26 Jul 2022

Tomohiro Kato: Japan executes Akihabara mass murderer, reports say

4:48 pm on 26 July 2022

Japan has executed a 39-year-old man who killed seven people in Tokyo in 2008 during a stabbing rampage, local media outlets have reported.

A woman prays for victims in the Akihabara district of Tokyo, ten years to the day when a man, Tomohiro Kato, drove a truck through the main intersection during a pedestrian-only day then went on a rampage with a knife on the early afternoon on June 8, 2018. Seven people died and 10 were injured in the 2008 incident. Tomohiro Kato was given the death penalty.( The Yomiuri Shimbun ) (Photo by Tetsu Joko / Yomiuri / The Yomiuri Shimbun via AFP)

A woman prays at a shrine set up in Tokyo to mark the tenth anniversary of the killings. Photo: AFP

Tomohiro Kato committed one of the most shocking mass murders in the country's recent history.

(FILES) This undated picture shows Tomohiro Kato convicted of killing seven people at Tokyo's Akihabara electronics shops district in 2008. - Japan on July 26, 2022 executed a man convicted of killing seven people in a stabbing rampage in Tokyo's popular Akihabara electronics district in 2008, local media reported. (Photo by JIJI PRESS / JIJI PRESS / AFP) / Japan OUT

Tomohiro Kato shortly after his arrest. Photo: AFP

He was 25 when he drove a truck into a lunch-time crowd of pedestrians at Akihabara shopping district, killing three people.

He stabbed passers-by with a dagger, killing four and wounding eight.

He was apprehended by police at the scene and later admitted his crimes in his trial, saying he had been angered by online bullying.

His crime sparked much debate in Japanese society at the time over random killings, online influence and the failures in mental health support for young people.

On Tuesday, Japanese media reported that Kato had been hanged in the Tokyo Detention Centre.

It is the country's first execution this year. It hung three people last December and more than 100 prisoners remain on death row.

Laws on knife ownership were also tightened after Kato's killing spree.

The Tokyo District Court sentenced him to death in 2011 saying his brutal crime had not indicated "a shred of humanity".

He lost an appeal in 2015 to commute his death sentence.

Japan remains one of the few developed countries that still uses capital punishment amid broader criticism from international and local human rights groups.

-BBC

Get the RNZ app

for ad-free news and current affairs