Victims' messages prevented 3rd nuke attack
July 28 Kyodo - Hiroshima Mayor Tadatoshi Akiba said Wednesday
messages from victims of the 1945 atomic
bombing of the western Japanese city effectively
prevented a third nuclear attack.
Akiba, who became the new Hiroshima mayor
in February, told a luncheon meeting of the
Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan that
the voices of A-bomb survivors succeeded
in reaching key decision-makers, thus blocking
a third nuclear catastrophe from occurring.
He objected to the view that a nuclear war
has been prevented solely by the theory of
nuclear deterrence, represented by mutually
assured destruction between the two major
nuclear powers of the Untied States and Russia,
saying those in charge of nuclear policies
must have had ''respect'' for the survivors.
On top of stopping a third nuclear attack,
A-bomb victims achieved two other victories,
Akiba pointed out. They chose to continue
living as human beings in a situation of
''bottomless agony and hell on earth,'' and
have been advocates of a ''cooperative and
altruistic'' model for relations among nations,
he said.
However, the mayor regretted the fact that
the global situation surrounding nuclear
weapons does not reflect the victims' wishes
despite all their efforts. He said the use
of nuclear weapons is these days considered
not an ''absolute evil'' but a ''lesser evil,''
54 years after the atomic bombings of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki.
The mayor also said he will emphasize a ''bridge
between generations'' in the city's annual
peace declaration to be issued at the upcoming
anniversary of the A-bombing on Aug. 6. ''Hiroshima
is responsible for passing down the messages
of victims to future generations as well
as to other countries,'' he said.
Akiba, a former House of Representatives
member of the Social Democratic Party, criticized
the Japanese government's failure to clearly
express its antinuclear stance, stressing
that strong political will is needed to achieve
a nuclear-free world.
He countered criticism that Hiroshima only
emphasizes the damage suffered by A-bomb
victims without dwelling on what brought
about such attacks on Japan, saying the A-bomb
victims had no choice but to convey their
antinuclear experiences and tell the truth.
Akiba defended movements by A-bomb victims
emphasizing the tragedy of nuclear weapons,
and insisted that such victims should not
be blamed for failing to advance nuclear
disarmament, saying that nuclear powers still
clinging to weapons of mass destruction are
to blame. ==Kyodo