Japanese Police have admitted
there were flaws in the security for former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who was
shot dead in the southern city of Nara yesterday. Nara Police Chief
Tomoaki Onizuka who made this known, said problems in the security are glaring.
A gunman opened fire on Mr. Abe at a political campaign event, a crime that has profoundly shocked Japan.
Police say the suspect, Tetsuya Yamagami, 41, held a grudge against a "specific organisation", which he believed Mr. Abe was part of. Yamagami has admitted shooting him with a homemade gun.
BBC/GBC
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