The suspect in the attack on the Japanese Prime Minister was angry at not getting the opportunity to contest the election
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Local media reports and social media posts by the suspected attacker suggest the youth wanted to become a politician and believed he had been unfairly denied participation in the country’s parliamentary elections. Ryuji Kimura, a 24-year-old man, was captured following Saturday’s attack.
The 24-year-old unemployed youth accused of attacking Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida with a pipe bomb was angry at not being given the opportunity to contest elections. Local media reports and social media posts by the suspected attacker suggest the youth wanted to become a politician and believed he had been unfairly denied participation in the country’s parliamentary elections. Ryuji Kimura, a 24-year-old man, was captured following Saturday’s attack. The attack happened in the city of Wakayama when Kishida was about to address a rally in support of his Liberal Democratic Party candidate.
The explosive used for the attack is believed to have been a pipe bomb. The explosive fell near Kishida but he narrowly escaped. According to media reports, in June last year, Kimura filed a lawsuit with the Kobe District Court, claiming that he should be allowed to participate in the July 2022 upper house election. It is noteworthy that a candidate must be 30 years or more to contest the election to the Upper House. Kimura was then 23 years old.
Disclaimer:IndiaTheNews has not edited this news. This news has been published from PTI-language feed.
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