Japan marks 64th anniversary of Nagasaki atomic bombing

NAGASAKI, Japan. August 10. KAZINFORM  More than 5,000 people gathered Saturday in the Peace Park in Nagasaki to mark the 64th anniversary of the U.S. atomic bombing of the southwestern Japanese city,  Kazinform cites Xinhuanet.

photo: QAZINFORM

At the memorial ceremony, Nagasaki Mayor Tomihisa Taue read the Peace Declaration, calling for worldwide nuclear disarmament and enhanced measures for nuclear nonproliferation.

Lauding U.S. President Barack Obama's statement on a world without nuclear weapons this April in Prague, Taue said: "...the government of Japan, a nation that has experienced nuclear devastation, must play a leading role in international society."

"In a bid for thorough elimination of nuclear armaments, we urge the strongest efforts towards the Nuclear Weapons Convention, which the U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki Moon last year called on governments to negotiate actively," said the Mayor.

In his speech at the ceremony, Prime Minister Taro Aso reaffirmed Japan' s three principles of not producing, possessing or allowing nuclear weapons on its soil, Kazinform refers to Xinhuanet.

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