Shinzo Abe dead – Japan’s ex-PM is killed in bloody assassination as ‘navy veteran’ blasts homemade gun during speech
PRIME Minister Shinzo Abe has died after being brutally shot in the chest during a bloody assassination attempt on Friday.
National broadcaster NHK aired footage showing Abe, 67, collapsing on the street in Nara, Japan, clutching his blood-smeared chest as several security guards ran toward him.
A security police seize a suspect who is believed to shoot former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe[/caption] The gunman used a homemade weapon appearing to two pipes strapped to a plank[/caption]Abe was seen holding his chest after reportedly suffering two gunshot wounds – one to the chest and one to the neck – that left him bloodied on the ground.
The former prime minister was not breathing and his heart had stopped, NHK quoted firefighters as saying.
As first responders rushed to save Abe’s life, police captured Yamagami Tetsuya, 41, for the alleged attempted murder, according to NHK.
Fuji TV reports that the suspect is an ex-Japanese military native of Nara city, and was formerly a member of the Maritime Self-Defence Force, the country’s equivalent of a navy, for three years until 2005.
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He was pictured carrying a large homemade weapon, according to police.
Close-ups of the gun appear to show two pipes strapped to a piece of wood.
Fumio Kishida, Abe’s replacement as prime minister, was rushed to his office by helicopter for emergency talks with officials.
Addressing the media, he described the shooting as a “heinous act”.
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He added that the reasons for the “barbaric” shooting were not clear at this moment.
Abe was giving a speech at a campaign event ahead of Sunday’s election for the parliament’s upper house when the shots rang out.
His security team were around him, but the gunman was able to draw his weapon and shoot the former statesman at close range “without being checked”.
A video from BNO News showed bystanders rushing to help the former prime minister after he was shot at around 11.30am local time (3.30am BST).
Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno said of the arrest: “A barbaric act like this is absolutely unforgivable, no matter what the reasons are, and we condemn it strongly.”
Abe’s younger brother has told reporters in Tokyo that the former prime minister is currently receiving a blood transfusion in hospital as doctors urgently try to save his life.
His wife, Akie Abe, rushed to the hospital to be at her stricken husband’s side.
Japan has some of the strictest gun laws in developed nations, and such shootings are incredibly rare.
In 2007, Nagasaki’s mayor was shot and killed by a member of the yakuza criminal gang.
The head of Japan’s Socialist Party was assassinated with a samurai sword by a right-wing youth during a speech in 1960.