Twitter
Advertisement

‘Land of online death pact’ fights web to save lives

A pandemic of internet suicide pacts that has rocked Japan since 2003 finally seems under control, thanks to authorities’ web policing

Latest News
article-main
FacebookTwitterWhatsappLinkedin
A pandemic of internet suicide pacts that has rocked Japan since 2003 finally seems under control, thanks to authorities’ web policing

TOKYO: In the country where the world’s first web suicide pact was forged, the battle to save lives is on.

Cyberpatrols, web whistle-blowers and a special online suicide-watch division have become the new front line in Japan’s battle with a scourge that came to light on its shores.

Despite Japan’s dismal record coping with its overall suicide rate, the fight with suicide chat rooms is - slowly - being won. Dozens of online forums where strangers met and pledged to end their lives together have been shut down.

Internet service providers have become sentinels of their unhappiest clients. Software has been designed that trawls Japanese cyberspace for keywords that suggest that a suicide is in the offing. The effect of all this has been startling.

A pandemic of web suicides that began in 2003 has ended almost as quickly as it began and the biggest forums have lost all their potency.

There was a time when victory seemed remote. In 2003 police in a deeply rural spot of northern Japan discovered a mini-van parked on the verge of a deserted mountain road. The windows were sealed with black duct tape and inside was a burnt-out charcoal stove.

Around it lay the bodies of three young people, the loneliest of souls who had found companionship in life only for the terrible act of death. Nobody realised it at the time, but it was the world’s first internet suicide pact among total strangers.

As the months wore on, chillingly similar reports began to appear in local papers in remote corners of the country. Each time police were confronted with the same baffling scene: the three or four victims were always young, usually in their late teens to mid-twenties, and had no apparent connection with one another before that first and fatal meeting.

Often they had travelled hundreds of miles by train to die together from carbon monoxide poisoning on the edges of quiet country roads.

The last text messages sent from their mobile phones were always to numbers that they had never dialled before and contained the matter-of-fact practicalities of group death: “I’ll bring the charcoal”, “We can split the rental of the minivan”.

By 2005 the internet suicide pacts had become an epidemic. Nearly 100 young people are thought to have died in such pacts that year. The government stepped in finally, vowing that even if Japan’s underlying suicide problem could not be solved, the web would not make it easier.
Find your daily dose of news & explainers in your WhatsApp. Stay updated, Stay informed-  Follow DNA on WhatsApp.
Advertisement

Live tv

Advertisement
Advertisement