- 2021-08-06 04:46:53
- LAST MODIFIED: 2024-11-24 05:43:39
Hiroshima marks 76th anniversary of US atomic bombing
Photo: NHK Japan
International Desk:
Dhaka, Aug-06,
Hiroshima on Friday marked the 76th
anniversary of the world’s first atomic bombing, as the mayor of the Japanese
city urged global leaders to unite to eliminate nuclear weapons, just as they
are united against the coronavirus.
Mayor Kazumi Matsui
urged world leaders to commit to nuclear disarmament as seriously as they
tackle the pandemic that the international community recognizes as “threat to
humanity.”
“Nuclear weapons, developed to win wars, are a threat of total annihilation that we can certainly end, if all nations work together,” Matsui said. “No sustainable society is possible with these weapons continually poised for indiscriminate slaughter.”
The United States
dropped the world’s first atomic bomb on Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945, destroying
the city and killing 140,000 people. It dropped a second bomb three days later
on Nagasaki, killing another 70,000. Japan surrendered Aug. 15, ending World
War II and its nearly half-century of aggression in Asia.
But countries
stockpiled nuclear weapons in the Cold War and a standoff continues to this
day.
The global Treaty on
the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons took effect in January after years of civil
effort joined by the atomic bombing survivors, or hibakusha. But while more
than 50 countries have ratified it, the treaty notably lacks the U.S. and other
nuclear powers as well as Japan, which has relied on the U.S. nuclear umbrella
for its defense since the war’s end.
Matsui renewed his
demand that his own government “immediately” sign and ratify the treaty and
join the discussion, to live up to the long-cherished wish of atomic bombing
survivors. He also demanded Japan provide productive mediation between nuclear
and non-nuclear weapons states.
Prime Minister
Yoshihide Suga, who attended the ceremony in Hiroshima, did not mention the
treaty and instead stressed the need for a more “realistic” approach to bridge
the nuclear and non-nuclear weapons states and by strengthening the NPT.
“There are differences
in the positions of each country over how to proceed with nuclear disarmament,”
he said. “It is necessary to persistently proceed with realistic efforts while
bridging between the countries of various positions.”
Many survivors of the
bombings have lasting injuries and illnesses linked to the bombs and radiation
exposure and faced discrimination in Japanese society.
The government began to
medically support certified survivors in 1968 after more than 20 years of
effort by the survivors.
Suga announced last
month the medical benefits would be extended to 84 Hiroshima survivors who had
been denied aid because they were outside a government-set boundary. The
victims were exposed to radioactive “black rain” that fell in the city after
the bombing and fought a long legal battle for their health problems to be
recognized.
Matsui urged Suga’s
government to further widen support and have generous assistance quickly reach
all those still suffering physical and emotional effects of radiation,
including the black rain survivors who were not part of the lawsuit.
Thursday’s ceremony at
the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park was significantly scaled down because of the
coronavirus pandemic and was also eclipsed by the Olympics being held in Tokyo,
where even national NHK television quickly switched to the games after the main
speeches.
End/Dct/Int/Sma/