
Pressed to confess: Japan accused of 'hostage justice'
In Japan's harsh criminal justice system, critics say innocence is not presumed and coerced confessions help drive the 99 per cent conviction rate.
"From the moment I was arrested, I've been treated like I'm a prisoner," Amano, 36, told AFP through a glass screen at the Tokyo Detention Centre, where he is held alongside people convicted of violent crimes, including death-row inmates.
"I'm sure something is wrong with me mentally, but I can't tell for sure because I can't even get a decent medical diagnosis here," he said.
Campaigners argue that lengthy pre-trial detention is meted out too easily in Japan, especially if suspects remain silent or refuse to confess.
That often makes confessions a de-facto condition for their release, one that rights groups say exists in few other liberal democracies.
This alleged use of confinement as a way to elicit confessions – or "hostage justice" – is under renewed scrutiny after a group of victims recently filed a lawsuit challenging its constitutionality.
Lawyer Takashi Takano, who spearheads the suit, slammed the "completely inverted chronology."
In Japan, "if you contest your charges, your bail is denied and detention drags on. You get punished and robbed of everything first, sometimes before the trial even begins, followed finally by a verdict," he told AFP.
AFP obtained rare, court-issued approval to speak to Amano, who denies the charges against him.
Since his 2018 arrest, he has been locked up incommunicado, having "lost everything", including his job, partner and mental health.
In summer, what little coolness there is in the detention facility filters through a small food slot into Amano's sweltering cell.
Three tatami mats fill the floor space, and there is no air conditioning.
For most of the day, Amano is not allowed to lie down or lean against a wall, so he spends hours sitting on a mat.
The former restaurant owner says he has lost 30 kilogrammes (66 pounds) since his arrest.
He can only contact his lawyers and is denied access to anyone else, including family, barring rare exceptions.
This has left him estranged from the "daughter I doted on", now seven years old, and whom he last saw in 2019.
"I don't know if she still remembers me."
"Hostage justice" – a term popularised by ex-Nissan chief Carlos Ghosn's months-long, 2018-2019 detention – has been repeatedly decried by international rights bodies.
The latest lawsuit challenges judges' ability to "rubber-stamp" detentions, and to reject bail without demonstrating "probable cause" that evidence will be destroyed, according to lawyer Takano.
In Japan, pre-indictment detention can last up to 23 days, extendable by multiple rearrests.
Only after indictment does bail become possible, but as with Amano, the option is often dismissed if the accused denies the charges, campaigners say.
Judicial data from 2021 shows that those who confessed were released much more quickly than those who denied the charges.
"In Japan, refusing to confess or remaining silent is seen as high-risk behaviour of someone likely to destroy evidence," Kana Sasakura, a criminal law professor at Konan University, told AFP.
Furthermore, detainees are typically interrogated without attorneys – a stark contrast to most Group of Seven and East Asian democracies – which makes it harder to withstand the pressure of questioning.
This, coupled with gruelling confinement, attests to Japan's overall reliance on confessions, Sasakura noted.
"It's a structure where, by conducting interrogations behind closed doors and isolating the suspect from the outside world, extracting confessions is made easier," she said.
The justice ministry told AFP that "prolonged detention solely on the grounds of remaining silent or denying charges isn't occurring."
"We don't use physical detention to force confessions," it added, defending Japan's "fair" and "evidence-based" system.
But Tomoya Asanuma, another plaintiff in the suit, recalls almost cracking under the strain.
Last year, the 36-year-old transgender activist endured almost four months of detention for charges including assault that he was ultimately acquitted of in January.
"Detectives would tell me, 'confess already, and we don't have to interrogate you so many times,'" Asanuma told AFP of the frequent, hours-long questioning.
Life under constant surveillance, including when he bathed or relieved himself, was a source of extra humiliation as his body still retained biologically female characteristics.
"The thought repeatedly crossed my mind that if I falsely confessed, I can maybe escape all this," he said.
And therein lies the secret to Japan's astonishing 99-per cent conviction rate, lawyer Takano argues.
"After such endless interrogations, most people break and confess," leading to statements adopted by courts as evidence, he said.
A case in point is Iwao Hakamada, who was once the world's longest-serving death-row inmate. His convictions – quashed last year – relied partly on confessions made during what the Supreme Court ruled were "inhumane" interrogations.
"That's what undergirds the '99-per cent' conviction rate. But do you really trust such guilty verdicts?" Takano said.
In his cell with an exposed toilet, Amano languishes with little sense of the time or weather outside.
The light remains on after bedtime, but he is not allowed to cover his face with bedding. But still he will not confess.
"If I succumb now and choose an easy way out, I would disappoint people who still support me," he said.
"I won't betray their trust."
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