BFF-05 Japan marks 73rd anniversary of atomic attack on Hiroshima

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Japan marks 73rd anniversary of atomic attack on Hiroshima

TOKYO, Aug 6, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – A bell tolled Monday in Hiroshima as Japan
marked 73 years since the world’s first atomic bombing, with the city’s mayor
warning that rising nationalism worldwide threatened peace.

The skies over Hiroshima’s Peace Memorial Park were clear, just as they
were on August 6, 1945, when an American B-29 bomber dropped its deadly
payload on the port city dotted with military installations, ultimately
killing 140,000 people.

Hiroshima Mayor Kazumi Matsui, standing at the park near ground zero for
the annual ceremony, made his annual call for a world without nuclear weapons
and warned of the threat of rising nationalism.

Without naming specific nations, he warned that “certain countries are
explicitly expressing self-centred nationalism and modernising their nuclear
arsenals.”

They were “rekindling tensions that had eased with the end of the Cold
War,” he added.

He urged the abolition of nuclear weapons, in a year when President Donald
Trump pledged to increase the US nuclear arsenal.

“If the human family forgets history or stops confronting it, we could
again commit a terrible error. That is precisely why we must continue talking
about Hiroshima,” Matsui said.

“Efforts to eliminate nuclear weapons must continue.”

His call however highlighted Japan’s contradictory relationship with
nuclear weapons.

Japanese officials routinely argue that they oppose atomic weapons, but
the nation’s defence is dependent on the US nuclear umbrella.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, whose government has chosen not to participate
in the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, said at the ceremony
that Japan’s responsibility was to bridge the gap between nuclear and non-
nuclear nations.

“In recent years, it has become evident that gaps exist among countries
about ways to proceed with nuclear arms reduction,” Abe told the ceremony,
without directly referring to the treaty.

“Our nation, while maintaining our (non-nuclear weapons) principles, will
patiently work to serve as a bridge between the two sides and lead efforts by
the international community” to reduce nuclear weapons, Abe said.

Japan suffered two nuclear attacks by the United States at the end of
World War II — first in Hiroshima and then in Nagasaki three days later.

The bombings claimed the lives of 140,000 people in Hiroshima and 74,000
people in Nagasaki.

Barack Obama became the first sitting US president to visit Hiroshima in
May 2016.

BSS/AFP/FI/ 0932 hrs