| Friday, February 27, 2004 |
Leader of Japan Nerve Gas Attack Sentenced
By MARI YAMAGUCHI
TOKYO - Former doomsday cult guru Shoko Asahara was convicted and sentenced to hang Friday for masterminding the deadly 1995 nerve gas attack on the Tokyo subway and other crimes that killed 27 people and alerted the world to the danger of high-tech terrorism.
Asahara, founder
of the apocalyptic Aum Shinrikyo cult, also was found guilty of ordering his
followers to produce and stockpile arsenals of conventional and chemical weapons,
including the sarin gas used in the subway attack.
Asahara, 48, stood in silence as the sentence was read. Asahara is the 12th
person sentenced to hang for the attacks, and the decision was widely expected.
Presiding Judge Shoji Ogawa, who led a four-judge panel, detailed Asahara's
crimes before announcing the sentence, saying they expanded from individual
murders to "indiscriminate terror attacks using chemical weapons."
"His crimes not only affected families and relatives of the victims but also
threw our country and neighboring countries into extreme fear," Ogawa said.
"They involved a series of extremely vicious acts that none of us had experienced
before."
The former
cult leader's attorneys immediately appealed, arguing that prosecutors had
ignored testimony showing Asahara was not behind the crimes, said lead defense
lawyer Osamu Watanabe. The move will set into motion further legal proceedings
that some say could last another decade.
Watanabe added that the defense team would resign after filing the appeal.
The ruling was the climax of a nearly eight-year-long trial. His attorneys
had argued that Asahara _ whose real name is Chizuo Matsumoto _ had lost
control over his flock by the time of the March 20, 1995, subway attack that
killed 12 and sickened thousands.
The attack sent the country into a panic as sickened, bleeding passengers
stumbled from subway stations and shattered the image of Japan as a peaceful,
largely crime-free country.
The prosecution, however, depended on testimony from former followers who
said that Asahara had planned and ordered their murderous deeds.
Asahara also was convicted of masterminding a sarin gas attack in June 1994
in the central Japan city of Matsumoto, the murder of anti-Aum lawyer Tsutsumi
Sakamoto and his family and the killings of wayward followers and people
helping members leave the cult.
At its height, Aum claimed 10,000 followers in Japan and 30,000 in Russia.
The guru used a mixture of Hinduism, Buddhism, Christianity and yoga to entice
his devotees, who engaged in bizarre rituals such as drinking his blood and
wearing electrical caps that they believed kept their brain waves in tune
with their master.
Many terrorism experts also point to Aum's weapons program as an early indication
of how individual groups, not only national governments, could use money
and technology to compile arsenals of weapons of mass destruction.
The verdict came after several hours of proceedings in which Ogawa detailed
the 13 counts against Asahara and dismissed the former guru's claims of innocence.
Japan has no jury trials.
The families of victims welcomed the verdict.
"It was good to hear the death sentence that I had been hoping for," said
Shizue Takahashi, widow of a train worker killed in the subway sarin attack.
"I visited my husband's grave this morning and I came to hear the ruling
with his spirit."
Some said that they were saddened that Asahara never acknowledged his responsibility
for the crimes or apologized to the victims. He rarely spoke during the years
of trial, only occasionally babbling incoherently in broken English.
"This death sentence is not enough," said Yoko Ito, whose daughter was killed
in the Matsumoto gas attack. "I was hoping that he would say something, but
it's very disappointing that the verdict ended in silence."
Security was tight at Tokyo District Court to guard against disruptions by
Asahara followers, and media reported that a decoy was used on the way to
the court Friday morning to thwart any attempt to free the ex-guru. Some
4,600 people turned out for a shot at the 38 courtroom seats available to
the public; spectators were chosen by lottery.
The subway gassing was Aum's most horrific crime. Five cult members pierced
bags of sarin _ originally developed by the Nazis _ on separate trains as
they converged in central Tokyo's national government district as a pre-emptive
strike against police planning raids on the cult.
Survivors still suffer from headaches, breathing troubles and dizziness.
The cult was ordered in separate court proceedings to pay $35 million in
damages to the victims.
Aum's weapons program was carried out by a coterie of highly educated scientists
from Japan's best schools. Asahara's flock was bewitched by his predictions
of an Armageddon that only cult members would survive.
The trial was lengthened by Japan's chronic shortage of lawyers and judges,
the complexity of the case and a six-month delay caused by Asahara's firing
of his first attorney. Friday's session was the 257th of the trial.
Police say the cult's remnants _ renamed Aleph since 2000 _ are showing signs
of greater allegiance to Asahara. Agents this month raided the offices of
the group, which still claims 1,650 members in Japan and 300 in Russia.
The group released a statement after the verdict, apologizing to the families
of the victims of Aum's crimes and vowing to compensate them.