
Nobel Peace Prize winner Hidankyo calls for a world without nukes
The Peninsula
Oslo: Japan s atomic bomb survivors group Nihon Hidankyo accepted its Nobel Peace Prize on Tuesday, urging countries to abolish the weapons resurging...
Oslo: Japan's atomic bomb survivors' group Nihon Hidankyo accepted its Nobel Peace Prize on Tuesday, urging countries to abolish the weapons resurging as a threat 80 years after the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings.
One of the three co-chairs of Nihon Hidankyo who accepted the prize, 92-year-old Nagasaki survivor Terumi Tanaka, demanded "action from governments to achieve" a nuclear-free world.
The prize was presented at a formal ceremony in Oslo's City Hall at a time when countries like Russia -- which has the world's largest nuclear arsenal -- increasingly brandish the atomic threat.
"I am infinitely saddened and angered that the 'nuclear taboo' threatens to be broken," Tanaka told the assembled dignitaries and guests, some clad in traditional Norwegian bunads or Japanese kimonos.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly made nuclear threats in a bid to deter the West and prevail in the war in Ukraine, and signed a decree in mid-November lowering the threshold for using atomic weapons.













