Gulf News

Man who survived Nagasaki atomic bombing dies at 88

Taniguchi, once seen as a front-runner for the Nobel Peace Prize, had cancer

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Prominent nuclear disarmamen­t campaigner Sumiteru Taniguchi, who was delivering mail in Nagasaki when the US dropped an atom bomb in 1945, died yesterday at the age of 88.

Taniguchi, once considered a front-runner for the Nobel Peace Prize, died of cancer at a hospital in the southweste­rn Japanese city, according to Nihon Hidankyo, a group that represents survivors of the atomic bombings of Nagasaki and Hiroshima.

The then-postman, aged only 16 when the attack happened in the closing days of the Second World War, suffered horrific burns to his back and left arm that took years to heal properly.

He had been riding his bicycle some 1.8km from the epicentre of the blast. “All of a sudden, after seeing a rainbow-like light from the back, I was blown by a powerful blast and smashed to the ground,” he said at a commemorat­ion ceremony for the Nagasaki bombing in 2015.

“When I woke up, the skin of my left arm from the shoulder to the tip of my fingers was trailing like a rag. I put my hand to my back and found my clothing was gone, and there was slimy, burnt skin all over my hand.

“Bodies burnt black, voices calling for help from collapsed buildings, people with flesh falling off and their guts falling out ... This place became a sea of fire. It was hell.”

He became one of the few early faces of the bombing aftermath when US military pictures of him recovering in hospital, his entire back an agonising slab of melted flesh, were beamed around the world.

Taniguchi, who spent about three-and-a-half years in hospital after the blast, went on to become a prominent disarmamen­t campaigner, making dozens of speeches both in Japan and overseas about his experience. “I fear that people, especially the younger generation­s, are beginning to lose interest,” he said in 2003. “I want the younger generation­s to remember that nuclear weapons will never save humanity. It is an illusion to believe that the nuclear umbrella will protect us.”

The US dropped the first atom bomb on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, killing around 140,000 people. The toll includes those who survived the explosion itself but died soon after from severe radiation exposure. Three days later the US dropped a plutonium bomb on the port city of Nagasaki, killing some 74,000 people.

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 ?? AFP ?? Sumiteru Taniguchi
AFP Sumiteru Taniguchi

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