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TOKYO
(Agencies via Xinhua) _ Japan yesterday approved a bill aimed
at restricting the activities of the doomsday cult accused
of a 1995 nerve gas attack on the Tokyo subway, Japanese media
reported.
The
bill did not directly name the cult, Aum Shinri Kyo (Supreme
Truth Sect), but said its purpose was to monitor the activities
of any group that has engaged in "indiscriminate mass
murder," NHK television said.
A
number of Aum members, including leader Shoko Asahara, are
on trial and have been convicted in connection with the gas
attack, which killed 12 and made more than 5,000 ill. One
was sentenced to death in September for his part in the subway
attack.
The
bill was approved at a regularly scheduled cabinet meeting
and was expected to be passed during the current session of
parliament, given a majority held by the coalition government.
Under
the bill, a group implicated in serious crimes can be placed
under the surveillance of the Public Security Investigation
Agency for up to three years and could be forced to report
on its activities every three months, Kyodo news agency said.
Police
and public security officials would have the right to inspect
such a group's facilities at any time, the bill says.
If
the group is found to have committed illegal activities, it
can be banned from acquiring land or facilities for up to
six months.
Public
pressure and police crackdowns on the cult have intensified
recently in response to fears it could be staging a comeback.
The
cult was forced to close several branch offices in September,
and two senior cult members were arrested on suspicion of
confining a woman to cult facilities against her will.
In
late September, the group said it would close its branches
and promised to stop recruiting and using its current name,
in a move seen aimed at deflecting further opposition.
The cult was stripped of most of its assets in 1996 when it
was liquidated by court order, but has managed to amass large
funds through businesses as well as purchasing property in
many parts of the country.
China
Daily 1999/11/03
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