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After 2-Year Hiatus, Japan Resumes 'Abhorrent' Practice
°ü¸®ÀÚ 2022-01-05 ¿ÀÀü 9:13:32 383

After 2-Year Hiatus, Japan Resumes 'Abhorrent' Practice

 

 

https://img2-azrcdn.newser.com/image/1390275-11-20211221073825-2-year-hiatus-japan-resumes-abhorrent-practice.jpeg

 

For two years, Japan hasn't carried out any executions. That changed Tuesday with the hanging of three death-row inmates, reviving outcry from human rights activists on the controversial way in which the country carries out capital punishment. 

 

At a presser, Justice Minister Yoshihisa Furukawa cited the "extremely brutal" cases that prompted Tuesday's executions, per CNN, including that of 65-year-old Yasutaka Fujishiro, who murdered seven relatives and neighbors in Hyogo prefecture in 2004.

 

The other two men executed, 54-year-old Tomoaki Takanezawa and 44-year-old Mitsunori Onogawa, slaughtered two workers at pachinko parlors in Gunma prefecture in 2003. 

 

They're the first executions under Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, who took office in October. 

 

The last time Japan saw an inmate put to death was Dec. 26, 2019; in 2018, more than a dozen members of a doomsday cult that set up a deadly sarin gas attack on a Tokyo subway were executed, per the Guardian. 

 

Japan's capital punishment consists of hangings only, and prisoners typically learn of their final long walk just hours before it happens.

 

The Japan Times notes that more notice did appear to be given decades ago, but that courtesy apparently stopped around 1975. 

 

Amnesty International, meanwhile, says inmates' families aren't even given word until after the deed is done. 

 

It's a process that causes psychological distress, say two current inmates who are now suing the government, asking for nearly $200,000 for the stress they're enduring by not knowing when their execution is scheduled for.

 

 

 

 

QUESTIONS:

1) Briefly enumerate the recent impositions of capital punishment in Japan.

 

2) What prompted the Japanese government to carry out the executions after a break?

 

3) Discuss the problematic part in carrying out the hanging.

 

4) Do you think blindsiding the death-row inmates and their families of the execution is reasonable? Why or why not?

 

5) Describe the general consensus among the Korean people on death penalty?

 

 

 

VOCABULARY:

outcry - a strong protest or objection 


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