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- Subject: Cult "mind-control" and U.S. plots
- Date: 22 Apr 1995 16:39:19 -0400
- Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
- Lines: 78
- Sender: root@newsbf02.news.aol.com
-
- Subject: Cult "mind control" and U.S. plots...
- (Al Bielek...phone Japan.)
- Reuter news wire: 3/7/95
-
- By Eugene Moosa
-
- TOKYO, April 7 (Reuter) - Not everyone might believe in a guru
- who says he time-travelled to the year 2006, but his followers
- in Japan pay $116,000 for "telepathy head gear" just to share
- visions he says he has experienced.
-
- The estimated 10,000 members of Japan's Aum Shinri Kyo (Supreme
- Truth Sect) say they even drink tea made from locks of hair of
- guru Shoko Asahara to enhance such abilities.
-
- The cult is now the target of daily police raids following the
- March 20 nerve gas attack on Tokyo's subway which killed 11
- people and injured thousands. The cult denies any connection to
- the attacks.
-
- Despite the raids, which have turned up hundreds of tonnes of
- chemicals, laboratories and secret plants, no formal charges
- have been made against the sect. Nor have there been any
- arrests directly linked to the attack.
-
- But what the raids have revealed is that the cult was obsessed
- with things more dangerous than time-travelling.
-
- Investigators rummaging through the labyrinthine building of the
- sect's complex at Kamiku Isshiki, at the foot of Mt Fuji west of
- Tokyo, were silent on exact details of what they found.
-
- But most agreed on one thing. "This is no police matter. This
- is a national security issue," as one put it.
-
- Day after day, the Japanese public have been fed hours of
- television footage and newspaper coverage of the details of the
- bizarre world of the Aum sect.
-
- Some aspects, like its pyramid structure resembling a national
- government, was straight out of pulp fiction. Its "defence
- ministry" guarded the premises and kept an eye on would-be
- escapees. Its "science ministry" ran chemical plants.
-
- Other aspects bordered on the incredible. It repeatedly accused
- the U.S.military of spraying nerve gas on the cult complex from
- airplanes. It said cellular phones were actually devices used
- in a government plot to control people's minds.
-
- Religious commentators said Asahara attracted his following from
- Japan's youth by appealing to their interest in the supernatural
- and the occult.
-
- His key prediction is that the world as we know it would end in
- 1997 in an "Armageddon" of nerve gas and biological wars.
-
- In 1992, he predicted a nuclear war would break out and forced
- his followers to move to Okinawa. Nothing happened.
-
- In last December's issue of the sect's monthly magazine entitled
- "Great Prophecy: the Shuddering End of the Century," Asahara
- said he travelled to the world in the year 2006 and talked to
- residents who said World War Three was over.
-
- "I asked the people around me what year it was," Asahara wrote
- in the magazine. "They said it was the year 2006. Mankind had
- already experienced World War Three."
-
- In a strange contrast to such far-fetched claims, the sect has
- displayed an extremely realistic attitude over money.
-
- It demands that a devoted follower wishing to live in its
- ascetic community give every penny he or she has to the sect,
- including house, land and life savings. The sect wants
- everything, and that includes stamps in desk drawers and
- telephone cards.
-
- REUTER
-
-