Japan: Latest double hanging condemned
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Posted: 26 April 2013 Five executions so far this year under new Prime Minister
Earlier today the two men - Yoshihide Miyagi, 56, and Katsuji Hamasaki, 64 - were hanged in Tokyo, after they had both been convicted of murder for shooting rival gang members in a restaurant in Ichihara city in 2005. The executions are the fourth and fifth to take place in Japan since Prime Minister Shinzo Abe took office in December, with three other men hanged in February. In total, Japan has executed 12 people in the last year. By contrast, before March 2012 no executions had been carried out for 20 months in the country. Amnesty International Asia Pacific Director Catherine Baber said: “We have already seen five executions this year, and it shows that the government has no intention of heeding international calls to start a genuine and open public debate on the death penalty including abolition. “We urge the government to immediately reverse this worrying trend and impose a moratorium on the death penalty with a view to its eventual abolishment.” |

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