Skip to main content

Japan: 40 years on death row


After four decades awaiting execution, a recent court development offers hope of retrial for Masaru Okunishi.

An evening in March 1961, in the central Japanese village of Kuzuo: Masaru Okunishi, a farmer in his mid- thirties, attended a meeting at a local community centre.

Among those gathered that night at the community centre were Okunishi’s wife - and his mistress.

Wine was served to the women, which Masaru Okunishi had carried to the meeting. The men drank sake and everyone toasted to success for their further networking.

But suddenly the evening started to go wrong. After a glass or two, Okunishi’s wife, his mistress and three other local women suddenly felt unwell. A doctor was frantically summoned, but the five women died shortly afterwards. Twelve other women were taken seriously ill.

The next morning, the farmer was brought to the local police station. No lawyer was present during five days of intense interrogation and by the early morning on 3 April the police had forcibly extracted a confession. Okunishi was formally charged with the murder of the five women.

Tests showed the wine was laced with agricultural chemicals, but no evidence was found proving that Okunishi had poisoned it. Masaru Okunishi later retracted his confession, saying he was forced to confess.

In 1964, the Tsu District Court acquitted Okunishi, citing a lack of evidence. But the prosecution appealed the verdict. The Nagoya High Court revoked the lower court decision and sentenced him to death in 1969 - a decision upheld by the Supreme Court in 1972.

Today, Okunishi is in solitary confinement in a detention centre in the central Japanese city of Nagoya. Now in his eighties, he has spent more than 45 years in custody, 40 of these on death row. He has had six appeals for a retrial rejected.

In April 2005, the Nagoya High Court decided to reopen the trial, citing new evidence that could prove his innocence.

However, following a challenge brought by the prosecution the Nagoya High Court reversed its decision in December 2006. The Supreme Court then referred the case back to the Nagoya High Court, which ordered testing of the chemical evidence in October 2011 and is expected to rule in relation to the request for retrial.

If the court opts for a retrial, Okunishi’s chances of acquittal are good, says Kazuko Ito, his lawyer of 17 years, speaking to Amnesty International from Tokyo.

Vindication

Ito, who is also the Secretary General of the Japanese NGO Human Rights Now, believes Okunishi’s case is typical of an innocent individual caught up in Japan’s flawed justice system.

“He was taken into custody for 49 hours without sufficient sleep or rest. Those are harsh conditions. He was forced to confess and that confession is the only evidence against him,” she says.

Several death row inmates in Japan were allegedly forced to “confess” to a crime during police interrogations. Despite this, only four convicted death row inmates have been retried and freed in Japan.

Japan’s criminal justice system is notoriously slow and the majority of prisoners sentenced to death are condemned to spend the rest of their time under inhumane conditions. As of 5 March, 132 prisoners were on death row in Japan – all are kept in solitary confinement.

A number of prisoners reportedly survive the isolation through reliance on sleeping pills and many suffer from mental disabilities due to the conditions under which they are detained.

So how has Okunishi managed to stay sane?

“He’s a very strong person,” said Ito.

“He’s been fighting for many years and his raison d’être is to vindicate himself. His determination gives him a reason to live,“ she said.

He receives frequent visits from his younger sister but his children have had little opportunity to visit him in prison.

But she remains optimistic that Okunishi could be acquitted soon.

“The most heinous crime is the execution of innocent people. You have to prevent such crimes of injustice, that’s why I decided to take up this case,” she said.

Studying the death penalty

Execution chamber
at Tokyo Detention Center
No executions were carried out in Japan in 2011, the first execution-free year since 1992.

In 2010, former Justice Minister Keiko Chiba set up a study group within the Ministry of Justice to assess the death penalty as a form of punishment. She also opened the execution chamber of the Tokyo Detention Centre to the media for the first time, to generate a nationwide debate on the death penalty.

Former Justice Minister Hideo Hiraoka repeatedly refused to sign execution warrants. However, he was replaced in January this year by Toshio Ogawa, who has stated publicly that signing off on executions is part of the Justice Minister's job description.

Polls showed that public support for the death penalty was bolstered after the 1995 terrorist attack on the Tokyo subway.

“People became very insecure after this incident and attitudes to crime became more and more severe. It’s very difficult to persuade Japanese people that the death penalty is a bad idea. If you kill someone, you deserve to die – that is the attitude of many ordinary people,” said Kazuko Ito.

Examples from other parts of the world show that political leadership is essential to change the public perception of the death penalty and inform about the reality of capital punishment.

This reality, in Japan and worldwide, includes the real inhumanity and arbitrariness of the penalty, the lack of superior deterrent effect compared with other punishments, and the impossibility of excluding error when imposing this irreversible sanction .

More than two thirds of the countries in the world have considered this reality and now reject the death penalty in law or practice.

Source: Amnesty International, March 27, 2012

Related articles:
Apr 20, 2010
The court said the arrival of records from the Supreme Court on Masaru Okunishi, who has been on death row since 1972, marks the beginning of a reconsideration of the case, after the top court decided to send it back to the ...
Aug 16, 2011
Death-row inmate Masaru Okunishi, however, may become the 1st to be granted a retrial in decades. In April 2010, the Supreme Court revoked a lower court ruling on Okunishi's retrial application and ordered the Nagoya ...
Aug 27, 2010
The hangmen are undeterred by age, senility or handicap: the condemned include 84-year-old Masaru Okunishi, who for more than four decades has protested his innocence of poisoning five women. Of the more than 30 ...
Sep 15, 2009
The hangmen are undeterred by age, senility or handicap: the condemned include 83-year-old Masaru Okunishi, who has protested his innocence of poisoning 5 women for over 4 decades. Amnesty says 32 people have ...

Most viewed (Last 7 days)

Iran: Flogging still a common practice

Flogging of Sufis in Gonabad: Fourteen Ne’matollahi dervishes received 25 lashes each for allegedly disturbing the public security "The lash ruling against 14 Ne'matollahi dervishes of Gonabad was carried out. They were residents of Baydokht and had been arrested and condemned by the Public Prosecutor of Gonabad after a protest against the illegal treatment dealing with the Sufis in June of last year [2010]. According to the website of Majzuban-e-Nur, Mr. Sa'id Kashani, Mr. Amir Roshan-Mojaver-Sufi, Mr. Alimohammad Amanian, Mr. Ruhollah Safari, Mr. Ali Abbasi-Baydokhti, Mr. Ebrahim Abbaszadeh, Mr. Mohammadali Ja'fari, Mr. Hossein Mahdavi, Mr. Hossein Abbaszadeh-Baydokhti, Mr. Rahmat Hosseini, Mr. Reza Kakhki, Mr. Behruz Mojaver-Sufi, Mr. Ali Mir, and Mr. Hassan Baluchi-Baydokhti are the fourteen dervishes whose requests were not only rejected, but who were condemned to 25 lashes for disturbing the public security. It should be mentioned that Ruhollah Safari, the ...

Japan’s Internet Wants Uchida Riko Executed. Here’s Why That Won’t Happen

This week, the prosecution in the case of a murder of a 17-year-old girl in Hokkaido came out with its sentencing recommendation. Japanese social media reacted by clamoring for the accused woman’s blood. But, while the facts of the case are heinous, the prosecutor’s decision not to seek the death penalty is grounded in long-standing precedent. Murdered for looking at the accused wrong Uchida Riko (内田梨瑚), 23, and her friends stand accused of murdering 17-year-old Murayama Runa (村山瑠奈) in Hokkaido’s Asahikawa. Prosecutors say the dispute began after Murayama posted a photo of Uchida to social media. They say Uchida’s group abducted the girl, made her undress, and then forced her to jump from a bridge.

Kansas AG urges governor to deny clemency to 8 sentenced to death

TOPEKA — Attorney General Kris Kobach on Tuesday urged the governor to deny clemency to Kansas inmates who have been sentenced to death. Eight of nine people sentenced to death in Kansas formally filed clemency requests in May, according to a press release from the Attorney General’s Office. Kobach urged Gov. Laura Kelly to reject them.

US | Conservative federal judge says death penalty for child sex crimes may be legal

June 24 (Reuters) - A conservative federal judge on Wednesday took the position that despite a 2008 U.S. Supreme Court ruling barring the death penalty for child rape, prosecutors today may be free to seek capital punishment in cases involving sexual offenses against children. St. Louis-based U.S. District Judge Joshua ​Divine, who was appointed to the bench only last year by Republican President Donald Trump, delivered his views in an unusual ‌court opinion issued on the same day he was set to sentence a Missouri man who faced a maximum prison term of 20 years.

Two men executed with AK-47 for raping and murdering boy, 12, in Yemen as children watch on

“Public execution is an even more grotesque violation of human rights, particularly in a country where the ability of the accused to obtain adequate legal representation and the coverage of the process is highly limited.” --  Human Rights Watch director Sarah Leah Whitson TWO pedophiles have been executed with AK-47s in front of a bloodthirsty crowd for raping and murdering a 12-year-old boy in Yemen. Chilling images show Wadah Refat and Mohamed Khaled being marched at gunpoint through the port city of Aden. Yemen is one of the few countries in the world where capital punishment is legal, and even children were in attendance to watch the gruesome event. Refat, 28, and Khaled, 31, were condemned for the abduction, rape, and murder of a young boy who was snatched after playing next to the house of one of the men. The pair reportedly dragged him into their home and raped him. When sentencing the pair, The Daily Star reported that the judge said, "After ...

Might Ohio use electric chair again?

Electric chair at Southern Ohio Correctional Facility The difficulty of obtaining drugs for executions has some Ohio legislators talking about alternatives, including the electric chair. "There are other options," said Rep. Jim Buchy, R-Greenville, a co-sponsor of legislation to keep the supplier of execution drugs secret. "Rope is cheap," said state Sen. Bill Seitz, R-Cincinnati. No one is seriously suggesting - at least not yet - taking "Old Sparky," Ohio's electric chair, out of retirement, or returning to hanging, which the state abandoned in 1897. But Ohio's problem with lethal-injection drugs is coming to a head: The scheduled Feb. 15 execution of Ronald Phillips is 90 days away. Legislators are rushing to pass House Bill 663 before the lame-duck legislative session ends on Dec. 31 so that the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction can obtain drugs it needs at least a month before the execution. The legisla...

I watched Ohio's last execution. Here's what it was like

As Gov. DeWine calls for Ohio to end capital punishment, the state’s last execution remains the one I witnessed in 2018 Inside Ohio's death house, there is a room for executions and separate witness rooms: one for those connected to the victim and another for those connected to the inmate. Windows separate the death chamber from those watching, the condemned from the living. I was there on July 18, 2018 – during Ohio’s most recent execution. Robert Van Hook was put to death that day for killing David Self in 1985. He sat on death row for three decades. I was one of three media witnesses to the execution.

Kuwait executes five convicted murderers after death sentences upheld by highest courts

Dubai: Kuwait has executed five men convicted of murder and other serious crimes after their death sentences were upheld by the country's highest courts and ratified by the Emir, the Public Prosecution said. The executions were carried out by hanging at the Central Prison after all legal procedures had been completed, according to a statement carried by local media. The public prosecution said the convicts had been granted all constitutional guarantees, including the right to defense and appeal throughout the investigation and trial process. 

New Mississippi billboard warns criminals: ‘Firing squad is legal’

DESOTO COUNTY, Miss. (WREG) — A billboard standing on Interstate 55 southbound as you cross the Tennessee state line and enter Mississippi from Memphis is sending a grim message to those coming into the state. DeSoto County District Attorney Matthew Barton recently announced the new billboard campaign, which features the sign reading, “WELCOME TO MISSISSIPPI. WHERE THE FIRING SQUAD IS LEGAL. THINK TWICE.” It references Mississippi’s law permitting execution by firing squad under certain circumstances for inmates sentenced to death. Barton says this campaign is aimed at deterring violent crime and sends a direct message to criminals entering Mississippi.

Iran | Youth Hanged for Murder Based on Qassameh Ceremony

Iran Human Rights (IHRNGO); 19 June 2026: Pejman Saedi, a Kurdish man convicted of murder based on a qassameh ceremony after being exonerated, was executed in Qorveh Prison. According to information obtained by Iran Human Rights, a man was hanged in Qorveh Prison on 12 January 2026. His identity has been established as Pejman Soltani, a 21-year-old Kurdish man from Dehgolan. He was arrested around three years ago and sentenced to qisas (retribution-in-kind) for murder.