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TOKYO:
A key member of Japan's doomsday cult, dubbed a "murder
machine" by the media for his crimes, including taking
part in the deadly 1995 gas attack on the Tokyo subway, was
sentenced to death yesterday.
Tokyo
District Court Judge Kiyoshi Kimura said former Aum Shinri
Kyo, or Supreme Truth, cult member Yasuo Hayashi, 42, deserved
the sentence because he released the largest amount of poisonous
sarin gas in the attack, which claimed 12 lives and injured
thousands.
Prosecutors
charged that Hayashi was directly responsible for the deaths
of eight people by carrying three plastic bags of the deadly
gas onto a packed commuter train. He released the gas by puncturing
the bags with the sharpened tip of an umbrella.
Hayashi
was also charged with other crimes, including taking part
in a separate gassing the previous year.
Hayashi
was the second cult member to receive the death penalty. The
other, Masato Yokoyama, has appealed. Media reports quoted
Hayashi's lawyers as saying they would seek an appeal.
"This
morning I prayed that he would get the death penalty. I am
satisfied," NHK quoted a parent of one of his victims
as saying after the ruling.
Hayashi
had told the court that he believed he would be sentenced
to death. "Whatever my motives may have been, I think
I will get the death penalty," he told the court in February.
After
the subway attack, Hayashi went on the run, living in hideouts
across the country for about a year and a half before being
arrested in one of the southern Okinawa islands.
While
a fugitive, he took part in another gas attack - which failed
- at a busy Tokyo train station, setting rumours swirling
that the "murder machine" was set to commit more
acts of violence.
Hayashi,
who had travelled around the world in search of spiritual
guidance, found it in the teachings of Aum founder Shoko Asahara,
and joined the cult when he was 30.
But
what he did in the cult was far from spiritual.
Agencies
via Xinhua
China Daily 2000/06/30
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