Nagasaki Peace Declaration

At 11:02am, on the 9th August 1945, a single atomic bomb instantly
reduced Nagasaki to a ruin.

A vast amount of radiation passed through people’s bodies, and the
city was struck by heat rays and a blast that defy imagination. 74,000
of the city’s population of 240,000 people were killed. A further
75,000 individuals sustained injuries. It was said that vegetation
would not grow for at least 70 years. However, today, 70 years on,
this hill in Urakami, which was once a ruin, is now enveloped in
greenery. Nevertheless, those hibakusha, atomic bomb survivors, whose
bodies were eaten away by radiation, and who continue to suffer from
the aftereffects, can never forget that day.

The atomic bomb was born of war, and was used in war.
The conviction that nuclear weapons must not exist, and that we must
never go to war again, was deeply and powerfully engraved upon the
hearts of the hibakusha, who know firsthand the
fearsome destructive force of atomic bombs. The peaceful ideology of
the Constitution of Japan was born from these painful and harsh
experiences, and from reflection upon the war. Since the war, our
country has walked the path of a peaceful nation. For the sake of
Nagasaki, and for the sake of all of Japan, we must never change the
peaceful principle that we renounce war.

Most of our population is now made up of the post-war generation. The
memories of war are fast fading from our society. We must not forget
the atomic bomb experiences of those in Nagasaki and Hiroshima.
Neither should we forget the air raids which destroyed Tokyo and many
other cities, the Battle of Okinawa, nor the many people of Asia who
suffered because of this tragic war. Now, 70 years on, it is vital
that we continue to pass on those memories.

I ask that those of you who experienced the atomic bomb and the war in
Japan and across the globe speak of your experiences, and not allow
those memories to fade.

To the young generation, I ask that you do not push wartime
experiences aside saying that they are stories of the past. Understand
that the wartime generation tell you their stories because what they
speak of could, in the future, happen to you as well. Therefore,
please inherit their wish for peace. Please imagine what you would do
in such circumstances, and ask yourself “What can I do for the sake of
peace?” You, the young generation, have the power to transcend
national borders and create new relationships.

The greatest power to realize a world without war and without nuclear
weapons lies inside each and every one of us. Listen to stories of the
war, sign petitions for nuclear abolition, and visit atomic bomb
exhibitions. Together, these individual actions can create a much
larger power. In Nagasaki, the younger generation, which includes
second and third generation hibakusha, are inheriting the wish for
peace and are taking action. Our individual strengths are the greatest
power in realizing a world without war and without nuclear weapons.
The power of civil society is the power to move governments, and to
move the world.

In May of this year, the “Review Conference of the Parties to the
Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT)” ended
without the adoption of a Final Document. However, the efforts of
those countries which are attempting to ban nuclear weapons made
possible a draft Final Document which incorporated steps towards
nuclear disarmament.

I ask the following of the heads of the NPT member states.
Please do not let this Review Conference have been a waste. Please
continue your efforts to debate a legal framework, such as a “Nuclear
Weapons Convention (NWC)”, at every opportunity, including at the
General Assembly of the United Nations.

Many countries at the Review Conference were in agreement that it is
important to visit the
atomic-bombed cities of Nagasaki and Hiroshima. Once again, I make a
call from Nagasaki.
I address President Obama, heads of state, including the heads of the
nuclear weapon states, and all the people of the world. Please come to
Nagasaki and Hiroshima, and see for yourself exactly what happened
under those mushroom clouds 70 years ago. Please understand and accept
the message of the hibakusha, who are still doing their best to pass
on their experiences, not simply as “victims”, but as “members of the
human race”.

I appeal to the Government of Japan.
Please explore national security measures which do not rely on nuclear
deterrence. The
establishment of a “Northeast Asia Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone
(NEA-NWFZ)”, as advocated by researchers in America, Japan, Korea,
China, and many other countries, would make this possible. Fix your
sights on the future, and please consider a conversion from a “nuclear
umbrella” to a “non-nuclear umbrella”.

This summer, Nagasaki held the “International Youth Peace Forum”,
where young people from 128 different countries and regions considered
and discussed peace.

In November, Nagasaki will host the “Pugwash International Conference”
for the first time. At this Conference, which was inspired by Albert
Einstein, who understood the terror of nuclear weapons, scientists
from all over the world will gather, discuss the problem of nuclear
weapons, and convey a message of peace from Nagasaki to the world.

“Peace from Nagasaki”. We shall continue to sow the seeds of peace as
we treasure these words.

Furthermore, 4 years on from the Great East Japan Earthquake, Nagasaki
continues to support the people of Fukushima who are suffering due to
the accident at the nuclear power plant.

The Diet is currently deliberating a bill which will determine how our
country guarantees its
security. There is widespread unease and concern that the oath which
was engraved onto our hearts 70 years ago and the peaceful ideology of
the Constitution of Japan are now wavering. I urge the Government and
the Diet to listen to these voices of unease and concern, concentrate
their wisdom, and conduct careful and sincere deliberations.

This year, the average age of the hibakusha has now passed 80. I
strongly request that the
Government of Japan fulfill its responsibility of providing
substantial care that conforms to the
actual needs of the hibakusha, and increase the extent of the area
acknowledged as being exposed to the atomic bomb while those who were
there are still alive.

We, the people of Nagasaki, offer our most heartfelt condolences to
those who lost their lives to the atomic bomb. We hereby declare that
together with the citizens of Hiroshima, we shall continue to use all
our strength to achieve a world without nuclear weapons, and the
realization of peace.


Tomihisa Taue
Mayor of Nagasaki
August 9, 2015


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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