The Telegram (St. John's)

Survivor of Nagasaki bomb campaigned to ban nukes BY MARI YAMAGUCHI

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Sumiteru Taniguchi, who devoted his life to seeking to abolish nuclear weapons after he was severely burned in the 1945 atomic bomb attack on his hometown of Nagasaki, died Wednesday of cancer. He was 88.

Taniguchi died at a hospital in Nagasaki of cancer of the duodenal papilla, the point where the pancreatic and bile ducts meet, according to the Japan Confederat­ion of A- and H-bomb Sufferers Organizati­ons.

Taniguchi was 16 and was on the job delivering mail on Aug. 9, 1945, when a U.S. atomic bomb was dropped on the city. The blast 1.8 kilometres away threw him from his bicycle, almost killing him. The Nagasaki attack killed more than 70,000 people. The bombing of Hiroshima three days earlier killed an estimated 140,000 people.

For nearly two years, Taniguchi could only lie on his stomach as he was treated for the burns that exposed flesh and bones. He later formed a survivors group and led a national effort against nuclear proliferat­ion.

In an interview with The Associated Press two years ago, Taniguchi peeled his undershirt off to show his scars, to describe his painful past and tell the world the tragedy should never be repeated.

He said he wanted no one else to have to suffer the pain of nuclear weapons.

His health declined in the last few years from age and illnesses.

In his video message in July, Taniguchi welcomed the UN nuclear weapons prohibitio­n treaty, but expressed concerns about the declining population of the survivors, known in Japan as hibakusha.

“I wonder what the world will be like when it loses the last atomic bombing survivor,” he said.

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