Hiroshima after the dropping of the atom bomb in August 1945
The bomb killed 160,000 people and left Hiroshima in ruins
Japan marked the 69th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima on
Wednesday Aug 06,2014, as Mayor Kazumi Matsui called on U.S. President Barack Obama
and other world leaders to visit the city to see the scars of the atomic
bombing first hand.
In his "peace declaration" speech, Matsui invited world leaders to his once-devastated hometown, referring to a proposal made at a ministerial meeting in April of the Non-Proliferation and Disarmament Initiative in Hiroshima, urging them to visit Hiroshima and Nagasaki
About 45,000 people stood for a minute of silence at the ceremony in
Hiroshima's peace park near the epicenter of the 1945 attack that killed
up to 140,000 people. A second bombing, over Nagasaki three days later,
killed another 70,000, prompting Japan's surrender in World War II.
The number of surviving victims, known as "hibakusha," was just more
than 190,000 this year. Their average age is 79, and many of the
attendants at the ceremony were their younger relatives and descendants.
Hiroshima officials said 5,507 survivors died over the past year.
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