Train staff held a moment of silence at the Kasumigaseki subway station at 8 am, roughly the hour when the Nazi-developed sarin gas was released into packed commuter trains during the morning rush hour.
In all, 13 people were killed and more than 6,000 injured, many of them severely, when the Aum Supreme Truth doomsday cult attacked stations and trains simultaneously.
Japan marks 15th anniversary of subway gas attacks
The Kasumigaseki district of Tokyo is the centre of the Japanese government.
Shizue Takahashi, whose husband was one of the two victims at Kasumigaseki station, urged cult followers to compensate the injured and bereaved.
"That the government offered a helping hand to victims doesn't mean the cult believers are exempt from their responsibility for compensation," she said.
Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama and his transport minister Seiji Maehara also paid tribute to victims.
"I pledged in front of the victims' souls that I'll do my best to ensure transport safety, including taking anti-terror measures," Maehara told reporters.
The cult was founded by Shoko Asahara, a bearded, half-blind former acupuncturist who preached of a coming apocalypse.
Asahara, 55, and nine other cult members are currently awaiting execution on death row, while three others remain at large.
After the subway attack, the Aum cult renamed itself Aleph -- after the first letter in the Hebrew alphabet -- and deposed Asahara. But authorities say hardcore followers still revere him and are actively recruiting younger generations who may not know about or remember the Aum crimes.
The group now has about 1,500 members in Japan, a third of whom live in compounds, and about 200 followers in Russia.
The cult was never outlawed in Japan, thanks to the country's constitutional guarantee of freedom of religion, although it was banned from teaching Asahara's violent dogma and remains under close surveillance.
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