Mixed Feelings As Japan Commemorate Hiroshima Bomb Explosion

Mixed Feelings As Japan Commemorate Hiroshima Bomb Explosion
Hiroshima, where the Bomb Explosion occurred
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Japan on Friday marked 76 years since the world’s first atomic bomb attack, with low-key ceremonies and dismay over a refusal by Olympics organisers to hold a minute’s silence for the victims.

Survivors, relatives, and a handful of foreign dignitaries attended this year’s main event in Hiroshima to pray for those killed or wounded in the bombing and call for world peace.

Virus concerns meant the general public were once again kept away, with the ceremony instead broadcast online.

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Participants, many dressed in black and wearing face masks, offered a silent prayer at 8:15 am (2315 GMT Thursday), the time the first nuclear weapon used in wartime was dropped over the city.

An estimated 140,000 people were killed in the bombing of Hiroshima, which was followed three days later by the atomic bombing of Nagasaki.

On Friday, Hiroshima’s mayor warned ‘experience has taught humanity that threatening others for self-defense benefits no one’.

He also called for leaders to visit Hiroshima and Nagasaki to ‘achieve a deeper understanding of the bombings’.

International Olympic Committee chief Thomas Bach made a trip to Hiroshima before the Games began, to mark the start of an Olympic truce that urges a halt to fighting worldwide to allow the safe passage of athletes.

But organisers stopped short of granting a request from bomb survivors and the city for athletes to join a minute of silent prayer on Friday morning.

In a letter, Bach said the Olympic closing ceremony would include time to honour victims of tragedy throughout history.

AFRICA DAILY NEWS, NEW YORK

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