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Japan executes three death row inmates, a first under PM Kishida

TOKYO: Japan executed three convicts on Tuesday, marking the first time the

death penalty

was carried out under Prime Minister

Fumio Kishida

's government and the first execution in the country in nearly two years, the

Kyodo

news agency reported.

One of those put to death was a 65-year-old man convicted of

stabbing

and killing seven of his relatives in 2004, according to Kyodo.

Capital punishment is carried out by hanging in Japan and prisoners are notified of their execution only hours before it is carried out. That practice that has long been decried by human rights groups for the stress it puts on death-row prisoners, for whom any day could be their last.

Two death row inmates in November launched a law suit against the government, demanding a change to the practice and compensation for the impact of it.

The United States and Japan are the only industrialised democracies that still carry capital punishment and rights groups such as

Amnesty International

have demanded change for decades.

The last execution in Japan was on Dec. 26, 2019, Kyodo reported.

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