- Joined
- Aug 28, 2011
- Messages
- 3,990
- Points
- 63

https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/e...n-chest-loaded-handgun-stolen-while-on-patrol
Japanese police officer's loaded handgun stolen after he was stabbed in chest on patrol

Published
6 hours ago
Facebook Twitter Email
TOKYO (REUTERS) - A Japanese police officer was stabbed several times in the chest with a kitchen knife and had his loaded handgun stolen while on patrol on Sunday (June 16) morning in the western city of Suita, in a rare case of violent crime in Japan, public broadcaster NHK reported.
The attack, which police believe may have been pre-meditated, sparked a manhunt with police using loudspeakers at a railway station to warn people to be on alert.
The stabbing comes two weeks before Japan hosts a leaders' summit of the Group of 20 major economies in the neighbouring city of Osaka. It also follows an incident last month in which a knife-wielding middle-aged man killed a girl and an adult, injuring another 17 people near Tokyo.
Violent crime is relatively rare in Japan but occasional high-profile incidents have shocked the nation.
"It's scary that a handgun was stolen. I want this to be resolved quickly," a male neighbour said.
"A kindergarten's open day was cancelled due to this incident. My kids cannot go out. It's scary," another man said.
The 26-year-old police officer was found lying on the ground with a kitchen knife stabbed in his left chest around 5.30am local time on Sunday (4.30am Singapore time), reported NHK.
Related Story
Japan school stabbing: Other recent attacks
He was attacked in front of a police box, as he likely followed two officers after a telephone call reporting a theft.
Police suspect the attack may have been premeditated, as nothing else was stolen and a security camera showed a man, who appeared in his 30s, hanging around the police box about an hour before the stabbing, said NHK.
Unlock more articles at just $0.99/month
Subscribe to read all the stories you want today. Only $0.99/month for the first 6 months*.
Subscribe Now
Topics: