Saturday, 23rd November 2024
To guardian.ng
Search
Asia  

Japan arsonist who killed 36 appeals death sentence

By AFP
26 January 2024   |   10:43 am
A Japanese man sentenced to death for an arson attack that killed 36 people at an anime studio appealed the ruling on Friday, a court said.
(FILES) This file aerial view taken on July 18, 2019 shows the rescue and recover scene after a fire at an animation company building killed 36 people in Kyoto. – The Japanese man who admitted starting a fire that killed 36 people at an anime studio in 2019 faces a possible death sentence on January 25, 2024 when a court in Kyoto delivers its verdict. (Photo by JIJI PRESS / JIJI PRESS / AFP) / Japan OUT / JAPAN OUT / TO GO WITH JAPAN-CRIME-ARSON,ADVANCER – TO GO WITH Japan-crime-arson,ADVANCER

A Japanese man sentenced to death for an arson attack that killed 36 people at an anime studio appealed the ruling on Friday, a court said.

Shinji Aoba, 45, was convicted on Thursday over the 2019 blaze at the studios of Kyoto Animation — Japan’s deadliest crime in decades.

His lawyers had entered a plea of not guilty, saying he had a mental disorder, but the judge rejected this.

On Friday his defence team appealed the ruling, a Kyoto District Court spokesman told AFP.

Japan is one of the few developed countries with capital punishment and public support for it is high.

As of December, 107 people were on death row.

Many of those killed in the July 2019 fire were young, including a 21-year-old woman.

Aoba broke into the building in the morning, spread gasoline around the ground floor, lit it and shouted “drop dead”, survivors said.

The victims “were engulfed in fire and smoke in the blink of an eye… They died an anguishing death as the studio instantly turned into a hell”, presiding judge Keisuke Masuda said in his ruling.

“Immolating people is truly cruel and inhumane,” the judge added.

Aoba himself sustained burns on 90 percent of his body and only regained consciousness weeks after the fire, and the ability to speak later still.

Aoba believed that the studio — known by its fans as KyoAni — stole his ideas, prosecutors said, a claim the company has denied.

A number of victims were found on a spiral stairwell leading to the roof, suggesting they were overcome as they desperately tried to escape.

More than 30 others were injured, with firefighters calling the incident “unprecedented” and saying that rescuing people trapped inside was “extremely difficult”.

0 Comments