BSS
  27 Oct 2021, 15:00

Hiroshima nuclear bomb survivor and campaigner dies at 96

  TOKYO, Oct 27, 2021 (BSS/AFP) - Hiroshima A-bomb survivor Sunao Tsuboi, who

became a prominent campaigner for nuclear disarmament and met Barack Obama on
his historic visit to the city, has died aged 96, his advocacy group said
Wednesday.

  Tsuboi was on his way to engineering school in 1945 when the first nuclear
bomb attack was launched by the United States, turning the bustling
metropolis into an inferno.

  "I suffered burns all over my body," he told AFP in 2016. "Naked, I tried
to run away for about three hours on August 6 but finally could no longer
walk."

  Then aged 20, he picked up a small rock and wrote on the ground "Tsuboi
dies here", before losing consciousness and waking up several weeks later.

  He later developed cancer and other diseases but became a prominent
advocate for atomic bomb survivors and a lifelong campaigner for a nuclear-
free world.

  "I can tolerate hardships for the sake of human happiness. I may die
tomorrow but I'm optimistic. I will never give up. We want zero nuclear
weapons," he said.

  Tsuboi was among a handful of Hiroshima survivors who met then US president
Obama when he visited the city in 2016.

  He smiled broadly as he shook Obama's hand, with the two men conversing for
upwards of a minute. "I was able to convey my thoughts," a satisfied Tsuboi
said afterwards.

  Tsuboi "passed away on Saturday due to anaemia", an official from Nihon
Hidankyo -- a group that represents survivors of the atomic bombings of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, of which Tsuboi was a key leader -- told AFP.

  There are 127,755 survivors of both attacks still alive and their average
age is 84, according to the health ministry.

  Around 140,000 people died in the bombing of Hiroshima, a toll that
includes those who survived the explosion but died soon after from radiation
exposure.

  Three days later the US dropped a plutonium bomb on the port city of
Nagasaki, killing about 74,000 people and leading to the end of World War II.