Japan zoo employee allegedly admits to throwing wife’s body into animal incinerator – National

A zoo in Japan was forced to delay its summer opening after an worker allegedly informed police that he had disposed of his wife’s body within the zoo’s incinerator, based on Japanese media reports.

Asahiyama Zoo in Asahikawa, Hokkaido, was scheduled to reopen on Wednesday, in time for a Japanese holiday period, after a three-week maintenance closure, but said it might reopen May 1 pending an investigation.

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A statement on the zoo’s website reads, “We regret to tell you that a city worker is currently being questioned by the police on suspicion of involvement in a serious incident.”

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Police arrested 33-year-old worker Suzuki Tatsuya after investigators discovered what gave the impression to be human body parts within the zoo’s incinerator, Japanese news outlet NHK reported on Friday.

The incinerator is usually used to get rid of animal carcasses, the BBC wrote.

Police say Tatsuya admitted to the alleged crime before he was arrested, based on the Japanese outlet, telling investigators he transported his 33-year-old wife’s body to the zoo and burned it at the top of March, it reported.

In response to investigators, he also indicated that he had killed her and allegedly threatened to burn her body until nothing remained, NHK said.

Police began questioning Tatsuya after members of the family reported his wife was missing, the outlet added.
Hirosuke Imazu, the mayor of Asahikawa city, described the invention at a press conference on Tuesday as an “unprecedented crisis,” the British outlet reported.


“Nobody could have predicted it,” he said.

“I’m overcome with immense anxiety, and I’m facing a crisis of unprecedented magnitude,” the mayor continued.

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“We’re making preparations to welcome you, so we hope that as many individuals as possible will come to the park,” he concluded.

The favored tourist destination, which attracts visitors from across Japan and around the globe, is operated by the local government and welcomed visitors on Friday, two days later than scheduled.


FILE: ASAHIKAWA, JAPAN: Visitors watch monkeys at Asahiyama Zoo on February 2, 2009, in Asahikawa, Japan. Asahiyama Zoo became popular in Japan after it began displaying animals closer to visitors.

Junko Kimura/Getty Images

Asahiyama Zoo opened in July 1967 and is globally renowned for its unique enclosure designs, which include glass elements and overhead cages, giving visitors up-close, personal access to the animals.

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