Jun 30, 2014
An unidentified man in a black suit tried to commit suicide by
setting himself on fire in front of hundreds of people on a bridge near
the south exit of JR Shinjuku Station in Tokyo on Sunday afternoon.
Police said the man, who appeared to be in his 60s, was seriously
injured but is expected to survive. He was being treated at a nearby
hospital, a police spokesman told The Japan Times later in the day.
Just after midday, the man climbed on top of the girders of a white
bridge used by pedestrians to cross busy Koshu Kaido Avenue and stayed
there for more than an hour, using a loud speaker to address a rapidly
growing crowd of onlookers on the bridge and the street below, witnesses
said.
Some people tweeted that the man was denouncing Prime Minister Shinzo
Abe’s drive to reinterpret the war-renouncing Constitution so Japan can
legally engage in collective self-defense.
Officials contacted at Shinjuku’s main police station said they could not confirm what the man said.
When police officers and firefighters tried to persuade the man to
come down, he poured a liquid, likely gasoline, over his body and set
himself on fire, a security guard who witnessed the incident told The
Japan Times.
“He was engulfed in flames. Firefighters immediately doused him with
water and the man fell” from the girders, said the guard, who only
identified himself by his family name of Yamashiro.
Online video of the incident shows the burning man standing as he
pours something over his head and back, and then crouching down. A
firefighter then climbs a ladder to pull him down, spreading bigger
flames.
After the fire was extinguished, the man was taken off the bridge and
down to the road, which links the station’s south entrance to a
shopping area on the other side. Several police officers then wrapped
him in a blue plastic sheet and carried him away, Yamashiro said.
Crowds of pedestrians near the station — one of the busiest areas in downtown Tokyo — gawked as the situation developed.
“Everybody who happened to be there stopped to watch what was
happening. The moment the man set himself on fire, the audience burst
into screams, and we were all left in total shock,” said Yuto Ishida,
19-year-old college student who witnessed the fire.
The man appeared to be carrying a big bottle, and Ishida said he first thought he was merely drunk.
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