Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Akiyo Asaki

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation
  
Tokyo councilwoman


Name
  
Akiyo Asaki

Akiyo Asaki wwwasyurausbigdataup1source1129jpg

Died
  
1995, Higashimurayama, Tokyo, Japan

Akiyo Asaki (朝木明代, 1944–1995) was a Tokyo councilwoman who died under mysterious circumstances.

Akiyo had become notable in Tokyo for making comments critical of Soka Gakkai.

In July 1995, she was accused of stealing a T-shirt from a clothing store. Asaki was never actually convicted of shoplifting, but Soka Gakkai claims that she was guilty, explaining, "In recent years, shoplifting by housewives has become a social issue." She offered a restaurant receipt as an alibi, but police discovered that it was forged. Several newsweeklies reported that the clothing store proprietor was a member of Soka Gakkai who could have invented the shoplifting charge, and were all sued for defamation. Two months later, Akiyo fell to her death from a sixth-story apartment building next to Higashi-Murayama Station. Police ruled the death a suicide. She was 51.

Conspiracy theory and lawsuits

On September 23, 1995, Akiyo's widower and surviving daughter, and her coworker in the Tokyo city council, all made statements to the press to the effect that they believed Soka Gakkai was involved in Akiyo's death. Their statements were reported by Time and several Japanese newsweeklies. Soka Gakkai's president compared the bereaved family to Aum Shinrikyo, a religious cult famous for dropping poison gas into the Tokyo subway system. The Gakkai sued Akiyo's family and the newsweeklies that reported their allegations, and in 2001 courts awarded the Gakkai 2 million yen. In 2008 and 2009, Akiyo's coworker Hozumi Yano won two defamation suits brought by Soka Gakkai for expressing his opinion that she was murdered. The Gakkai continues to claim that it has "prevailed in every defamation case in which Asaki's death was at issue".

The case has been taken up by Zaitokukai and other right-wing groups.

References

Akiyo Asaki Wikipedia