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A knife-wielding man has attacked a group of schoolchildren waiting for a bus in a Japanese city near Tokyo.
At least 18 people were injured on a residential street in Kawasaki. Two of them, a 12-year-old girl and a 39-year-old man, are dead.A suspect, a man in his 50s, stabbed himself in the neck after his rampage and later died in hospital.

Violent crime is rare in Japan and the motive for the attack is unknown.The suspect was holding knives in both hands as he attacked the victims – sixteen of whom were schoolgirls.Local media outlets say the 39-year-old victim is believed to be the parent of one of the children.Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has condemned the attack, saying he felt “strong anger” against it.

“It is a very harrowing case. I offer my heartfelt condolences to the victims and hope the injured recover quickly,” Mr Abe said.An aerial view shows rescue workers and police officers operate at the site where sixteen people were injured in a suspected stabbing by a man, in Kawasaki, 28 May 2019.The incident took place just before 08:00 local time on Tuesday (23:00 GMT Monday) near a local park and a train station.
A number of students were waiting to board their bus to the nearby Caritas elementary school, a private Catholic school.The driver of the Caritas school bus told NHK that he saw a man approach the queue of students.

He began stabbing the children and then boarded the bus and stabbed children inside as well, according to the BBC’s Japan correspondent Rupert Wingfield-Hayes.News outlet Kyodo said the man was heard shouting “I’m going to kill you” during the attack.He was apprehended by police and later died in hospital from injuries.

Emergency services arrived at the scene and set up medical tents to treat the wounded.Locals have now begun placing flowers outside the site of the attack in a tribute to the victims.Japan’s Yasuko Atsukata, who witnessed the crime scene where a man stabbed 19 people, lays flowers.People have begun laying down flowers at the site of the mass stabbing.US President Donald Trump, who was in Japan on the last day of a state visit, also offered his “prayers and sympathy” to the victims.

How common are such incidents in Japan? They are extremely rare and Japan has one of the world’s lowest rates of violent crime.”Around my neighbourhood it’s very common to see children as young as four walking to school by themselves, that is normal practice in Japan because it’s so safe,” our correspondent says.

However, there has been in recent years a handful of attacks involving knives.In 2016, 19 people at a care centre for people with mental disabilities were stabbed by a former worker. He reportedly said he wanted those with disabilities to “disappear”.Eight students were killed in a 2001 attack after a man entered an elementary school in Osaka and began stabbing students.