Kyoto anime studio fire death toll rises to 34
Updated 11:49, 20-Jul-2019
CGTN
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Japanese police have identified the man suspected of causing the fatal fire at an animation studio in Kyoto as Shinji Aoba, a 41-year-old resident of Saitama City, near Tokyo.

The suspect is currently being treated in hospital for injuries he sustained in the fire. He will be interrogated by the police once he has recovered, local investigators said.

The motive behind may have been the theft of ideas, local media reported citing investigative sources on Friday. 

Reports say the suspected arsonist has a criminal record and lives on welfare and was treated for mental health issues.

The death toll of this tragedy rose to 34 on Friday night after another man died from injury. 

Investigation also showed that the Kyoto Animation company building did not have any sprinklers or indoor hydrants installed since they were not legally required by the fire code, a Kyoto Fire Department official said on Friday.

Investigators collect forensic evidence in Kyoto, July 19, 2019. /VCG photo

Investigators collect forensic evidence in Kyoto, July 19, 2019. /VCG photo

The horrific fire in the city of Kyoto gutted a building owned by the animation production company Kyoto Animation, a firm behind hit anime television series beloved by the genre's many fans.

The tragedy shocked Japan, where violent crime is extremely rare, and there were questions over how so many people could have died in a country where fire safety is taken very seriously, in part because many people still live in wooden homes. 

The investigation into the deadly fire was being complicated by the fact that the chief suspect, a 41-year-old man detained on Thursday, suffered serious burns in the blaze and was in the hospital. Some reports Friday said the man was unconscious, and that police had been unable to interrogate him so far.

Only sketchy details have emerged about the man who reportedly doused the building in a flammable substance and yelled "drop dead" before setting the liquid alight.

Local media said he did not appear to have any ties to Kyoto Animation.

He had reportedly also brought knives and a hammer to the building.

Some reports suggested the man believed the company had stolen his work, with the local Kyoto Shimbun newspaper reporting that he told police, "I set the fire because they stole novels."

Firefighters check the torched Kyoto Animation building in Kyoto, Japan, July 19, 2019. /Reuters Photo

Firefighters check the torched Kyoto Animation building in Kyoto, Japan, July 19, 2019. /Reuters Photo

Difficult to escape

On Thursday, Kyoto Animation president Hideaki Hatta said the firm had been threatened.

"There have been emails with death threats," he told reporters, without giving further information.

Details were still emerging about the victims in the blaze, which also injured 36 people, 10 of whom suffered serious injuries. 

Local police said 12 men and 20 women were among the dead, with one victim not yet identified. Most were believed to be employees of the company.

The blaze appeared to have engulfed the three-story building with shocking speed, and firefighters said many of the bodies they found were on a stairwell leading from the top floor to the roof, suggesting people were trying to escape the flames when they were overcome.

Keizo Harafuji, a former scientific investigation officer for the Tokyo police, told public broadcaster NHK that those trapped inside would have had little chance of escape.

"Flames spread incomparably faster with gasoline than in a normal fire," he said. "So I think the flames spread so fast that there was no time for the fire alarm and fire doors. It would have been difficult to escape after the fire began."

'Like hell'

Eyewitnesses described a raging inferno that left those outside unable to even approach to help people trying to escape.

"There was a person who jumped from the second floor. The person jumped, desperately trying to get away from the building but we couldn't rush to help because the fire was so strong," one local woman told an online affiliate of the Asahi Shimbun daily.

"People with severe burns were crying uncontrollably, just completely dazed," she added. "It was like I was looking at hell."

A man places flowers near the torched Kyoto Animation building to mourn the victims of the arson attack, in Kyoto, Japan, July 19, 2019./ Reuters Photo

A man places flowers near the torched Kyoto Animation building to mourn the victims of the arson attack, in Kyoto, Japan, July 19, 2019./ Reuters Photo

On Friday morning, a handful of people arrived at the site of the charred building to lay flowers. Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said he was praying for those affected.

"It's so dreadful that I'm lost for words," he wrote on his official Twitter account.

The blaze also prompted an outpouring of grief and support from the anime industry and fans of the sector, which is one of Japan's most well-known cultural products. 

An online fundraiser organized by an American anime licencing firm had raised over one million U.S. dollars by Friday morning. 

"Thank you to everyone who has shown their support for those impacted by the tragedy at KyoAni," the organizers Sentai Filmworks wrote, using a nickname for Kyoto Animation. "Together, we can bring light to this incredibly dark time."

(With input from agencies)