
30 years after deadly Tokyo subway gassing, survivors and victims' families still seeking closure
Thirteen people were killed and thousands were sickened when cult members released sarin nerve gas in the capital's subway trains on March 20, 1995. The attack remains one of the most shocking atrocities in Japan, a country known for its low crime rates.
The cult, Aum Shinrikyo or Supreme Truth, has since disbanded. Its founder, Shoko Asahara, and 12 of his disciples were executed in 2018.
But 1,600 former members still operate under renamed groups and have ignored an order to pay damages to survivors and bereaved families.
Shizue Takahashi lost her husband, a deputy station master, in the attack. The couple was just starting to enjoy time to themselves after raising three children when tragedy struck.
'My life is still being ruined by Aum and its successor groups,' said Takahashi, 78. 'We need to carry on and not let the memories fade.'
People gasped for air and collapsed
At 8 a.m. during the morning rush, five cult members got on separate train cars on three subway lines converging at Kasumigaseki, Japan's government center, each dropping bags of sarin on the train floors. They punctured the bags with umbrellas, releasing the gas inside the train cars.
Within minutes, commuters poured out of the trains onto the platforms, rubbing their eyes and gasping for air. Some collapsed. Others fled onto the streets where ambulances and rescue workers in hazmat suits gave first-aid.
Kazumasa Takahashi didn't know the puddle he was cleaning on the subway car floor was sarin. He collapsed as he removed a bag — a sacrifice some survivors say saved lives — and never woke up.
The attack sickened more than 6,000. A 14th victim died in 2020 after battling severe after-effects.
The subway gassing happened after a botched police investigation failed to link the cult to earlier crimes, says Yuji Nakamura, a lawyer for the survivors and the bereaved families. 'It could have been prevented," he said.
Two days after the gassing, Tokyo police, carrying a caged canary to detect poison, raided Aum's headquarters near Mount Fuji, where the cultists lived together, trained and produced sarin. Asahara was found in a hidden compartment.
Apocalyptic cult
Born Chizuo Matsumoto in 1955, Asahara founded Aum Shinrikyo in 1984. The cult combined Hinduism, Buddhism, Christianity and yoga, and attracted young people disillusioned with materialism. He taught that death could elevate their spirits and justified killing as a virtue.
Followers paid to drink Asahara's bathwater and wore electrical head gear they believed synchronized their brain waves with the guru's. He prophesized an imminent apocalypse, which only true believers would survive.
Asahara gathered doctors, lawyers and scientists from Japan's top universities as his closest aides.
Using donations from followers and earnings from yoga classes and health food businesses, they bought land and equipment. Asahara's scientists developed and manufactured sarin, VX and other chemical and biological weapons.
In 1989, its members killed Tsutsumi Sakamoto, a lawyer who opposed the cult, his wife and baby boy. Their criminal activities escalated after their defeat in the 1990 parliamentary elections. A 1994 sarin attack in the central Japanese city of Matsumoto killed eight and injured more than 140 others.
In all, Aum killed 27 people in more than a dozen attacks that culminated in the subway gassing. It was part of a plot by Asahara to hasten Armageddon, envisioning overthrowing the government.
Still seeking redress
Shizue Takahashi attended most of the Aum criminal trials. She has lobbied for government support, winning the enactment of a law to support crime victims and government benefits of 3 billion yen ($20 million) for more than 6,000 survivors and bereaved families of the Aum crimes.
The government has also enacted laws banning sarin production and possession, and restricted the activities of groups linked to mass killings. Police have since established nuclear, biological and chemical weapons units and beefed up training.
Aum's main successor, Aleph, has ignored a court order to pay 1 billion yen ($6.7 million) in compensation to survivors and bereaved families. The group has allegedly hidden billions of yen of income from yoga and spiritual seminars.
Many of the subway gassing survivors still suffer health problems and trauma, according to support groups.
Takahashi and others last week called on Justice Minister Keisuke Suzuki to do more to accelerate compensation by Aleph and keep them under close watch.
Survivors and their supporters say lessons have not been sufficiently shared with the public.
Shoko Egawa, a journalist and expert on Aum crimes, says attention on the group has largely focused on its crimes rather than teaching people to stay away from dangerous cults. 'There is still a lot to learn from (the Aum problems), including how they attracted followers, so that we can prevent people from getting their lives ruined by cults,' Egawa said.
Takahashi recently launched a website that compiles articles and comments by survivors, lawyers and writers, including Haruki Murakami's 2007 article about his 1997 book 'Underground.'
Aum's remnants
At its peak, the cult boasted more than 10,000 followers in Japan and 30,000 in Russia and elsewhere. Aum has disbanded, but about 1,600 people belonging to Aleph and two smaller groups in Japan still practice Asahara's teachings, said the Public Security Intelligence Agency, which monitors the groups.
Minoru Kariya, whose father was killed by Aum members in early 1995 while he was trying to get his sister to quit the cult, said authorities need to do much more to tackle the threat.
'It's scary that they still exist and are operating as organizations and recruiting new followers,' he said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
10-08-2025
- Scottish Sun
Isolated island where visitors banned for 70 years & trespassers are killed with arrows is the world's last time capsule
In 2018 a Christian missionary was shot dead after attempting to convert the tribe to Christianity KEEP OUT Isolated island where visitors banned for 70 years & trespassers are killed with arrows is the world's last time capsule Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A REMOTE island in the Indian Ocean that has been off limits to visitors for 70 years is one of the world's last remaining time capsules. The tribe who inhabit the tiny island have been living in voluntary isolation for 60,000 years, and are completely unexposed to modern life. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 5 North Sentinel Island is completely prohibited for guests Credit: Alamy 5 The Sentinelese have been known to kill those who attempt to visit the island 5 Members of the tribe are not prosecuted for attacking outsiders Credit: Alamy Back in 1956, the Indian government prohibited contact with the residents of North Sentinel Island, in the Bay of Bengal, and the law is still in place today. The prohibition exists to prevent the islanders coming in to contact with mainland diseases, as they will likely have no immunity to them due to lack of exposure. It was also implemented to preserve their cultural heritage, and to prevent the tribe from being exploited for tourism or research extraction. Thanks to the law, the Sentinelese are also protected from poaching and human trafficking, with strict penalties in place for violations. Unwanted visitors There is a five mile exclusion zone surrounding the island, and members of the tribe who have defended the island have not been prosecuted by the government. The tribe have been known to kill unwanted visitors with arrows, and back in April, Youtuber Mykhailo Viktorovych Polyakov, 24, was arrested after visiting the island and giving the Sentinelese people a can of coke. Following the trip, the influencer, who previously visited Afghanistan and posed with Taliban weapons, described himself as a "thrill seeker". But he's not the only one to visit the tribe, in 2018, Christian missionary John Allen Chau, 26, visited the island in an attempt to convert the tribe to Christianity. John had planned to live with the Sentinelese and teach them the bible, but he was immediately shot with a bow and arrow on arrival. And in 2006, two Indian fisherman were killed by the tribe after their boat accidentally drifted on to the shore. Brit danger tourist brands tribe pest an 'amateur' & reveals bizarre peace offering he SHOULD have made instead of Coke The families of the dead have been unable to bury their bodies, as it is too dangerous to visit the island. North Sentinel Island is roughly 60 square kilometres in size, and is covered in untouched tropical rainforest. There are no signs of farmland or large settlements on the island, which has no roads, cars, or infrastructure. Understanding the tribe Indian anthropologist Triloknath Pandit dedicated years trying to understand the tribe by cautiously approaching them and offering them gifts such as coconuts and metal tools. Sometimes they would take the offerings, after the anthropologist and his team had left, but on other occasions, they would fire arrows at the outsiders. ALL ALONE Who are the Sentinelese? THE Sentinelese tribe are an indigenous tribe who have thrived on North Sentinal Island, one of the Andaman Islands in the Indian Ocean, for up to 55,000 years. They have zero contact with the outside world and are actively hostile to anyone who approaches their land. The small forested island of North Sentinel, which is a similar size to Manhattan, is even off limits to the Indian navy in a bid to protect the tribe of about 150 from being wiped out by disease. The tribe got international attention after the 2004 tsunami, when a member of the tribe was pictured on a beach, firing arrows at a helicopter inspecting their welfare. In 2006, two Indian fishermen, who had moored their boat near the island to sleep after fishing near there, were killed when their boat broke loose and drifted onto the shore. Campaigns by non-profit and local organisations have led the Indian government to abandon plans to contact the Sentinelese. Survival International, an organisation that campaigns for the rights of tribal people, works to ensure that no further attempts are made to contact the tribe. Then in 1991, a group of Sentinelese walked out of the jungle unarmed and accepted the gifts straight from the visitors. However, the moment was short-lived. 'When I was giving away the coconuts, I got a bit separated from the rest of my team and started going close to the shore", Pandit told the BBC. "One young Sentinel boy made a funny face, took his knife and signalled to me that he would cut off my head. "I immediately called for the boat and made a quick retreat. The gesture of the boy is significant. He made it clear I was not welcome.' 5 Mykhailo Polyakov was arrested after he allegedly made an illegal and unauthorized landing at the tribal reserve on North Sentinel Island Credit: Police Handout


Daily Mirror
07-08-2025
- Daily Mirror
BBC viewers cringe at Kemi Badenoch's 'fields of wheat' moment
Tory leader Kemi Badenoch opened up about snitching on a fellow student, who was cheating on his exams, while at school in a BBC interview - and viewers have slammed the politician BBC viewers have cringed their way through Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch 's latest BBC interview after the politician made a candid admission about her school days. The 45-year-old sat down with BBC presenter Amol Rajan to speak about her life and career - however, there's one particular anecdote of Badenoch's that left fans baffled throughout the hour-long programme. Speaking about how she despises rule-breaking, Badenoch admitted that when she was "about 14 or 15", she stood up in an exam and accused a boy of cheating. "That boy ended up getting expelled," she said. "I didn't get praised for it. I was a relatively popular kid at school, and people said, 'Why did you do that, why would you do it?' I said, 'Because he was doing the wrong thing.'" It comes after Nigel Farage unveiled an ex-Tory who made racist remark on WhatsApp as its newest defector. BBC viewers quickly took to social media to slam Badenoch's confession, with many labelling it her 'field of wheat' moment - referring to the interview in which Theresa May said in the run-up to the 2017 election that the naughtiest thing she ever did as a child was "run through the fields of wheat". "@KemiBadenoch I think I prefer @theresa_may, running through the fields of what," one viewer wrote. While another said: "It's a mystery why Kemi Badenoch isn't popular with the electorate..." A third viewer said: "Whoever is advising Kemi Badenoch hates her." A fourth added: "Who is advising Kemi Badenoch. No way she is winning PM with the way she has been moving." Elsewhere in the interview, Badenoch revealed that she lost faith in God after Austrian man Josef Fritzl 's horrific crimes came to light. Fritzl kept his daughter imprisoned underneath his home for 24 years. Badenoch said: "I couldn't stop reading this story. And I read her account, how she prayed every day to be rescued. "And I thought, I was praying for all sorts of stupid things and I was getting my prayers answered. I was praying to have good grades, my hair should grow longer, and I would pray for the bus to come on time so I wouldn't miss something." She added: "It's like, why were those prayers answered, and not this woman's prayers? And it was like someone blew out a candle. I rejected God, not Christianity. So I would still define myself as a cultural Christian."


The Independent
07-08-2025
- The Independent
The criminal case that killed Kemi Badenoch's belief in God
Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch has revealed she lost her faith in God after learning about the case of Austrian sex offender Josef Fritzl in 2008. She explained that the unanswered prayers of Fritzl's daughter and captive Elisabeth Fritzl, contrasted with her own trivial prayers being answered, caused her to question her belief. That was a turning point that she described as being 'like someone blew out a candle'. Despite rejecting God, Ms Badenoch said she had not rejected Christianity and remains a 'cultural Christian '. She said she wants to 'protect certain things because I think the world that we have in the UK is very much built on many Christian values'.