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Investigation: Japan knifing suspect methodically murdered 19 disabled people

Uematsu told investigators he had no regrets and was trying to help the world by killing people he thought were burdens.

Tokyo: The former employee accused of killing 19 disabled people and injuring others at a care home in Japan moved briskly and methodically inside buildings and rooms he knew, finishing the deadliest mass attack in postwar Japan in less than one hour, officials said Thursday.

He tied down several of the six overnight workers - one at each of the six sections he passed through - with plastic zip bands so he could move freely in the Yamayuri-en residential buildings, according to a prefectural welfare department official, Yuki Natori. In addition to the 19 disabled people slain, 24 were injured as well as two employees.

Around 2 a.m. Tuesday, the attacker smashed open the window of one of the patients' rooms on the first floor, sneaking into the east wing of the facility for about 150 people with severe autism and other mental disabilities.

Tracing the blood stains he left as he moved from one room to another, officials believe he started from the Flower Home section, where he killed five women. He moved west to the Rainbow Home, slashing more people and leaving five of them dead in that section. He apparently entered the west wing using a key either stolen from an overnight worker or a duplicate he had kept, then killed two men in one section and seven more men upstairs.

One of the two sections he left untouched housed 20 men Satoshi Uematsu had taken care of when he worked at the facility, although the reason they were spared was unknown, Natori said.

Authorities believe Uematsu left the facility around 2:50 a.m. and drove to the local police to turn himself in. He remained in custody Thursday, and prosecutors have until mid-August to decide whether to file murder charges.

Local media have reported that Uematsu told investigators he had no regrets and was trying to help the world by killing people he thought were burdens.

Advocacy groups condemned the crime and the suspect's view, which they said reflected a persistent prejudice in Japan.

"Of course not everyone who supports the idea murders, but there are still many people who share the view," said Koji Onoue, vice chairman of Japan National Assembly of Disabled People's International. "We shouldn't treat (Uematsu) as an abnormal, isolated case. Instead, we should take this opportunity and think why this happened and how people with disabilities are still viewed in this country."

The killings mirrored a plot described in a letter Uematsu tried to give to a Parliament leader in February. He quit his job at the Yamayuri-en facility after being confronted about the letter and was committed to psychiatric treatment, but he was released within two weeks, officials have said.

An official of the city overseeing Uematsu's home said he told medical staff at the hospital during his psychiatric stay that a "Hitler idea has fallen on him." The official spoke on condition of anonymity, citing the sensitivity of the issue.

While his reference wasn't described further, disabled people were killed in Nazi Germany in actions seen as improving the perceived master race.

( Source : AP )
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