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World

Abe killer's mother 'gave 100m yen to church'

Tetsuya Yamagami, accused of killing former Japanese premier Shinzo Abe, is taken to prosecutors in Nara, Japan on July 10. (Kyodo Photo via Reuters)

TOKYO: The mother of the man who fatally shot former Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe donated about 100 million yen (26.7 million baht) to the Unification Church, the man’s uncle said on Friday.

The assailant, 41-year-old Tetsuya Yamagami, has told investigators he believes Abe was linked to the church and that he resents the organisation because his mother’s donations to it ruined his family’s finances.

Yamagami shot Abe on July 8 when the former prime minister was delivering a stump speech on a street in the western city of Nara. Yamagami was arrested at the scene where police found a homemade gun, and he was sent to prosecutors on Sunday on suspicion of murder.

His mother’s contributions to the church included about 60 million yen from a life insurance payment over the death of Yamagami’s father, his uncle told reporters in Osaka Prefecture. He said the other 40 million yen to the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification, widely known as the Unification Church, came from her selling family real estate.

Yamagami’s mother continued donating smaller amounts even after going bankrupt in 2002, said the man’s 77-year-old uncle, who has continued to support her financially for many years. “I believe she was a very important follower of the church. She was under mind control,” he said.

The Unification Church, founded in South Korea in 1954 by Sun Myung Moon and known for its group weddings, has a controversial reputation in Japan, where it claims to have about 600,000 followers.

Yamagami’s mother joined the church around 1991 following his father’s suicide in 1984, according to his uncle.

The church has claimed it returned 50 million yen to her, while adding there were no records of the amounts of the donations she made to the organisation. But Yamagami’s uncle criticised the church’s response and accused it of attempting to evade responsibility.

His uncle said the family’s subsequent financial difficulties meant Yamagami had to abandon going to college due to lack of funds. “He was extremely smart, just like his father,” he said. “He was hardworking, too, and I only have good memories of him.”

After giving up on college Yamagami attended a cram school with the aim of becoming a firefighter, but failed the admission test due to nearsightedness, his uncle told reporters.

As a Maritime Self-Defense Force member in 2005, Yamagami attempted suicide because he wanted his brother and sister to benefit from a life insurance payment, his uncle said. Yamagami said at the time that he tried to take his own life because “my life and my family were ruined by the Unification Church”, according to his uncle.

He also said Yamagami’s mother is staying at his home and resting due to extreme fatigue. He said he was not sure if she is still in touch with the church and that she is cooperating with the authorities’ investigation.

Investigative sources said Yamagami told police he test-fired a homemade gun at a facility in Nara connected to the Unification Church at around 4am on July 7, a day before the fatal shooting.

Yamagami has told investigators that later that same day he went to Abe’s campaign stop in Okayama Prefecture with homemade weapons including the one eventually used to kill Abe. He appears to have been looking for a chance to shoot the former prime minister at the event.

The Unification Church has in the past been the subject of a series of complaints claiming it forced people to buy expensive pots and seals. It also encourages believers to donate 10% of their income, according to its Japanese website.

“(Former prime minister) Nobusuke Kishi invited the church (to Japan from South Korea). So I killed (his grandson) Abe,” Yamagami has said, according to investigative sources.

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