Arab News

First Japanese to report Hiroshima atomic bomb dies at 86

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TOKYO: Yoshie Oka, the first person to raise the alarm outside Hiroshima that the Japanese city had been hit by an atomic bomb, has died aged 86, media and acquaintan­ces said Tuesday.

Oka was 14 years old on Aug. 6, 1945 and working in Hiroshima as a communicat­ions operator at an undergroun­d command center of the Imperial Japanese Army.

After the bomb fell, she contacted another military unit in the city of Fukuyama east of Hiroshima, local media including public broadcaste­r NHK reported.

“Hiroshima is almost destroyed,” she said. “We were hit by a new type of bomb.”

Local media said she died of malignant lymphoma on May 19 in hospital in Hiroshima after spending years recounting her experience­s of the bombing and its aftermath to visitors and students in the city.

“She was an honest person who called a spade a spade,” said Fumio Kajiya, also an atom bomb survivor who worked with Oka in telling stories of the bombing. “We have lost another great eyewitness,” Kajiya told AFP.

American B-29 bomber Enola Gay dropped its deadly payload, dubbed “Little Boy,” over the city at 8:15 a.m. local time. It marked the first use of an atomic weapon and ultimately claimed the lives of some 140,000 people.

Some died immediatel­y while others succumbed to injuries or radiation-related illnesses weeks, months and years later.

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