death row inmate, Hidenori Ogata, 33, also was hanged at the Tokyo Detention Center. He strangled a woman and stabbed a man to death in 2003.
Japan, along with the United States, is one of the few industrialized countries that still has capital punishment. There is little public outcry against the death penalty in Japan, but the country has been criticized by rights groups such as Amnesty International and the main Japanese bar association.
Justice Minister Keiko Chiba, formerly a member of a group of lawmakers opposed to the death penalty, witnessed the executions and said afterward that she wanted a new study group to spur debate on the punishment, including whether it should be abolished in Japan.
“Witnessing the executions with my own eyes made me think deeply about the death penalty,” Chiba told a news conference.
Chiba left the anti-execution group to take the top ministry job under the government of the Democratic Party of Japan after it swept to power in September, but she has continued to express reservations about the practice.
Japan’s media are not allowed to cover executions. But following Wednesday’s executions, Chiba said that should change.
Criminals can be left on death row for years in Japan, and executions — all carried out by hanging — are highly secretive. Inmates do not know when they will be executed, while lawyers and family are only told after the fact.
Japan has 107 death row inmates, the ministry said.
Tags: Asia, Criminal Punishment, Death Penalty Controversy, East Asia, Japan, Tokyo