Home>News Center>World
         
 

Nine died in group suicides near Tokyo
(Agencies)
Updated: 2004-10-12 15:07

Seven young men and women were found dead in a car parked at an isolated mountainside lot near Tokyo early Tuesday in a suspected group suicide, police said. Minutes later, the bodies of two more women who had apparently fulfilled a separate suicide pact were found.

The deaths follow several similar cases recently of groups committing suicide in Japan, often in cars, after meeting via the Internet.


The car in which four men and three women were found dead, is seen at a police station in Chichibu, north of Tokyo October 12, 2004. Japanese police said on Tuesday they were investigating a group suicide in which seven people who got acquainted through the Internet killed themselves. [Reuters]
In the first case Tuesday, a friend of one of the seven who had received an e-mail hinting at suicide called the police but the authorities failed to reach the car in time, a police spokesman in Saitama prefecture said on condition of anonymity.

Investigators found four charcoal stoves in the car which they believe the group used to poison themselves with carbon monoxide, another police spokesman said, also requesting anonymity.

Minutes later, two women were found dead in a car parked outside an isolated temple in Yokosuka, about 100 kilometers (60 miles) southeast of the first location, a Kanagawa prefecture police spokesman said. The pair were lying on the car's back seat, with two charcoal stoves sitting on the floor. The car windows had been sealed with a black plastic tarp.

Police said it was not immediately known whether the two cases were related.

They were still investigating the cause of the death and the identities of the men and women, believed to be in their teens and 20s.

The circumstances resembled several other group suicides reported throughout Japan in recent years.

Dozens of Web forums for trading information and advice on suicide have emerged in Japan. There have been several cases of groups of people committing suicide, often with charcoal stoves in cars, after meeting one another on the Internet.

Japan's suicide rates are among the highest in the world. The number of Japanese committed suicide last year exceeded 32,000 to mark the record high. Police did not have figures for Internet group suicides.

Officials have blamed a decade-long economic slump for an increasing number of people killing themselves.



 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

China to lobby for 4th round six-party talks

 

   
 

Tax revenue growth slows down

 

   
 

China to amend Criminal Procedure Law

 

   
 

US urged to abide by one-China principle

 

   
 

President pledges support to UN, Annan

 

   
 

Beijing to get water from Hebei, Shanxi

 

   
  Saddam said to have undergone operation
   
  U.S. Shuttles may resume ISS flights in May
   
  Helicopter crash delays vote count
   
  US steps up attacks on Iraq insurgents
   
  Gunmen kill Iraqi local official in Mosul
   
  Istanbul's Jews re-open synagogue after bombing
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  Are the Republicans exploiting the memory of 9/11?  
Advertisement