
Hiroshima marks 80 years since atomic bombing
Japanese prime minister Shigeru Ishiba attended the ceremony on Wednesday, along with officials from around the world.
"Japan is the only nation that has suffered an atomic bombing in war," Hiroshima mayor Kazumi Matsui said at the city's Peace Memorial Park. "The Japanese government represents a people who aspire for genuine and lasting peace."
World War Two ended with Japan's surrender after the dropping of the bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which took place days apart.
The bombs killed more than 200,000 people - some from the immediate blast and others from radiation sickness and burns.
The legacy of the weapons continues to haunt survivors today."My father was badly burned and blinded by the blast. His skin was hanging from his body - he couldn't even hold my hand," Hiroshima survivor Shingo Naito told the BBC. He was six years old when the bomb struck his city, killing his father and two younger siblings.Mr Naito has been sharing his story with a group of students in Hiroshima, who are turning his memories of the tragedy into art.In 2024, Nihon Hidankyo, a Japanese group of atomic bomb survivors won the Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts to rid the world of nuclear weapons.In a speech on Wednesday, Hiroshima mayor Matsui warned of an "accelerating trend toward military build-up around the world" and "the idea that nuclear weapons are essential for national defence"."These developments flagrantly disregard the lessons the international community should have learned from the tragedies of history," he said. "They threaten to topple the peacebuilding frameworks so many have worked so hard to construct."Matsui said that the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which aims to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and promote the peaceful use of nuclear energy, was "on the brink of dysfunctionality".He also called on the Japanese government to ratify the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons - an international agreement banning nuclear weapons that came into force in 2021.More than 70 countries have ratified the treaty, but nuclear powers like the US and Russia have opposed it, pointing to the deterrence function of nuclear arsenals.Japan has also rejected such a ban, arguing that its security is enhanced by US nuclear weapons.The nuclear issue is a divisive one in Japan. On the streets leading up to the Peace Memorial Park, there were small protests calling for the abolition of nuclear weapons.Satoshi Tanaka, another atomic bomb survivor who suffered multiple cancers from radiation exposure, said that seeing the bloodshed in Gaza and Ukraine today conjures up his own suffering."Seeing the mountains of rubble, the destroyed cities, the children and women fleeing in panic, it all brings back memories of what I went through," he told the BBC. "We are living alongside nuclear weapons that could wipe out humanity multiple times over.""The most urgent priority is to push the leaders of nuclear-armed countries. The people of the world must become even more outraged, raise their voices louder, and take massive action." — BBC
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A similar review will be conducted nationwide to verify nearly a billion voters. But opposition parties have accused the commission of dropping many voters — especially Muslims who make up a sizeable chunk of the population in four border districts — to aid Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the upcoming state poll body and BJP have denied the allegations. In response to the BBC's questions, the Election Commission shared its 24 June order on conducting the SIR and a 27 July press note outlining efforts to ensure no eligible voter was "left behind"."Further, [the commission] does not take any responsibility of any other misinformation or unsubstantiated allegations being floated around by some vested interests," it added in the commission has not released the list of deleted names or given any break-up according to religion, so it's not possible to verify the opposition's concerns.A review by Hindustan Times newspaper found high voter deletions in Kishanganj, a district with the largest share of Muslims in Bihar, but not in other Muslim-dominated has faced repeated adjournments as opposition MPs demand a debate on what they call a threat to democracy. Outside, they chanted "Down down Modi", "Take SIR back" and "Stop stealing votes". The Supreme Court is also reviewing the move after watchdog ADR questioned its timing."It comes just three months before the assembly elections and there has not been enough time given to the exercise," Jagdeep Chhokar of ADR, told the BBC."As reports from the ground showed, there were irregularities when the exercise was being conducted and the process of data collection was massively faulty," he ADR has argued in court that the exercise "will disenfranchise millions of genuine voters" in a state that's one of India's poorest and is home to "a large number of marginalised communities".It says the SIR shifts the burden onto people to prove their citizenship, often requiring their own and their parents' documents within a short deadline — an impossible task for millions of poor migrant the draft roll was being published, BBC travelled to Patna and nearby villages to hear what voters think of Danara village, home to the poorest of the poor known as Mahadalits, most residents work on farms of upper-castes or are are crumbling, open drains line the narrow lanes and a stagnant puddle near the local temple has turned residents had little to no idea about SIR or its impact, and many weren't sure if officials had even visited their they deeply value their vote. 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He points out the name of a cousin who died more than five years back but still figures on the list — and at least two names that appear twice."There's obviously been no checking. The list has dead people and duplicates and many who did not even fill the form. This is a misuse of government machinery and billions of rupees that have been spent on this exercise."Chhokar of ADR says they will raise these issues in the Supreme Court this week. 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