TOKYO Nuclear weapons present a “tangible and present crisis” after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the mayor of Nagasaki said on Tuesday, the 77th anniversary of the atomic bombing that destroyed the Japanese city.On August 9, 1945, Nagasaki was flattened in an inferno that killed 74,000 people, three days after the world’s first nuclear bomb attack in Hiroshima.The twin
Japan on Tuesday (Aug 9) marked the 77th anniversary of the atomic bomb attack on Nagasaki city, with addresses at the ceremony heavy with warnings of the growing possibility of nuclear proliferation and worsening clashes of conventional forces around the globe. "The use of nuclear weapons against Hiroshima and Nagasaki caused a humanitarian catastrophe unique in history," UN Secretary General.
NAGASAKI Atomic bomb survivors and bereaved families of victims offered prayers for peace on Tuesday during the 77th ceremony marking the U.S. atomic bombing of Nagasaki.
Mayor Tomihisa Taue called for the abolition of nuclear weapons amid mounting concerns over their potential use following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Tokyo, Aug 9 (EFE).- Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said Tuesday that the push for global nuclear disarmament “is struggling” and called on the tragedy experienced in the Japanese city of Nagasaki after the 1945 nuclear bomb attack to never be repeated. “The push for nuclear disarmament is struggling, so Japan will work decisively for …