Myojo 56 building fire
Myojo 56 building fire | |
---|---|
Native name | 明星56ビル火災 |
Location | Kabukicho section of Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan |
Date | 1 September 2001 ≈ 1:00 a.m. (JST (UTC+09:00)) |
Target | Unknown |
Attack type | Suspected arson, mass murder |
Deaths | 44 |
Injured | 3 |
Perpetrators | Unknown |
Motive | Unknown |
35°41′41″N 139°42′05″E / 35.69472°N 139.70139°E The Myojo 56 building fire (明星56ビル火災, Myōjō Gojū-Roku Biru Kasai) was a structural fire that began at about 01:00 local time on September 1, 2001 in the Myojo 56 building, located in the Kabukichō section of Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan.
The fire, the fifth-deadliest in post-war Japanese history,[1] burned for five hours before being extinguished and resulted in the death of 44 people and injuries to another three. It is suspected that the fire resulted from arson, but no suspect was ever arrested. In the aftermath of the incident, media coverage (which declined after the September 11 attacks that occurred 10 days later) focused on the arrest and conviction of the property owners for criminal negligence and on the building's putative ties to organized crime.
Fire
[edit]The fire burned on the third floor of the building. When the fire broke out, 19 people were on the third floor and 28 on the fourth floor.[2] Three employees jumped out of the building from the third floor and survived, suffering injuries. Witnesses who saw one of the employees called an ambulance.
Emergency responders arriving to treat the jumpers learned of the building fire and evacuation efforts commenced. Firefighters removed the bodies of 44 people (32 men and 12 women) from inside the building, and rescued those who managed to flee to the roof.[3][4]
Victims
[edit]Female
[edit]- Sayuri Nakamura, 22
- sisters Aiko and Ayako Ueda, 25 and 28
- Kiyoko Shimizu, 29
- Miyuki Ichikawa, 19
- Misae Tsakamoto, 24
- Megumi Ieta, 18
- Rena Yumimoto, 26
- Suki Makao, 31
- Chieko Watarase, 21
- Rie Fukushima, 35
- Suzuka Isogai, 38
Male
[edit]- Taichi Matsuda, 53
- Aoi Yoshioka, 28
- Shion Miyamoto, 41
- Kyo Fujimoto, 37
- Tomomi Sugimoto, 27
- Katsumi Itou
- Isamu Nozawa
- Daisuke Fujisawa
- Rokuro Matsuda
- Hanzō Shinoda
- Jiro Kusumoto
- Nao Himura
- Ryōsuke Nakajima
- Yū Ishikawa
- Yuki Ishikawa
- Hanzō Satō
- Shigeru Urano
- Ichirou Yuuki
- Hajime Miyajima
- Hifumi Miyagawa
- Kyo Matsumoto
- Tadashi Miyashita
- Rokurou Hoshino
- Kazuhiko Kumamoto
- Hanzou Kawaguchi
- Nobuharu Kiyoko
- Toshikazu Matsubara
- 5 more unnamed victims
Aftermath
[edit]Police officials remarked that the lethality of the fire was exacerbated by numerous violations of the fire code, including blocked fire doors and stairwells. The main cause of death among the fire's victims was found to be carbon monoxide poisoning.[4] An investigation conducted by the Metropolitan Police Department concluded that if the building's automated fire doors had not been prevented from closing, deadly gases would not have reached the building's occupied rooms for at least 20 minutes.[1]
One injured man, seen near the burning building, later disappeared.[5] The building was demolished in May 2006,[6] and replaced with a one-story restaurant.
Criminal allegations
[edit]Six individuals were arrested in conjunction with the blaze, on charges of professional negligence resulting in death. Those charged included two executives of the Myojo Kosan Group, which owned the building, and the commercial tenants of the structure, which housed a video mahjong parlor and a hostess bar.[1] On July 2, 2008, five of the defendants were convicted of negligence in the Tokyo District Court. The sixth defendant was acquitted.[7]
By July 3, 2008, Tokyo police had concluded that the fire resulted from arson, but had not made any corresponding arrest.[7]
Japan Today, an English-language online news outlet, quoted Tokyo police as stating that the mahjong parlor located in the building was "an illegal gambling den" with daily revenues of about eight million yen. Japan Today's report speculates that the Chinese mafia and yakuza could have been linked to the incident, as illegal gambling operations are regularly forced to pay "protection money" to organized crime syndicates. However, there is no material or eyewitness evidence of organized crime involvement in the fire.[8]
See also
[edit]- List of major crimes in Japan
- List of massacres in Japan
- Sennichi Department Store Building fire
- 2019 Kyoto Animation arson attack
- 2021 Osaka building fire
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Police arrest six over deadly Kabukicho fire". The Japan Times Online. 2003-02-19. Retrieved 2008-05-23.
- ^ 新宿ビル火災の教訓 (in Japanese). Disaster Prevention System Institute. Retrieved 2008-07-17.
- ^ "Tokyo blast kills 44". BBC News. 2001-09-01. Retrieved 2008-05-23.
- ^ a b "Arson likely cause of Kabukicho blaze". The Japan Times. 2002-12-13. Retrieved 2008-02-05.
- ^ 歌舞伎町火災、ナゾの血まみれ足跡 (in Japanese). zakzak. 2001-09-09. Archived from the original on 2001-09-09. Retrieved 2008-07-17. Internet Archive copy.
- ^ 日本のニュースを英語で読むならジャパンタイムズウィークリー
- ^ a b "Five avoid prison for '01 inferno fatal to 44". The Japan Times Online. 2008-07-03. Retrieved 2008-07-16.
- ^ "Chinese mafia muscling in on Kabuki-cho". Japan Today. 2001-09-17. Retrieved 2008-07-21.[permanent dead link ]
External links
[edit]- Deadly Explosion, Fire In Tokyo CBS, September 1, 2001
- Fire, Explosion Kills 44 in Tokyo Nightclub CNN, September 1, 2001
- At least 44 die in Tokyo explosion The Guardian, September 1, 2001
- Police arrest six over deadly Kabukicho fire The Japan Times, February 19, 2003
- Victims' families sue over Kabukicho fire deaths in 2001 The Japan Times, February 23, 2003
- Kabukicho fire deathtrap to be razed The Japan Times Weekly, May 13, 2006
- (in Japanese) Kabukicho fire Disaster Prevention System Institute
- 2001 in Tokyo
- 2001 murders in Japan
- 2001 fires in Asia
- 2001 disasters in Japan
- Arson in Japan
- Building and structure fires in Japan
- Arson in 2001
- Murder in Tokyo
- Deaths from carbon monoxide poisoning
- Disasters in Tokyo
- Mass murder in 2001
- 21st-century mass murder in Japan
- September 2001 crimes
- Unsolved murders in Japan
- Unsolved mass murders
- Commercial building fires
- Shinjuku
- September 2001 events in Japan