A man set himself on fire at Tokyo's busy Shinjuku railway
station on Sunday in what appears to be a rare violent political protest.
The man, who appeared to be in his 50s or 60s, was taken to
hospital after suffering serious injuries, said Daiji Kubota, an officer at the
Shinjuku police station. He said the man's identity and the reason for the
self-immolation was under investigation.
Footage of the incident on Twitter and other social media
showed a man wearing a suit and tie sitting on a small mat along the metal
framework above a pedestrian walkway with two plastic bottles of what looked
like gasoline beside him.
Witnesses were quoted as saying the man spoke through a
megaphone to protest the government's moves to change Japan's defence
policy.
He then doused himself with gasoline and set himself alight
as hundreds of people watched from below and from nearby buildings.
Television reports showed firefighters pulling the man down
onto the pedestrian bridge walkway and using hoses and a fire extinguisher to
put out the fire. The man was then taken away in an ambulance.
Japan's Cabinet is expected on Tuesday to approve a proposal
calling for the right to 'collective self-defence,' which would allow Japan to
play a more assertive role in international security amid China's growing
military presence and rising regional tensions. Japan currently limits its
participation even in U.N. peacekeeping activities to noncombat roles.
Critics say the shift undermines the war-renouncing Article 9
of Japan's Constitution, and opposition groups have staged constant but
peaceful protests outside Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's official residence.
Japan has had very few self-immolations in past decades
despite a long history of suicides by ritual disembowelment, or seppuku, dating
back to the feudal era.
The most high-profile suicide for political reasons in the
modern era was by Yukio Mishima, a right-wing author considered to be one of
Japan's greatest novelists, who killed himself in front of the headquarters of
Japan's Self Defense Forces in 1970 after an unsuccessful coup attempt.
Culled from DailyMail
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