Japanese man who threw pipe bomb at ex-PM Kishida tells court he didn't
intend to kill
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[February 04, 2025]
TOKYO (AP) — A man who
threw a homemade pipe bomb at former Japanese Prime Minister Fumio
Kishida at a 2023 campaign event denied that he intended to kill the
politician as his trial began Tuesday at a court in western Japan. |
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A suspect, center on the ground, is caught by police after he allegedly
threw "the suspicious object," as Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida
visited Saikazaki port for an election campaign event in Wakayama,
western Japan Saturday, April 15, 2023.(Kyodo News via AP, File) |
Ryuji Kimura, 25, is charged with attempted murder for the April
15, 2023 attack on Kishida at a small fishing port in the city
of Wakayama, as well as four other charges including violations
of laws controlling explosives and deadly weapons.
The then-prime minister was unhurt, but two people sustained
minor injuries. Kimura was arrested on the spot.
At Tuesday's trial at the Wakayama District Court, Kimura
pleaded not guilty to attempted murder, saying he didn't intend
to kill Kishida, according to Japan's NHK public television and
other media. They said Kimura admitted to making the bombs and
other charges.
A ruling is expected later this month.
The attack on Kishida came about a year after the assassination
of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe during a campaign speech in
Nara, another city in western Japan. That attack shocked the
nation and prompted greater protection for dignitaries.
Gun-related crime is rare in Japan because of strict gun control
laws, but there has been a series of high-profile knife attacks
in recent years on subways and elsewhere, and there is growing
concern about homemade guns and explosives.
Prosecutors said the bomb Kimura threw at Kishida was one of two
he brought to the campaign event.
Social media postings later suggested Kimura had grievances
about Japan’s election system.
Authorities found parts of the pipe bomb stuck in a container 60
meters (65 yards) away from the venue. Prosecutors say that it
was potentially lethal.
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