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TOKYO:
Two members of a Japanese doomsday cult were sentenced to
death yesterday for murder and attempted murder for a 1995
gas attack on the Tokyo subway in which 12 people died, NHK
reported.
A
third man, Shigeo Sugimoto, who drove a getaway car, was sentenced
to life imprisonment.
Tokyo
District Court Judge Manabu Yamazaki said former Aum Shinrikyo,
or Supreme Truth, cult members Toru Toyoda, 32, and Kenichi
Hirose, 36, deserved the death penalty for their role in releasing
sarin nerve gas in an incident that injured thousands.
The
two men admitted the charges but argued that their minds had
been controlled by cult leader Shoko Asahara, claiming he
masterminded the attack.
Asahara,
whose real name is Chizuo Matsumoto, remains on trial for
organizing the gassing and 16 other charges.
Asahara's
trial, now in its fifth year, promises to go on much longer
with some legal experts saying it may well take more than
15 years for a final verdict.
Another
key member of the cult, 42-year-old Yasuo Hayashi - dubbed
a "murder machine" by the media for his crimes -
was last month sentenced to death because, the judge said,
he released the largest amount of sarin gas on the underground.
While
most of Aum's leaders are behind bars, the cult remains active,
prompting the government to place it under surveillance in
February for three years, a move allowing authorities to inspect
all its sites.
For
its part, the cult has changed its name to Aleph - the first
letter of the Hebrew alphabet - and insists it is now a benign
religious group.
In
the past, Aum preached the world was coming to an end and
that the cult must arm itself to prepare for various calamities.
Agencies
via Xinhua
China
Daily 2000/07/18
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