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Japan A-bomb survivors hopeful for Obama

Posted 01 15 2009 2:48AM

Japan A-bomb survivors hopeful for Obama

TOKYO (AFP) – Survivors of the have high hopes for US president-elect , believing he is the leader who could usher in a nuclear-free era.

Hiroshima residents have launched a letter campaign urging Obama to become the first sitting US president to see the site of the world's first nuclear attack.

The umbrella group representing is also requesting a face-to-face meeting with Obama, who takes office on .

The survivors place "high hopes in Obama's pledges to seek a nuclear-free world," said Terumi Tanaka, leader of the Japan Confederation of A and H bomb Sufferers Organisations.

On his campaign website, Obama said his goal was "a world without ."

Obama said that while the United States would retain nuclear weapons so long as they existed, his administration would "take several steps down the long road" to eliminating them, including ending development of new nuclear arms.

The policy marks a shift from that of the outgoing administration of , which updated the design of US .

Obama's views are "unprecedented for the leader of the country which has resisted abandoning nuclear weapons," said Tanaka, a 76-year-old survivor of the atomic bombing in .

"We want to support him and encourage him to take the initiative in abandoning nuclear weapons by telling him directly of our experiences," Tanaka said.

In a letter to Obama, the survivors say they want to speak to Obama "to help you better understand the horror of nuclear weapons."

A single US bomb dropped on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945 killed more than 140,000 people, either instantly or in the days and weeks that followed as radiation or horrific burns took their toll.

The United States dropped a second on Nagasaki three days later, killing another 70,000 people. Japan surrendered less than a week later, ending .

Citizens of Hiroshima, mostly teenage students, are sending a pile of 355 letters to Obama, calling on him to visit.

"We want him to see Hiroshima because he is a key person in world politics and the one who has the right to press the button to launch a nuclear-armed missile," said Keisuke Yoshihara, an editor at the local , who encouraged the letter campaign.

About 50 students in Punahou High School in Honolulu, Hawaii, from which Obama graduated, offered to translate letters into English, he said.

No serving US president has visited Hiroshima, although and both came when they were not in office. last year became the highest-ranking US official to visit.

"For Obama to seek a nuclear-free world is of course a meaningful change from the ," said Masahiko Asada, professor of international law at .

"But disarmament experts will watch cautiously whether he takes concrete steps towards that goal, such as ratifying the CTBT."

The has not ratified the CTBT, or Comprehensive , which aims to ban all everywhere in the world.

Asada said US ratification would put pressure on other holdouts, such as China, India and Pakistan, enabling the treaty to take effect.

The professor said that a visit by Obama could influence him.

"I visited Auschwitz last year and I felt that while hearing about things is one thing, seeing them is quite another," he said.

Japan has been officially pacifist since the end of and pushed for nuclear arms abolition. However, the country relies on the US nuclear umbrella for security from nuclear-armed .


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