Statistics: Homicides in Japan for 2005

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070518/ap_on_re_as/japan_crime

By HANS GREIMEL, Associated Press Writer
Fri May 18, 2:41 PM ET

TOKYO - A mother beheaded by her son. A baby who suffocated after being stuffed by his parents in the baggage compartment of a motorbike while they went gambling. A murderous shooting spree during a hostage standoff.

An outbreak of violent crime this week has triggered soul-searching and outrage in Japan, a country that has long prided itself on its safe streets and tight communal bonds.

The "appalling destruction" of traditional values — as one lawmaker put it — climaxed Friday, when a former gangster killed a policeman and wounded his son and daughter during a shooting rampage at his home, where he had held his ex-wife hostage for 24 hours. It was the first time an on-duty policeman was shot to death since 2001.

The standoff capped a week of mayhem and mistreatment.

On Tuesday, a teenager strolled into a police station with his mother's severed head in a bag. On Thursday, a couple was arrested after their 1-year-old son's body was found wrapped in a plastic bag and dumped in a gutter. The baby died after his parents allegedly left him in the baggage hold of a motorbike while they gambled at a pachinko pinball parlor.

The same day, a 3-year-old child was abandoned by his father at an anonymous drop box meant for unwanted infants.

"We are witnessing the deterioration of Japanese society," ruling party politician Tsuneo Suzuki told parliament Thursday. "We must stem this appalling destruction of family and community morals."

While Japan is still a relatively safe country by international standards, crime is on the rise as the country grapples with a widening gap between rich and poor and other social ills.

A tide of corporate layoffs amid widespread restructuring, the fragmentation of extended families and a creeping sense of urban alienation all contribute to the erosion of mores, experts say.

Japan, a country of 127 million people, had just 1,391 homicides in 2005, compared with 16,692 in the United States. But overall crime jumped to 2.27 million cases that year, from 1.81 million in 1996, and violent offenses nearly doubled to 73,772 cases, according to the National Police Agency.

"Anxiety is mounting in Japan about the increase of high-profile crimes. Due to rapid globalization, the traditional rules and social order are changing dramatically," said Jun Ayukawa, an expert on criminal psychology at Japan's Kwansei Gakuin University.

"While families used to act as brakes, there is an increase in crimes where people feel lost in despair and no longer care what happens to their families," he said.

Indeed, fractured families have figured prominently in this week's grisly headlines.

Motoki Tamiya and his wife, Mika, both 21, were arrested Thursday after DNA tests of the dead 1-year-old linked the boy to his mother. The baby's body was found last month on a remote road in the mountains of western Japan.

On Tuesday, Japan's only anonymous drop box for unwanted infants triggered a wave of anger after it was discovered that a 3-year-old preschooler — and not a newborn — was left by his father on the service's first day.

The drop-off, known as "Stork's Cradle," was begun by a Roman Catholic-run hospital in southern Japan to stem a wave of abandonments of newborns in unsafe public places.

The same day, there were more shocking headlines. A teenage boy carrying a severed head walked into a Japanese police station saying he killed his mother — the latest in a series of dismemberments.

News reports said the 17-year-old suspect hacked off his mother's head as she slept, then went to an Internet cafe to watch music videos — with the head — before turning himself into police in the morning.

In January, Tokyo was on edge after a woman confessed to cutting up her husband with a saw and dumping the body parts around the capital.

The recent surge in high-profile violent crime has spurred debate over tougher gun control rules, calls for strengthening the moral fiber of younger generations at the nation's schools as well as recriminations about the state of modern parenting.

Calls for more stringent gun control intensified last month when the Nagasaki mayor was shot and killed by an organized crime boss. Days later, police stormed an apartment and seized another gangster who allegedly gunned down a rival outside a Tokyo convenience store and had barricaded himself inside.

The use of guns is still relatively alien to the Japanese public. Handguns are strictly banned, and only police officers and other professionals, such as shooting instructors, are permitted to own them.

Friday's standoff ended when the gunman, Hisato Obayashi, 50, surrendered to police 24 hours after taking his ex-wife captive. The woman, identified as Michiko Mori, escaped from a bathroom window during the siege.

The violence erupted Thursday outside the central city of Nagoya when the suspect shot his adult son and daughter and killed a policeman trying to rescue a wounded comrade. News reports said Obayashi was a former mobster affiliated with Japan's largest crime syndicate, the Yamaguchi-gumi.
___

Associated Press Writer Kana Inagaki contributed to this report.

According to this article Japan recorded 1,391 homicides in 2005, compared with 16,692 in the United States. The population of the United States has around 300 million while Japan has around 179 million. My limited research shows that Japan has horrible personal gun right privileges. If gun control doesn't correlate to homicides and crime then why are their numbers so much lower? I would guess that Japan records homicides differently than the US does? Easy does it with the responces; I'm on your side, which happens to be the same side as the constitution and I'm voting for Ron Paul. :cool:
 
I don't think they record homicides differently, they have a very different culture. Shocked, that another culture could be less violent than our own? Deal with it.

The assault rate in Japan is something like 1% of that in the US. That corresponds pretty well to to the lowered murder rate there. Less attacks, less violence. A cultural pressure to not yell and scream when you don't get what you want. The people there have a more homogeneous society in which deference to authority is prized. The extremes of poverty that we have in the US are not present, everyone there is really part of the middle class, even if they are living in subsidized housing. (Health care is free, btw)

A larger proportion of Americans seem to be much more violent than the Japanese. I do not know why, but it seems important to find out. Before and during WWII, the Japanese committed terrible atrocities on their neigbors, due in part to their cultural belief that non-Japanese were sub-human. However, we seem to have changed some of that attitude since we defeated them in WWII. They are still unapologetically racist, but they don't seem like they are itching to annex Asia anymore.
 
japan and the United States have completely different socio-economic foundations, different social and family values. the society lacks most of our freedoms and emphasis on individuality, but social ills they have, for an interesting comparison take a look at the US vs Japan suicide rate.
 
Japan is mostly homogeneous and very nationalistic in composition and they've remained so for hundreds of years. The United States has the most ethnic, cultural, and racial diversity on the planet, plus a host of other features Japan and other countries do not have. Gun control has little to do with it.
 
I lived in japan for 3 years.
Japan is a very homogeneous place the people have a lot of pride.
Over there people are not allowed to have hand guns or rifles, at least I never found a rifle for sale or saw any rifle ammo for sale at the gun shops. People can just have shot guns and you have to have a hunting licence to buy a gun.
I all most bought a gun over there but the $400 to $600 price tag on the hunting licence that I most likely would not use turned me off to it.
 
Something very interesting that not many people realize is that Japanese IN AMERICA (where they presumably have the same "unlimited access" to guns that drives the antis crazy) have even LOWER murder rates than the Japanese in Japan. This is a societal thing, and trying to claim that it's a result of "gun control" is like trying to claim that the higher US murder rate by NON-gun means (the US rate for murders by beating, stabbing, etc., is three times that of Japan) is like trying to claim this is because the Japanese have strict "arm and leg control laws", or "knife control laws". Where things tend to even out is if you compare the violent death rates (homicide PLUS suicide) of one country to another; when homicides go up, suicides go down, and vice-versa.
 
Breakdown of the family

was one of the points made in the article above. I believe that is a significant consideration in North American murder rates as well.:banghead::banghead:
 
I have read that they record murder suicides as just suicides. Here with a family of four if it is a murder suicide it counts as 3 murders one suicide in Japan it would count as 4 suicides so if this is how they actually record murder suicides than in actuality their murder rate would be alot higher and thier suicide rate would be lower.
 
I reckon it's this whole 'diversity' business that sets the US up as more violent than other countries. Around 1900 or so, a near-total lack of gun laws in England and the US still saw the US with a higher rate of violence.
Homogenous cultures seem to have less trouble... but then we have Switzerland.

You take all our guns away and give 'em to the Japanese, the US would likely still have a higher violence/murder rate than them.

Maybe it's the whole Democracy business - "I'm a free man and I'll do what I please when I please it. I'll kick you in the face if you tell me different." No idea.
 
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