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100 A-bomb survivors return from 4-month voyage

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5 Comments

  • eternityforme at 09:09 AM JST - 14th January

    The message of peace presented to the world by these people should be heard and taken into trust by the youth and future generations to come. Having been to Nagasaki, one can only imagine the multitude of horrors these people bore witness too. Good on them for sharing what they know and have seen! Now if only those dopey politicans, military advisers etc would listen.

  • neverknow2 at 12:28 PM JST - 14th January

    those who were affected by French nuclear tests at the Mururoa Atoll

    Clever choice of words. No people live in or near this area. No health was affected nor were any incomes lost. Environmental damage is debatable

  • bebert at 01:13 PM JST - 14th January

    to call for the abolition of nuclear weapons

    Unfortunately, as long as Israel and Pakistan have nuclear weapons, no one else can risk getting rid of theirs.

  • nidu at 03:09 PM JST - 14th January

    bebert:

    Pakistan and India are at daggers-drawn to each other. Pakistan cannot risk getting rid of their`s, just because india had it first.

  • ca1ic0cat at 10:02 PM JST - 14th January

    It's going to be impossible to stuff the nuke genie back in the bottle. As long as there are regimes who fear other countries there will be a "need" for nukes. Democracy is the only way to come close to getting rid of nukes. And even then remember that the European democracies all rushed to war in 1914. You wonder when humanity will ever get over this need to fight over things.

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