Man dead after setting himself on fire in bullet train; woman passenger also dies
ODAWARA —
A man set himself on fire on a high-speed bullet train on Tuesday, killing himself and another passenger as the coach filled with smoke, a fire official said.
At least 26 other people were injured, three seriously, mostly from smoke inhalation, Odawara Fire Department official Ikutaro Torii said.
The man’s motive wasn’t clear. Police identified him from a copy of his driver’s license as a 71-year-old resident of Tokyo.
The passenger poured an oil-like substance over his head before setting himself on fire at around 11:30 a.m., authorities said. Kyodo News service reported that he used a lighter. Officials said the fire was at the front of the first car in the train, which was in between Shin-Yokohama and Odawawa stations heading from Tokyo to Osaka.
“I said to myself, ‘This is bad!’” said Takeo Inariyama, a 54-year-old businessman traveling in the second car. “I saw everyone running toward me and smoke coming. Also the smell (of smoke) filled the car. So I felt my life was in danger.”
The train stopped on the outskirts of Odawara city, about 80 kilometers west of Tokyo, when a passenger pressed an emergency button after finding someone collapsed on the floor near a restroom at the back of the first car, a transport ministry official said on condition of anonymity, citing department rules.
The passenger on the floor, a woman, was later pronounced dead, reportedly from inhaling smoke.
Crew members rushed to extinguish the fire, said Kengo Sasaoka, a spokesman for Central Japan Railway Co., which operates the bullet train between Tokyo and Osaka.
TBS television broadcast a video of passengers evacuating the smoke-filled coach, some coughing, others covering their faces with towels and handkerchiefs.
Witnesses provided somewhat varying accounts to Japanese networks.
One passenger, in a telephone interview with TBS, said the man approached him when he was standing outside the driver’s compartment and told him to stay away because it would be dangerous, then poured an orange-colored liquid over himself.
Public broadcaster NHK quoted a 58-year-old businessman as saying the man walked up and down the aisle a few times before returning with a plastic container that splashed a liquid on the businessman’s shoulder as he walked by.
The man then started dumping the liquid on the floor, and the businessman quickly left as he smelled gasoline, he said.
Bringing hazardous materials on public transportation is prohibited, but there is no way of checking, railway analyst Ryozo Kawashima told NHK. He said he does not recall any other incident like this in the bullet train’s 50-year history.
Bullet train service between Tokyo and Osaka was suspended for about two and a half hours while rescue workers helped some of the injured off the train. The train then moved slowly to Odawara station, where about 1,000 passengers got off.
The 16-car bullet train, called the Shinkansen in Japanese, travels the 553 kilometers between Tokyo and Osaka in 2 hours and 33 minutes.
Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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78 Comments
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-8
BurakuminDes
What a nutcase, people could easily have died from smoke inhalation due to his selfish act. Just lucky no-one did.
-8
nakanoguy01
i wonder if he was trying to protest against something. self-immolation is relatively popular in asia.
7
GW
What an A-hole! Say a bit on tv, messed up! Could have been a lot worse!
6
smithinjapan
BurakuminDes: "What a nutcase, people could easily have died from smoke inhalation due to his selfish act. Just lucky no-one did."
Well, he killed at least ONE other person if he is included in the two found in a state of "cardiopulmonary arrest", which means TWO if he is not. But yes, it's lucky MORE were not killed, and something we can be thankful about in yet ANOTHER case of a coward taking his own life and trying to bring others with him.
-4
Tessa
Dreadful news.
What does cardiopulmonary arrest mean?
-2
BurakuminDes
@ Smith - thanks, I left out the "more" in that statement. The mind boggles how many innocent people could easily have died in that carriage. Coward is the right word for him.
4
wontond
I don't usually approve when people criticize people who delay trains by jumping on the track, as their comments appear to lack compassion. However, this guy is a piece of work. Inconveniencing people versus endangering people is a totally different ball park. If you're going to off yourself, do it with a little dignity.
-13
Alphaape
In layman's term: A Heart attack.
13
WesternerJapan87
Cardiopulmonary arrest is NOT a "heart attack".
It means when the heart and lungs have stopped functioning (i.e. the person is no longer breathing and no longer has any heart function).
-5
Brainiac
People going about their daily business get on a train and end up dead. Some mornings when I wake up, I wonder if today will be my last day. Is there anywhere safe anymore?
6
SenseNotSoCommon
It's essentially dead (no heartbeat or breathing), but not yet officially confirmed as such due to the absence of a medical professional.
0
papigiulio
According to other news sources there are 2 people ( 1 male 1 female ) dead and more than 20 wounded now.
0
noypikantoku
what an A-Hole! if he wanted to kill himself he should not involve other innocent people....
-20
Kobe White Bar Owner
Horrific story! and what a way to go! "Prime Minister Shinzo Abe set up a task force to respond to the incident" Hows is this anything to do with Abe, surely its a police mater and should be handled as such or is it just a standard p.r stunt? The dear leader is tending for his flock? Maybe the guy was of some stature...
Moderator
No Abe-bashing on this thread, please.
-3
Disillusioned
I'm sitting on a local train reading this and realised there is only one fire extinguisher in this carriage and it looks like a paper fire extinguisher (just a water sprayer). It would be pretty useless to put out an oil fire.
Yeah, Japan is a relatively safe country unless some whacko sets himself on fire, randomly slashes you or pushes you in front of a train.
-14
Wc626
Copycat? Like that dude in Hibiya Park who lit himself in flames. I believe that was a political statement opposing Abe's stance on giving the SDF a more active role.
6
Alan
It's a translation of "shinpai teishi", which literally means "lungs and heart stopped." These days the Japanese media seem to use it, possibly for legal reasons, to refer to people who are apparently dead but haven't yet been officially declared dead.
1
zichi
"cardiopulmonary arrest" Japanese term for dead/died until on official death certificate is issued then dead is dead.
Horrific events and don't know why suicidal people need to involve others in their ending.
0
WesternerJapan87
Details have emerged that one of the dead is a male in his 30's.
0
zones2surf
My sympathies to the other passenger that died as a result of this selfish act as well as those injured and inconvenienced.
I truly hope this man did not leave behind a wife and child(ren). If so, then in addition to dealing with the suicide of their husband/father, they may well be exposed to damages and lawsuits as a result of the circumstances surrounding the suicide.
-8
Wc626
LoL.@Disillusioned. Coulda' been worse. Sarin Gas attack.
-1
A.N. Other
Well, that's not something you see every day. :/
-1
Evan Hayden
What a selfish idiot. If you're going to immolate yourself, at least have the decency to not try to take others down with you...
-2
Charles Noguhi
It's interesting that someone can board a train with a large amount of flammable liquids.
-4
sillygirl
Wow, Japan IS getting scarier and scarier. This was a bullet train that my family, friends even I could have been on. WTH??????
0
Educator60
@ WesternerJapan87 at Jun. 30, 2015 - 03:13PM JST "Details have emerged that one of the dead is a male in his 30's."
The man who self-immolated has been almost certainly identified as a 71-year-old who name has not yet been released. The woman who died appears to have been in her 50s or 60s.
-3
smithinjapan
Guys, for those who don't know, "Cardiopulmonary arrest" is the term they use for 'dead' because only a licensed physician can pronounce a person dead, so even police and paramedics (save in very rare cases where it is MORE than obvious, like if the person has exploded or been crushed by a giant rock) cannot legally declare a person dead. They usually get whisked away to a hospital where they are then pronounced dead.
1
sandhonour
Jesus - I catch the Nozomi quite often. The poor woman and her family. That guy should rot in hell. One thing is to hurt yourself another thing is to hurt others.
0
jcapan
"ANOTHER case of a coward taking his own life and trying to bring others with him"
Hard to argue with that. If he didn't want to take others with him, he would have done this at home, in an empty park etc. So, let's call him what he is, a terrorist. His no doubt being mentally unhinged doesn't change that fact.
-7
A.N. Other
The point I would make is that the toilet area is in between cars, so would, in theory at least, be sealed off from the passenger seating area. How, then, was this woman overcome by smoke? It would only take a few seconds to escape into one of the adjacent compartments.
-2
Jalapeno
The guy was after attention. Just jumping in front of a train ain't gonna do it.
0
Educator60
@ A.N. Other "The point I would make is that the toilet area is in between cars, so would, in theory at least, be sealed off from the passenger seating area."
Several cars were filled with smoke, so I guess there's something amiss with your theory.
1
Brent Kooi
Very sad story. But even more sad is the lack of compassion most commenters display. This man likely was not any of the awful things said about him, but rather, he was very likely mentally ill. Japan has such poor mental healthcare, so few doctors, and such restrictive pharmaceuticals that many people cannot get the care they need. Yet people jump to conclusions and judgments, vilifying this man and thereby making themselves look better. "There, but for the grace of God, go I."
0
gogogo
What is the purpose of doing that? I don't understand why a task force was needed?
-3
Brainiac
gogogo
It is not unusual for a prime minister to set up a task force in an incident like this, especially if there is some concern that it might have been a terrorist act, unlikely though that is. It is a prudent decision.
-2
Educator60
@ gogogo at Jun. 30, 2015 - 05:54PM JST "Prime Minister Shinzo Abe set up a task force to respond to the incident
What is the purpose of doing that? I don't understand why a task force was needed?"
Because it was an unprecedented incident on a major transportation route that at first glance might have been a terrorist attack. Sounds like a good enough reason to me.
-3
Mada Edo
kawaisou
-1
nandakandamanda
Abura in the dictionary means petroleum products, but in general spoken use means petrol/gasoline/diesel. ( Oil, or engine oil is generally called 'Oiru', as in oiru kokan, or change of oil.)
Listening to the passengers on TV they said it smelt like gasoline or kerosene.
Until the police are sure what exactly was in the tank they will use the neutral word abura, meaning liquid fuel of some kind.
-5
PROVIDE3D
This is not only a suicide act but also a terrorist one.
1
Stewart Gale
Brent Kooi, I am as compassionate as the next man but it's hard to have sympathy for anyone who takes the life of another.
-4
lovelife
for those who DONT KNOW what "cardiopulmonary arrest" is .......... ""Cardiac arrest, also known as cardiopulmonary arrest or circulatory arrest, is a sudden stop in effective blood circulation due to the failure of the heart to contract effectively or at all.[1] Medical personnel may refer to an unexpected cardiac arrest as a sudden cardiac arrest (SCA)""
WIKIPEDIA has everything
-1
Fouxdefa
What a horrible way to go.
-4
Laguna
Apparently it was an 18 liter container of kerosene, which is flammable but not explosive. Good thing it wasn't gasoline, or the entire car would have been obliterated and the train derailed.
0
Gobshite
Abe does nothing else, so get his name in the papers doing something positive... Waste of time though, 71 year old immolating on a train? who knew?
-3
careing
Now all liquid substances will be banned on trains in Japan now because of one nincompoop.
-1
Kabukilover
While I find it impossible to feel any compassion for a person who killed to innocent people while killing himself I also find it pretty obvious that the man was out of his mind. This horrific crime might have been avoided if mental health services in Japan were better. I am also for a tast force looking into this, though I suspect it's conclusions will be of little worth.
I hate to say this but our train services need better security. This guy got flammable substances on board. The damage could have been infinitely worse.
-1
Danny Bloom
tragic
-2
Mirai Hayashi
Please! Go kill yourself elsewhere ! No one wants to see you die nor do they want to die with you, you selfish self absorbed twat!
-1
ma1210
What a sad new, why no one prevented this accident.. isn't the smell of oil very strong ? Are the others just sat like nothing happened?
0
Andrew Silberman
I was on that train, Car 6. The strange thing was that we all learned what was going on through Yahoo News, not by train announcements---that just said there was smoke detected, please don't use the toilets, etc......
-2
Jandworld
Hopefully the JT will provide some clue as to the motives of this 71year old?
If not only the police cares, this is perhaps the only article concerning this incident.
-4
Gerard van Schip
"the businessman quickly left as he smelled gasoline" I see a problem right there. If some dude was pouring gasoline on a train I was on I would hit the emergency button and try to grab the guy.
-3
Tessa
@Andrew Silberman, please tell us more.
-1
HollisBrown
I don't understand how a 'bystander' can have died due to smoke inhalation. Did nobody help the poor lady get out? Was she left alone inside the first car - asleep maybe - until it was too late? Whatever happened, it sounds like the lady wasn't in any way a target, and that is a tragedy for Japan.
-2
kurisupisu
Who would have thought that this would be a reality in Japan? Unfortunately, the level of mental illness in Japan is not something that is taken seriously enough. I have seen obviously mental people doing strange things on trains. Hopefully this won't produce a string of copycats....
-2
Drift Wood
It is very sad that anyone has to resort to self immolation to end his/other people's life. I truly believe that everyone wants to be happy but at times it just isn't easy in this society of easy finger pointing. no excuse but this is the consequence of our selfish attitude. i see more cursing of the person than any sadness that this person had not been happier. Why is it so easy to accept selfishness by ourselves in our everyday act of alienation of individuals, stepping on others, jeering and yet when such people kill themselves in a way that is not more civic minded (no different from the alienation, selfish stepping, jeering), then he gets blamed more?
-3
Educator60
@ HollisBrown at Jun. 30, 2015 - 09:18PM JST "I don't understand how a 'bystander' can have died due to smoke inhalation."
The usual way, too much smoke in the lungs.
"Did nobody help the poor lady get out?"
Maybe, maybe not. We don't know. Maybe in the dark and chaos no saw her of was able to help her.
"Was she left alone inside the first car - asleep maybe - until it was too late?"
Since she was found in the floor of the deck between Cars 1 & 2, I doubt it.
The unfortunate woman has been identified as s 52-year-old resident of Yokohama.
The man has now been identified by police as a 71-year-old resident of Suginami ward, Tokyo.
-3
Andrew Silberman
@tessa, what would you like to know?
-2
TexPomeroy
First, words of condolence for the innocent (in addition to the lady from Yokohama, possibly a man in his 30s?) - the 70-something's in Japan apparently are so self-absorbed [I say if the self immolator was unhinged then it was the responsibility of his peers to ensure he was kept under watch] that the younger generation is being smothered to Japan's detriment; allowing mentally-ill people to roam the streets freely is... nutty. My understanding is that there is a revolutionary imaging system developed by a Japanese inventor {worked together with Ross Perot} which detects problem activities at train stations and onboard, but the Japanese rail operators have ignored it.
-3
Tessa
@Andrew Silberman
For starters, were the announcements made in languages other than Japanese?
Thank you.
-1
Bill Adams
There is a lot of harsh condemnation here, and while some of it is justified, I think it's sad that a 71-year-old man should want to kill himself. He could be your father. Yes, it was very wrong of him to endanger others, but surely this must be due to mental illness. We really do need to know what led him to this drastic action. I hope JapanToday will enlighten us in the coming days.
-1
Terrance F. Marrow
Very sad story. But even more sad is the lack of compassion most commenters display. This man likely was not any of the awful things said about him, but rather, he was very likely mentally ill. [Truth]
0
Andrew Silberman
@Tessa, no, announcements (the few that were made) were all in Japanese. Most were along the lines of "more information will be given when known...." But everyone has smart phones, and at one point a passenger turned his internet radio on with some volume so everyone knew what was going on....but reacting in the wonderfully (in this case) stoic Japanese manner. You could not even tell something was amiss. Just patiently, almost silently waiting for things to resume to normal. (At least that was in Cars 6, 7, and 8.)
-2
Andrew Silberman
Agree that more compassion all the way around would help. Yes, compassion to the mentally ill guy but far moreso to the victims, one whom he killed and others injured. And now to all of us who will be thinking twice about any odd behavior on trains whenever we get on them.
-2
danalawton1@yahoo.com
I hope the powers that be do not greatly increase security measures. I'd hate to see getting on a Shinkansen becoming a major ordeal.
-4
Andrew Silberman
Agree that more compassion all the way around would help. Yes, compassion to the mentally ill guy but far moreso to the victims, one whom he killed and others injured. And now to all of us who will be thinking twice about any odd behavior on trains whenever we get on them. One thing though, especially as more tourists come here: announcements should be in at least a couple more languages, and they should probably consider actually saying something. Even if these announcements were in English, it would probably just get non-Japanese upset....especially with more news coming from outside the train. Imagine that!
-3
TexPomeroy
I also happen to know that there is an inexpensive digital signage gizmo (from a Canadian inventor so is multilingual and "versatile") that could be "near seat" - but what has the response to this been amongst the Japanese rail/transit operators? Slower than molasses on a cold Canadian winter morning... Japan needs to "get on with it" I say!
-2
veejay
unfortunately this POS, and yes he was certainly mentally ill otherwise he wouldn't have committed such a stupid act, has created a precedent for other mentally ill idiots to follow and as such a taskforce-type response is necessary in order to avoid any recurrence.
1
Stewart Gale
What's with all the thumbs down on these posts? Most of them are perfectly reasonable such as "Tessa, what would you like to know?"
2
Strangerland
It's easy to say this guy was mentally ill, but he may have been making a statement of some sort that we just haven't heard. Self Immolation is often/usually to make some statement. I wouldn't be surprised if the media just wasn't reporting it (or maybe didn't receive it from investigators).
0
TexPomeroy
I think rail operators in Japan need to be given many thumbs down. BTW indeed the thumbs up/down system on this site is inane - I ignore it... this ain't the Roman Colosseum and we ain't gladiators! I'd rather they used broken pieces of pottery a la Athens: whoever ends up with the largest amount suffers Themistocles' fate. But to get things "back on track," we need a tracking system at train stations for obviously deranged people and a system to provide warning to foreign tourists who cannot handle the Japanese language, but the rail/transit operators are probably putting profits before people...
0
Stewart Gale
Yes, it could be he was a disgruntled former JR employee or something.
-2
natsu823
The passengers should have stopped him before he set himself on fire.
0
Stewart Gale
Easy to say from behind a keyboard in the safety of your house natsu823. Would you have risked being burned alive with him by jumping in Bruce Willis style? I bet you wouldn't, the safest thing to do if you knew what he was about to do would be to get away from him as quickly as possible.
0
Triumvere
Bizarre and terrifying. This happened in Japan? Really?
The passengers probably had no idea what the hell was going on.
1
Kobe White Bar Owner
Yes Japan is not the safe haven you thought, folks!!! Shock horror is a country full of people just like everywhere else.
0
goldnugget
Japan woke up for a moment.
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