Voice of America News
Nagasaki
Marks Anniversary of Nuclear Bombing
Steve Herman
Tokyo
09 Aug 2003, 12:10 UTC
Japan has been
marking the anniversaries of the two atom bombs dropped by America to end World
War II, but the commemorations this year come as the country is beginning to
debate its post-war pacifist policies.
At the exact
moment 58 years after a flash turned the skies whiter than anyone had ever
seen, the Nagasaki Bell tolled for one minute and the city paused for a moment
of silence.
An estimated
74,000 people were killed and roughly an equal number injured when a 19 kiloton
plutonium bomb detonated over Nagasaki on August 9, 1945. The horrific blast
melted steel and spewed radiation into the skies. Six days later, Japan
surrendered, bringing the Second World War to an end.
Japanese Prime
Minister Junichiro Koizumi looked on Saturday as Nagasaki Mayor Itcho Ito, who
was born two weeks after the bombing, said many of the survivors continue to
suffer physically and mentally.
Mayor Ito
called for an end to nuclear proliferation. He says leaders of the United States
and other nations with nuclear weapons should visit Nagasaki's museum to
witness the effects of what he called the "instruments of
devastation."
The annual
August ceremonies remembering the two atomic attacks, in Nagasaki and
Hiroshima, come at a time when Japan appears to be thinking of moving away from
its post-World War II tradition of pacifism.
The shift in
thinking has been prompted by what are perceived as increased threats from
North Korea, which has declared its intention to build and maintain nuclear
weapons. North Korea is also believed to have, or soon to have, ballistic
missiles capable of delivering such bombs to Japanese cities.
The changing
situation has led to talk about doing away with the ultimate taboo here;
namely, for Japan to possess its own nuclear weapons.
Prime Minister
Koizumi reiterated in Nagasaki Saturday what he said three days earlier at the
commemoration of the Hiroshima bombing - that his administration will not move
in that direction.
Mr. Koizumi
says Japan will maintain its pacifist Constitution and uphold its principles of
not building, possessing or allowing nuclear weapons into the country.
However, the
nuclear issue has been broached since last year's memorial ceremonies in
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, by two prominent politicians who are also top advisers
to the prime minister. Proponents of such a move say Japan should, at the
least, assert its right to bear nuclear weapons.