Japan executes its worst criminals in secretive death penalty chamber | News World

Japan’s death row inmates stand on the red square to be hanged (Picture: JIJI PRESS/AFP via Getty Images)

Inside what looks like a standard, grey office block, lie the secretive execution rooms where Japan’s most notorious criminals are taken to be hanged.

The country’s use of the death penalty has come into the sportlight again after it carried out its first execution since 2022, of a serial killer who promised to assist vulnerable women and girls kill themselves, but then raped and dismembered them, keeping their body parts in cold storage.

‘Twitter killer’ Takahiro Shiraishi, so-called due to the strategy he used to first contact his victims, is reported to have spent his last moments at Tokyo Detention House in Katsushika City.

From the surface, the constructing looks unassuming. But deep inside its partitions lies a chamber with a glass wall where criminals are taken to be hanged – with only an hour or two of notice.

In 2010, media got a rare opportunity to see considered one of the country’s few remaining execution rooms, where the country’s worst criminals are put to death.

(EDITOR'S NOTE: JAPAN'S JUSTICE MINISTRY REQUESTS THAT THESE PICTURES NOT BE CROPPED FOR SECURITY REASONS) This photo taken during a media tour conducted by Japan's Justice Ministry on August 27, 2010 shows some of the rooms, including the execution room (R), inside the Tokyo detention house in Tokyo. Japan, one of the few industrialised democracies to maintain the death penalty, threw open the doors to its mystery-shrouded execution chamber for the first time to media. AFP PHOTO / JIJI PRESS (Photo by JIJI PRESS / JIJI PRESS / AFP) / Japan OUT (Photo credit should read JIJI PRESS/AFP via Getty Images)
The sterile wood paneled room with garish blue curtains (Credits: JIJI PRESS/AFP via Getty Images)
This general view shows journalists standing outside the Tokyo Detention House in Katsushika in Tokyo on November 20, 2018. - Sources told AFP on November 20 that Carlos Ghosn, one of the world's most influential executives, was being held at the detention centre in the capital belonging to Tokyo prosecutors following his arrest the day before. (Photo by Toshifumi KITAMURA / AFP)TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA/AFP/Getty Images
Tokyo Detention House looks like several grey office constructing (Credits: Toshifumi Kitamura/AFP)

Contained in the nondescript constructing, which is surrounded by a low wire fence, criminals on death row are taken to a morbidly empty room.

They then stand facing a viewing platform separated by a window, and are made to face in the course of a red square. The square marks out a trap door which is able to crumple beneath their feet, sending them plunging right down to be hanged.

Medics then confirm their death and wipe the body down in a final sterile act.

Prisoners are sometimes told of their fate only hours before their execution, meaning families and lawyers are sometimes left at nighttime until after the execution has taken place.

Before being led to their fate, convicts pass a small gold statue of Kannon, a Buddhist goddess related to mercy.

Witnesses of the hangings have told of their horror as they watch officers pull the mechanical levers to drop prisoners, blindfolded and hooded to muffle their screams, through the ground right into a chamber below.

(EDITOR'S NOTE: JAPAN'S JUSTICE MINISTRY REQUESTS THAT THESE PICTURES NOT BE CROPPED FOR SECURITY REASONS) This photo taken during a media tour conducted by Japan's Justice Ministry on August 27, 2010 shows some of the rooms inside the Tokyo detention house in Tokyo. Japan, one of the few industrialised democracies to maintain the death penalty, threw open the doors to its mystery-shrouded execution chamber for the first time to media. AFP PHOTO / JIJI PRESS (Photo credit should read JIJI PRESS/AFP via Getty Images)
View from the platform into execution room (Photo credits: JIJI PRESS/AFP via Getty Images)

Despite several years without executions, human rights campaigners feared executions were making a comeback after 21-year-old Yuki Endo, who murdered the parents of a woman after she rejected him, was sentenced to death in January 2024.

Yuki was just 19 when he stabbed the girl’s parents, attacked and injured her sister with a machete and burned the home down, making him the primary person in Japan to be given death penalty for against the law committed between the ages of 18 and 19, the MailOnline reported.

Essentially the most recent executed prisoner before last week was Tomohiro Kato in 2022, who killed seven people in 2008 by driving a truck right into a crowd on the Akihabara shopping district.

Why are Japan’s executions so secretive?

Japan’s death penalty law requires that the executions must follow ‘utmost secrecy’, in keeping with the Death Penalty Information Centre.

This extends to the convicts themselves, who typically discover about their execution on the morning it takes place, an area newspaper wrote, citing lawyer Yoshikuni Noguchi who once witnessed an execution.

After the announcement, the convict is moved to a special room and monitored by security officers.

(EDITOR'S NOTE: JAPAN'S JUSTICE MINISTRY REQUESTS THAT THESE PICTURES NOT BE CROPPED FOR SECURITY REASONS) This photo taken during a media tour conducted by Japan's Justice Ministry on August 27, 2010 shows an execution room at the Tokyo detention house in Tokyo. Japan, one of the few industrialised democracies to maintain the death penalty, threw open the doors to its mystery-shrouded execution chamber for the first time to media. AFP PHOTO / JIJI PRESS (Photo by JIJI PRESS / JIJI PRESS / AFP) / Japan OUT (Photo credit should read JIJI PRESS/AFP via Getty Images)
Where the hooded and blindfolded convict will hang (Credits: JIJI PRESS/AFP via Getty Images)

Families are alleged to be told in regards to the execution, but in keeping with the UN and campaigners this isn’t at all times the case.

Lawyer Noguchi recounted an execution, describing intimately how with one pull of the lever, the body of the inmate was dropped through the hatch.

He needed to grab the rope to stop it from shaking.

The experience impacted him deeply, with those around him saying he looked pale.

He later resigned from his role as a jail officer.

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One of the vital infamous convicts executed at Tokyo Detention Home is cult leader Shoko Asahara, 63, real name Chizuo Matsumoto.

After founding the Aum Shinrikyo cult in 1984, he attracted loyal supporters into his bizarre ideology and world of rituals, similar to drinking bathwater and wearing electrical caps for synchronised brain waves.

But behind the scenes, the cult was stockpiling weapons, and on March 20, 1995, Asahara and his worshippers released sarin nerve gas into the busy Tokyo subway.

The attack killed 13 people.

Asahara was eventually convicted of getting killed 27 people in 13 murders and other assaults and kidnappings during six years of attempting to construct his twisted, alternative empire.

Following his failed appeals for his release, the mass murderer was hanged on July 6, 2018 with six other cult members.

Amnesty International feared that the appointment of Fumio Kishida as Japan’s Prime Minister in 2021 showed the country’s ‘lack of respect for right to life’.

Critics of capital punishment like Amnesty argue that death penalty is unacceptable, saying it denies human rights and it’s irreversible and mistakes can occur.

Amnesty also claimed it does little to discourage crime and it’s utilized in countries with problematic human rights record like China, Iran and Saudi Arabia.

A version of this text was published in March 2024.

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