The Manila Times

Japan marks 75th year of Hiroshima bombing

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TOKYO: Thursday marks 75 years since the United States unleashed the WORLD’S first ATOMIC BOMB ATTACK ON the city of Hiroshima, followed three days later by the second and last on Nagasaki, vaporizing lives, buildings and Japan’s capacity for war.

At 8:15 a.m. on Aug. 6, 1945, US B-29 warplane Enola Gay dropped a bomb, nicknamed “Little Boy,” and obliterate­d the southweste­rn city of Hiroshima, killing 140,000 of an estimated population of 350,000, with thousands more dying later of injuries and radiation-related illness.

On August 9, the US dropped another bomb, dubbed “Fat Man,” about 420 kilometers to the south over Nagasaki, instantly killing more than 75,000 people beneath a mushroom cloud, which grew as high as 9,000 meters.

Japan surrendere­d six days later, ending World War 2.

Archive footage shows pre-bomb Hiroshima as a bustling, thriving city of trilby-topped gentlemen boarding trams, ladies dressed in elegant kimonos, and uniformed schoolchil­dren walking beneath cherry blossoms overhangin­g shopping streets.

After the blast, rubble and contorted metal stretch almost uninterrup­tedly to the horizon.

Electricit­y poles and bare trees accompany the dotted handful of windowless buildings, which appear to have withstood the impossible. Japan will commemorat­e the 75th anniversar­y of the bombing of the two cities on Thursday and Sunday in 2020.

In previous years, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and the city mayors attended annual memorial services and renewed pledges for a nuclear-free world. Bells tolled and a minute’s silence was observed at the exact time the bombs detonated in both cities.

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