Get you up to speed: Mystery substance sprayed by man near Tokyo shopping centre puts 20 in hospital | News World
A man sprayed an unknown substance at the Ginza Six shopping complex in Tokyo, resulting in 20 people falling ill. Emergency responders, including those in hazmat suits, are on the scene as police investigate the incident.
Tokyo police have cordoned off the area around the Ginza Six shopping complex as they investigate the incident, with emergency responders donning hazmat suits at the scene. The specific nature of the substance sprayed remains unidentified, and no timeline for the reopening of the shopping centre has been provided.
Tokyo police have launched an investigation into the incident at the Ginza Six shopping complex, where an unknown substance was sprayed, resulting in 20 people falling ill. Emergency responders are investigating the scene while access to the area remains restricted, and further measures may be implemented as authorities assess the situation.
What remains unclear — Authorities have not identified the substance that caused the illnesses.
Twenty people hospitalised after unknown substance sprayed in Tokyo shopping centre
A busy shopping centre in Tokyo fell into chaos after a man sprayed an unknown substance, causing 20 people to fall ill.
Footage from Japan’s Nippon TV showed dozens of emergency responders at the scene.
One responder was filmed in a hazmat suit wiping what appeared to be a stain on a wall at the Ginza Six shopping complex.
A man was spotted spraying an ‘unknown substance’ around a bank ATM located on the first floor of the upscale shopping mall, Tokyo police said.
Roads around the mall, in Tokyo’s shopping district, were blocked off with fire trucks lined up in the streets.

A police cordon is currently in place as officers investigate (Picture: AP)
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One reporter saw two people on stretchers being placed into an ambulance while hazmat suit-wearing responders went inside the shopping centre.
One 70-year-old woman who was at the mall told AFP that as she walked near the ATM where the spray was deployed, her throat started ‘stinging’.
She added: ‘By the time I arrived, the commotion had already started, and I thought there might have been a small fire or something.
‘Once I went into the ATM corner, my throat felt scratchy, almost numb.’
Police are currently investigating the incident.

The noxious substance was sprayed by an ATM (Picture: AP)
In 2024, four people were injured after being sprayed with an ‘unknown substance’ at the University of Greenwich.
Police rushed to the university campus shortly following reports that a man had been ‘attacked’.
The man was treated for head injuries before being rushed to the hospital.
The substance was later found to be non-toxic, but students were nonetheless on edge after the incident.
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