SAGAMIHARA: A knifewielding man broke into a facility for the disabled in a small town near Tokyo early on Tuesday and killed 19 patients as they slept, authorities said, Japan’s worst mass killing in decades. At least 25 other residents were wounded in the attack at the Tsukui Yamayuri-En facility in Sagamihara town, about 40 km southwest of Tokyo. “This is a very heartwrenching and shocking incident in which many innocent people became victims,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told. The suspect was a 26- year-old former employee of the facility who gave himself up to police. The man, Satoshi Uematsu, said in letters he wrote in February that he could “obliterate 470 disabled people”, Kyodo news agency reported. He said he would kill 260 severely disabled people at two areas in the facility during a night shift, and would not hurt employees. “My goal is a world in which the severely disabled can be euthanized, with their guardians’ consent, if they are unable to live at home and be active in society,” Uematsu wrote in the two letters given to the speaker of the lower house of parliament, Kyodo reported. Uematsu was committed to hospital after he expressed a “willingness to kill severely disabled people”, an official in Sagamihara told. He was freed on March 2 after a doctor deemed he had improved, the official said. Uematsu lived near the facility, and a neighbour described him as a polite, young man who always greeted him with a smile. “It would be easier to understand if there had been a warning but there were no signs,” said Akihiro Hasegawa, 73. (Agencies)