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Fire kills 15 at Japanese adult video theater
Japan Fire TOK802 5259075
Investigators inspect the scene of a fire in Osaka, western Japan early Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2008. Police say 15 people have been killed in the pre-dawn fire in a video shop located on the first floor of the seven-story building. - photo by AP Photo/Kyodo News

    TOKYO — A man set fire to an adult video theater in western Japan on Wednesday, killing at least 15 people in what police said was a suicide attempt.
    Police arrested the man, who was one of the customers, on suspicion of arson and attempted murder, Osaka police spokesman Kengo Hirami said. The suspect admitted to police that he set a fire using a stash of newspapers in his bag, Hirami said.
    Police quoted the suspect as saying he did it because ‘‘I was tired of living,’’ public broadcaster NHK reported.
    The blaze broke out at about 3 a.m. in the Cats Adult Video Theater, located on the ground floor of a seven-story building in an entertainment district in Japan’s second-largest city, fire department official Yuko Kotani said.
    Hirami said officials were still trying to determine the identities of the 15 dead. Several of the injured, nine men and one woman, were in a serious condition in hospital.
    When the fire started, most of the theater’s 32 viewing cubicles — each equipped with a cot, a television and a DVD player — were occupied.
    The video center offered a wide selection of DVDs, mostly adult movies, but also cartoons and Hollywood films, and attracted businessmen and others who used the rooms as a cheap alternative to hotels after missing the last train home.
    A growing number of young people whose low-paying jobs cannot pay for proper housing live in such all-night lounges watching videos or reading comic books.
    The Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism instructed fire department officials Wednesday to conduct an emergency nationwide inspection of video shops and Internet cafes, as well as karaoke bars and other entertainment facilities with individual cubicles.
    In 2001, a fire in Tokyo’s biggest red-light district killed more than 40 people, including bar hostesses and their customers.

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