The Philippine Star

Kerry makes historic visit to Hiroshima

7 decades after A-bomb

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HIROSHIMA (AP) — US Secretary of State John Kerry visited the revered memorial to Hiroshima’s atomic bombing, delivering a message of peace and hope for a nuclear-free world, seven decades after the United States used the weapon for the first time in history and killed 140,000 Japanese.

Kerry yesterday became the most senior American official to travel to the city, touring its peace museum with other foreign ministers of the Group of Seven industrial­ized nations and laying a wreath at the adjoining park’s stone-arched monument, with the exposed steel beams of Hiroshima’s iconic A-Bomb Dome in the distance.

The otherwise somber occasion was lifted by the presence of about 800 Japanese schoolchil­dren waving flags of the G7 nations, including that of the United States, and cheering as the ministers walked past.

Kerry didn’t speak publicly at the ceremony, though could be seen with his arm around Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida, a Hiroshima native, and whispering in his ear. The ministers departed with origami cranes in their national colors around their necks, Kerry draped in red, white and blue.

“Everyone in the world should see and feel the power of this memorial,” Kerry wrote in the museum’s guest book. “It is a stark, harsh, compelling reminder not only of our obligation to end the threat of nuclear weapons, but to rededicate all our effort to avoid war itself.”

”War must be the last resort — never the first choice,” he added.

“This memorial compels us all to redouble our efforts to change the world, to find peace and build the future so yearned for by citizens everywhere.”

Kerry’s appearance, just footsteps away from Ground Zero, completed an evolution for the United States, whose leaders avoided the city for many years because of political sensitivit­ies.

 ?? AFP ?? US Secretary of State John Kerry, Japan's Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida and British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond receive wreaths to offer at the Memorial Cenotaph for the 1945 atomic bombing victimsat the Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima yesterday.
AFP US Secretary of State John Kerry, Japan's Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida and British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond receive wreaths to offer at the Memorial Cenotaph for the 1945 atomic bombing victimsat the Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima yesterday.

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