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Listing of 76-years-on commemorations of the U.S. atomic bombings of Hiroshima (August 6) and Nagasaki (August 9), Japan
Please see our Nuclear Weapons website section, for a listing of commemorations. If you can't find one near you to plug into, consider organizing a local one yourself with friends, family, neighbors, co-workers, and kindred spirits.
Note that due to the ongoing and even worsening pandemic, there are a number of virtual commemorations available to attend remotely.
We will continue to update this listing of events as we learn of more.
Japan should lead nuclear ban: editorial
An editorial in the Asahi Shimbun on the day of the Hiroshima atomic bombing commemoration, calls on Japan to lead global efforts to ban nuclear weapons. Japan has neither signed nor ratified the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. But the powerful opinion from one of Japan's leading daily newspapers opens:
"The world is at a crossroads for choosing between two scenarios: fear of nuclear war ending in a catastrophe or a safer future of coexistence.
"Confrontations among states are heating up in Europe, Asia and the Middle East, the most striking example being the U.S.-China rivalry over hegemony. The situation is prompting a rise in anxiety about a possible nuclear war.
"At the same time, a trend is gaining momentum for seeking a world without nuclear weapons, above and beyond the framework of nations, in finding value in cooperation precisely at a time like this.
"Which path we should be choosing appears evident when we give thought to the ravages of the atomic bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima 76 years ago today.
"Humankind should not be allowed to commit the same fault again. And Japan should be leading the pledge and action for fleshing out that vow." Read the full editorial.
RECOGNITION AT LAST: Hiroshima victims win court case
A group of hitherto unrecognized citizens of Hiroshima, who were contaminated by the radioactive and toxic “black rain” that fell after the August 6, 1945 atomic bombing of that city, won an important day in court last month. The 84 plaintiffs, who were living outside the official contamination zone when the bomb was dropped, will now receive the same health care and compensation as others, known as “Hibakusha”, according to the decision made by the Hiroshima high court. Importantly, the court acknowledged that people’s health was harmed not only by external exposures but by internal exposure to radiation through the ingestion of contaminated water and food. The ruling comes just in time as many Hibakusha have already passed away.