India-Japan joint military exercise ‘Dharma Guardian’ kicks off in Japan
The 6th edition of the India-Japan joint military exercise, Dharma Guardian, commenced at the East Fuji Training Area in Japan.
According to a government survey in Japan, over 80 per cent of Japanese people support the death penalty, stating that the existence of the system is “unavoidable,” local media reported on Sunday.
Japan flag Representation (Photo:X)
According to a government survey in Japan, over 80 per cent of Japanese people support the death penalty, stating that the existence of the system is “unavoidable,” local media reported on Sunday.
This survey is conducted every five years, and for the fifth consecutive term, the support for capital punishment exceeded 80 per cent in a government poll, reports the leading news portal, Kyodo News.
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In the most recent survey, it was shown that the approval for capital punishment increased by 2.3 points, reaching 83.1 per cent in comparison to the earlier survey conducted in 2019. At the same time, the percentage of individuals supporting abolition saw a more significant increase of 7.5 points, climbing to 16.5 per cent.
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The main reason for the support of the death penalty given by 66.2 per cent was concern for the feelings of victims of capital crimes and their families.
Meanwhile, a total of 55.5 per cent said violent crimes should be paid for with lives, while 53.4 per cent, raising concern, stated that the abolition of capital punishment would lead to a rise in atrocious crimes.
On the other hand, the section of people favouring the abolition of the death penalty, amongst them 71 per cent, gave the reason that mistaken convictions become irreversible.
Meanwhile, many said that the death penalty should be abolished if life imprisonment without parole is introduced, while others favouring the death penalty said it should remain in place.
The survey was conducted between October and December after an 88-year-old man, Iwao Hakamada, was acquitted in a retrial in 2024 over a 1966 quadruple murder case after spending more than four decades on death row, Kyodo News reported.
According to the Japanese Ministry of Justice, 77 people have been executed in Japan since 2007. There have been no executions in Japan since July 2022.
Japan and the United States are the only G7 countries that still use capital punishment. In Japan, capital punishment has strong public support, and scrapping it is rarely discussed.
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