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Selling organs on the black market, forcing their wives and daughters to have sex with other gang members and clawing their rivals' eyes, the Yakuza are even more notorious than the US mafia
SHOKO Tendo still has the scars from being brutally raped and beaten by her father's gang mates in a shabby hotel room as a teenager.
Her dad Hiroyasu Tendo was a member of the world's deadliest gang - Japan's Yakuza - and forced her into sex slavery for five years before she escaped.
The 35,000-strong gang make the mafia look like kindergarten, and are known for committing mass murder, organ trading and ritual pinky finger amputations.
And while stats show the savage criminal gang may be dropping in numbers, just this week a gang member was shot in Tokyo's entertainment district in front of dozens of startled tourists.
Here Sun Online takes a closer look at their blood curdling activities, which include chopping off their members' fingers and forcing their own wives and daughters into prostitution despite promoting a veneer of respectability.

Women have such little status in parts of the Yakuza that wives and daughters will often be used as prostitutes by their own family members.
Shoko Tendo, the daughter of a Yakuza gangster boss who wrote a memoir about her experiences, said her father allowed her to be repeatedly raped by associates he was indebted to, leaving her "bloody and bruised" in downmarket hotel rooms.
As a result she became addicted to drugs, which the gangsters would constantly feed her.
Shoko was also violently beaten by other gang members, being left with injuries such as broken bones and perforated eardrums.
"Every time I met a new man I thought he would be different," she told The Independent. "When they cried and said sorry I forgave them. I never learnt."
Now in her early 50s, she has had plastic surgery to recover from her injuries, but still has both physical and emotional life-long scars.
The Yakuza are believed to run the Japanese sex trade, where they lure in women from around the world with promises of visas, only to take their passport and drive them into debt so they are forced to work in brothels - it's thought they are capitalising on Asia's growing status as a destination for sex tourism.
Surveys have found 50 per cent of Japanese men have paid for sex and 75 per cent of junior and high school girls have been solicited by middle-aged men.
And their network of brothels is not limited to Japan, but also Korea, Thailand and the Philippines where foreigners would fly specifically to for sex parties.
There has, to date, been just one female Yakuza leader, Fumiko Taoka, who briefly led her dead husband Kazuo Taoka's gang until a new male leader was chosen in 1984
As well as having heavily-tattooed bodies, the Yakuza can often be identified by their lack of a pinky finger.
This is because members - who are initiated into gangs with sword-fighting and meditation lessons - have them amputated as punishment if they step out of line, usually because they are unable to pay off gambling debts or fail to complete a task such as a killing or importing drugs.
The process known as yubitsume - which translates to 'finger shortening' - dates back to the eighteenth century when the pinky finger was key for helping to grip the Japanese Kendo sword.
Without it, warriors are weaker and more reliant on their leader.
Today the ritual involves the member chopping it off themselves before handing it over to their boss who keeps it as a trophy.
If gang members continue to offend their bosses, they either face more yubitsume, or expulsion.
The latter is the worst punishment, as those who are kicked out are unable to associate with gang members for the rest of their lives.
Former Yakuza members who have since returned to non-criminal society can struggle to find work due to their associations with the gang, so often wear specially-made prosthetic fingers - costing £1,500 - to disguise it.
The practice of finger shortening is thought to have died out in recent decades because it is an easy way for police to identify possible criminals.
Despite their violent ways, the gang has a 'white collar' image, which sees them have offices, registered members, business cards, press conferences and be praised for helping the 2011 earthquake and tsunami relief funds.
They sent trucks from the Tokyo and Kobe regions to deliver food, water, blankets and toiletries to evacuation centres in northeast Japan - getting there quicker than the Japanese authorities.
“Yakuza are dropouts from society,” said author Manabu Miyazaki, the son of a former Yakuza boss, told The Guardian recently. "They’ve suffered, and they’re just trying to help other people who are in trouble."
In Japan, tattoos are almost entirely associated with being a member of the Yakuza - the 35,000-strong organised crime syndicate which has shocked the world with its ruthless illegal business dealings in drugs and firearms, organ trading and sex trafficking.
Their most notorious leader Kazuo Taoka was nicknamed 'The Bear', as he had a penchant for clawing at his opponent's eyes.
He once survived being shot in the neck, and his attacker was found weeks later dead in woodland near Kobe.

The Yakuza are also known for their brazen assassinations - which happen as often in broad daylight as under the cover of darkness.
In 2015, a Yakuza boss, Tasuyuki Hishida, was found bludgeoned to death with his hands and feet bound with plastic cable ties. 
And in 2007, the Mayor of Nagasaki, Itcho Ito, was shot twice in the back by a gang member, Tesuya Shiroo, over his administration's refusal to choose Yakuza firms for lucrative construction contracts.
A 2012 study by Japan's National Police Agency found that one in five Japanese companies have admitted paying the Yakuza off to avoid their extortion demands - even though in 2011 it became a crime to do so.
Before that, in 1998, the particularly-violent Yakuza family, the Kudo-kai, who are based in Kitakyushu, gunned down a 70-year-old man who refused to give them favourable treatment for public works projects.
A spate of violence will often follow funerals of murdered members, which, interestingly, members of all groups will often attend.
At their height, the Yakuza had a massive 184,000 members.
Infighting between gangs is often bloody - one series of clashes left 25 dead and more than 70 injured in a matter of days in 1984, in a country which has an extraordinarily low murder rate.
The American Mafia only had an estimated 5,000 members at its peak - whereas the Yakuza's largest gang, the Yamaguchi-gumi in Kobe, alone recently listed 23,000 members

Among the many famous illegal Yakuza enterprises - which has in the past included helping former Japanese prime minister Kakuei Tanaka secure his leadership by paying off members of a rival party, is organ trading, including kidneys and livers.
In 2011, a doctor, Toshinobu Horiuchi was arrested after it was discovered he was collaborating with the Yakuza to fake an adoption in order to obtain organs.
He was suffering from kidney failure and needed a new one. He met the wife of a Yakuza in a bar who promised to source him a new one for £96,000.
They planned to help him adopt a 20-year-old male stranger - as organ donation is only available between family members in Japan - so the man could pass on his healthy kidney.
In recent decades the Yakuza have also helped Japanese kidney patients travel to Taiwan and Singapore to purchase organs without consent from executed prisoners.
The demand is exacerbated by the fact that Japanese culture doesn't believe in organ donation, and because Yakuza tattoos - so thick they block sweat from leaving the body - take a toxic toll on members' livers.
In 2008, there was outrage in the United States when Tadamasa Goto, founder of gang the Goto-gumi, struck a deal with the FBI where he would give them information on the Yakuza and donate money to UCLA Medical Centre in Los Angeles if they helped arrange liver transplants for him and three of his associates.
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