New York, September 17, 2003The Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ) is gravely concerned by the recent murder of Japanese freelance
journalist Satoru Someya and is conducting an investigation to determine
if he was killed for his work.
On September 12, police found Someya's body near a pier in Tokyo Bay.
The exact time of his death is not known, although an autopsy determined
that Someya had been dead for one to two weeks, according to Japanese
press reports.
Someya's body was wrapped in a weighted chain, his hands were tied with
rope, and he had eight stab wounds in his back and two gashes in his head,
according to police reports. Someya had been missing since September 5,
when he last spoke by phone with a magazine editor.
Someya, 38, reported for various magazines about organized crime in Tokyo
under the pen name Kuragaki Kashiwabara. In July, he published a book
titled Kabukicho Underground about Chinese criminal groups operating
in Kabukicho, Tokyo's notorious red light district.
The motive for Someya's murder is unclear. In the postscript to Kabukicho
Underground, the journalist wrote that he might be in danger because
of his investigations, according to press reports. However, police have
also said that Someya may have been in financial trouble, and that he
owed money to several acquaintances. Tokyo police are currently investigating
the murder.
Violent attacks against journalists in Japan are very rare. On May 3,
1987, an unidentified gunman shot and killed Asahi Shimbun reporter
Tomohiro Kojiri. No one was ever convicted of the murder, and the statute
of limitations on the case expired in May 2002.

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