TOKYO: The mayor of Hiroshima urged Japan to sign a landmark UN treaty banning nuclear weapons as the city Tuesday marked 74 years since being targeted in the world´s first atomic attack. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe led commemorations at the Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima as residents offered silent prayers, lit candles and placed wreathes to remember those killed in the August 6, 1945 bombing.
And mayor Kazumi Matsui used the occasion to push the Abe administration to sign the UN treaty on the prohibition of nuclear weapons (TPNW), approved by more than 120 nations, but rejected by the US and other nuclear armed countries. “I call on the government of the only country to experience a nuclear weapon in war to accede to the hibakusha´s (atomic bomb victims) request that the TPNW be signed and ratified,” said Matsui. “I urge Japan´s leaders to manifest the pacifism of the Japanese constitution by displaying leadership in taking the next step towards a world free from nuclear weapons.”
Trump, 77, is charged with 34 counts of falsifying business records
Garcetti said a criminal case and indictment had been brought “and if there is any connection to state actors in...
Tehran has always said it had no plans to obtain nuclear weapons
“Both sides have been working together to ensure continued operation of Indian aviation platforms,” India’s...
“China is one of the pillars of the new world order,” Orban said
“We are putting maximum pressure on our partners to increase weapon deliveries,” Zelensky said