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The cult leader, Shoko Asahara, whose real name is Chizuo Matsumoto, had been in prison for 22 years before being executed this week. The attack has left more than a dozen dead and thousands wounded.
Twelve other members of Aum Shinrikyo were sentenced to death for their roles in the Tokyo attack. The death sentence for Asahara was finalized in 2006, according to the public broadcaster NHK, but the trials of its co-conspirators continued for another 12 years.
Since this procedure ended earlier this year, the days of Aum Shinrikyo members have been counted, even though opponents of the death penalty have tried to block the executions.
Asahara was one of seven worshipers hanged this week. Others are Tomomasa Nakagawa, Tomomitsu Niimi, Kiyohide Hayakawa, Yoshihiro Inoue, Seiichi Endo and Masami Tsuchiya, according to Japanese Justice Minister Yoko Kawakami.
Six other people are still sentenced to death following the 1995 attack and other Aum Shinrikyo crimes. The date of their execution is not known.
Shizue Takahashi, a representative of the group of victims and widow of an employee of Toyko Metro, died during the sarin attack, told reporters that she was "surprised" by this execution sudden.
"When I think of those who died because of them, it was a pity (my husband's parents) and my parents could not hear the news of this execution," he said. -she says. "I wanted (members of the sect) to confess more about the incident, so it's a pity we can not hear their account anymore."
In a statement Friday, Amnesty said that the execution of Asahara and other members of Aum Shinrikyo would not do justice to the Tokyo attack.
"The attacks carried out by Aum are despicable and the officials deserve to be punished, but the death penalty is never the solution," said Hiroka Shoji, a researcher in Asia. Is to Amnesty International. The death penalty can never hold this role because it is the ultimate denial of human rights. "
Deadly Beliefs
Many Asahara scholars were highly educated scientists and engineers , who helped bring to & # 39; huge amounts of & # 39; money to the coffers of the sect.
As worship grew, families of members began to give warning, and brainwashing and abuse complaints within Aum Shinrikyo became more common. Few could have predicted what would happen, and the cult became world famous with the attack on the Tokyo subway in March 1995, when members of Aum Shinrikyo dropped sarin gas on cars filled with commuters during peak hours. The attack killed 13 people and injured 5500.
Asahara and dozens of his supporters were arrested in the following months, after raids across the country
Murderous Worship
the murder of Sakamoto and the growing clamor of members of the sect. Aum Shinrikyo has begun to prepare for the end.
Subway attack
Five members of Aum Shinrikyo boarded subway cars on three different lines in central Tokyo at rush hour, carrying plastic bags filled with sarin. They punched the bags with the sharpened tips of their umbrellas and left them on luggage racks or on the floor to suck the deadly gas into the cars.
The trains were to arrive at Kasumigaseki Central Station four minutes apart, and the cult was hoping not only to kill everyone on board, but also to use the trains to route the gas to a massive interchange used by thousands of passengers. at a time.
Fortunately, mistakes made in the development of sarin and its method of delivery meant that the attack was much less effective than expected, and the group only managed to kill 12 people and injure 5,500 people. Another victim died later.
According to the FAS report, chemical weapons experts estimate that "tens of thousands could easily have been killed" had the attack been conducted properly.
Arrest and Trial
Dozens of members of Aum Shinrikyo were arrested after months of police raids in hundreds of localities in Japan.
Asahara himself was arrested in May 1995 and charged with 17 counts ranging from murder to the illegal production of weapons and drugs.
After a trial that lasted eight years, Asahara was found guilty of orchestrating the attack and sentenced to death in 2004. In 2006, he had exhausted the appeal process.
James Griffiths reported from Hong Kong, Yoko Wakatsuki reported from Tokyo.
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