How Shinzo Abe's Assassination Brought the Moonies Back Into the Limelight
Briefly

How Shinzo Abe's Assassination Brought the Moonies Back Into the Limelight
"Shinzo Abe, the former Prime Minister of Japan, was speaking at a political rally near a train station in the city of Nara when the shots rang out. It was an unfamiliar sound; it's essentially illegal for Japanese civilians to own guns, and firearm-related deaths are very rare. The noise was so strange that only some of the rally-goers flinched."
"The man held a large oblong contraption. It consisted of two metal pipes, a wooden board wound in black electrical tape, a bundle of wires, and a plastic handle. It had the shape of a gun but looked homemade, like a high-school science project. The man was tackled and pinned to the ground by members of Abe's security detail. In the scuffle, he blurted out a question: "Did it hit him?""
"Three hundred miles east, in Tokyo, a journalist named Eito Suzuki saw the news break on TV: Abe, the longest-serving Prime Minister in Japanese history, was dead. Suzuki was at home, about to leave for a hotel staycation with his wife and son. Everything about the story was shocking-the fact of the gun, the lapse in security, the surreal death of one of the most powerful men in the country."
Shinzo Abe was shot while speaking at a political rally near a Nara train station, collapsing with blood seeping from his neck. The shooter used a homemade, oblong contraption made of metal pipes, tape, wires, and a plastic handle, and was tackled and pinned by Abe's security detail after asking, 'Did it hit him?' Firearm-related deaths are very rare in Japan, making the attack shocking. Journalist Eito Suzuki, who had spent decades investigating so-called antisocial religions, immediately suspected a possible cult connection and had previously focused on the Unification Church's influence in Japan.
Read at The New Yorker
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