By allowing ads to appear on this site, you support the local businesses who, in turn, support great journalism.
Japan hangs 3 convicted murderers
Japan Execution TOK 4777189
In this Aug. 20, 1989 photo, Tsutomu Miyazaki, wearing glasses at center left, attends an on-the-spot investigation by police of his serial killing of girls in Tokyo. Japan executed the man Tuesday, June 17, 2008 convicted of killing and mutilating young girls in a series of crimes in the late 1980s, news reports said, in a case that triggered calls for tighter restrictions on violent pornographic videos. - photo by Associated Press
    TOKYO — A serial killer who mutilated the bodies of four young girls and reportedly drank the blood of one of his victims was among three convicted murderers executed in Japan on Tuesday for crimes an official called indescribably cruel.
    Tsutomu Miyazaki, 45, whose rash of grisly killings in the late 1980s triggered calls for tighter restrictions on violent pornographic videos, was hanged at a detention center in Tokyo, Justice Minister Kunio Hatoyama said.
    Miyazaki burned the body of one 4-year-old and left her bones on her parents’ doorstep. He also wrote letters to the media and victims’ families taunting police. Japanese newspaper reports said he ate part of the hand of one of his victims and drank her blood.
    The two others executed Tuesday were Shinji Mutsuda, 45, who had been on death row for the murder and robbery of two people, and Yoshio Yamasaki, 73, who was convicted of killing two people for the insurance money, the Justice Ministry said in a statement.
    ‘‘I ordered their executions because the cases were of indescribable cruelty,’’ Hatoyama said. ‘‘We are pursuing executions in order to achieve justice and firmly protect the rule of law.’’
    Japan, one of the few industrialized countries that has capital punishment, has picked up the pace of executions over the past year amid rising concerns about violent crime.
    The three executions brought to 13 the number of death row inmates hanged in the past six months under Hatoyama, an outspoken supporter of the death penalty. Only one inmate was executed in 2005.
    Amnesty International Japan protested Tuesday’s hangings and said the pace of executions in Japan is quickening. In a statement, the group also demanded Japan abolish capital punishment.
    Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda said there is no need for a change.
    ‘‘There is no other policy than to maintain the current policy,’’ Fukuda said Tuesday. ‘‘There are people who want to abolish it, but that is a minority view. The majority want it to be maintained. I feel there is no need to change it, but we must also keep an eye on world opinion.’’
    Hatoyama, who took office last August, denied his ministry was purposely picking up the pace of hangings. Three men were executed in December, three more in February and another four in April.
    In 1997, Tokyo District Court found Miyazaki guilty of killing four girls aged 4 to 7 years old in 1988 and 1989, and sentenced him to death. The Tokyo High Court upheld the sentence in 2001, and the Supreme Court followed suit on Jan. 17 this year, exhausting Miyazaki’s appeals.
    Miyazaki was also convicted of the abduction and sexual assault of a fifth girl.
    The murders and Miyazaki’s arrest dominated Japanese headlines, along with the discovery that his home was filled with a collection of thousands of violent pornographic videos, animated films and comic books stacked floor-to-ceiling.
    The case triggered concerns that many young people had become desensitized to human suffering through the repeated viewing of graphic images in videos and comics.
    Mutsuda also was hanged at the Tokyo detention center for killing two men and robbing them of $278,000 in 1995 and 1996. Yamasaki was executed in Osaka for murders committed in 1985 and 1990.
    Japan has 102 death row inmates after Tuesday’s hangings, the ministry said.
    The government began to release the names of those executed and their crimes in December, easing its secret policy in an apparent move to gain understanding and support for capital punishment.
    Despite international criticism of Japan’s death penalty, there is little opposition to the policy domestically.

Sign up for the Herald's free e-newsletter