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Otoya Yamaguchi

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Native name
  
山口 二矢


Name
  
Otoya Yamaguchi

Otoya Yamaguchi murderpediaorgmaleYimagesyamaguchiotoyayama

Born
  
February 22, 1943 (
1943-02-22
)

Known for
  
Assassination of Inejiro Asanuma

Died
  
November 2, 1960, Tokyo, Japan

Similar People
  
Inejiro Asanuma, Yasushi Nagao, Masakatsu Morita

Otoya Yamaguchi (山口 二矢, Yamaguchi Otoya, February 22, 1943 – November 2, 1960) was a Japanese ultranationalist who assassinated Inejiro Asanuma, a politician and head of the Japan Socialist Party. Yamaguchi was a member of a right-wing Uyoku dantai group, and assassinated Asanuma by yoroidōshi on October 12, 1960, at Tokyo's Hibiya Hall during a political debate in advance of parliamentary elections.

Contents

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Death

Less than three weeks after the assassination, while being held in a juvenile detention facility, Yamaguchi mixed a small amount of toothpaste with water and wrote on his cell wall, "Seven lives for my country. Long live His Imperial Majesty, the Emperor!" Yamaguchi then knotted strips of his bedsheet into a makeshift rope and used it to hang himself from a light fixture. The phrase "seven lives for my country" was a reference to the last words of 14th-century samurai Kusunoki Masashige.

Legacy

Otoya Yamaguchi untitled Flickr Photo Sharing

A photograph taken by Yasushi Nagao immediately after Otoya withdrew his sword from Asanuma would later go on to win the 1961 Pulitzer Prize, and the 1960 World Press Photo award. Footage of the incident was also captured.

Otoya Yamaguchi Otoya Yamaguchi Wikiwand

Nobel Prize-winning author Kenzaburō Ōe based his 1961 novellas Seventeen and The Death of a Political Youth on Yamaguchi.


Otoya Yamaguchi Otoya Yamaguchi Photos Murderpedia the encyclopedia

References

Otoya Yamaguchi Wikipedia