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Nagasaki Peace Declaration 2011

August 9, 2011

The mayor of Nagasaki, Tomihisa Taue , read the following statement this morning, on the 66th anniversary of the US atomic bombing of that city on August 9, 1945.

This March, we were astounded by the severity of accident at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station operated by the Tokyo Electric Power Company, Inc., after the occurrence of the Great East Japan Earthquake and ensuing tsunami. With some of the station’s reactors exposed to the open air due to explosions, no residents are now to be found in the communities surrounding the station. There is no telling when those who have been evacuated because of the radiation can return home. As the people of a nation that has experienced nuclear devastation, we continued the plea of “No More Hibakusha!” How has it come that we are threatened once again by the fear of radiation?

Have we lost our awe of nature? Have we become overconfident in the control we wield as human beings? Have we turned away from our responsibility for the future? Now is the time to discuss thoroughly and choose what kind of society we will create from this point on.

No matter how long it will take, it is necessary to promote the development of renewable energies in place of nuclear power in a bid to transform ourselves into a society with a safer energy base. Read more…

Reflections on Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and Fukushima: Are we witnessing the beginning of the end of the nuclear age?

August 6, 2011

Masao Tomonaga, MD

Masao Tomonaga

Masao Tomonaga

The 66th anniversary of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki arrives as Japan tries to recover from the ongoing nuclear power plant disaster at Fukushima Daiichi, which has exposed almost two million people to chronic low dose radiation.

On March 11, a powerful tsunami in northeast Japan, triggered by a devastating earthquake, struck the electric supply apparatus at Fukushima and induced meltdowns in two of the plant’s reactors, along with hydrogen explosions in the reactor buildings. During the next two weeks, high levels of radioactive iodine and cesium were released into the air. The soil of Fukushima Prefecture was widely contaminated with radioactive nuclides, as were coastal waters. Residents, including a few hundred thousand children, were chronically exposed to low-dose radiation. More than 20,000 residents were evacuated from their home towns, where the estimated annual exposure dose exceeds 20 millisieverts (mSv). Many farmers abandoned their cattle. Five months after the onset of the disaster, a prefecture-wide mass medical survey has been started to determine the health impact on the two million residents of Fukushima.

This new nuclear tragedy now forms the backdrop of Japan’s first terrible experience with the destructive forces of the nuclear age, commemorated each year at this time. Read more…

Hiroshima Peace Declaration — August 6, 2011

August 6, 2011

On August 6, 1945, the United States exploded an atomic bomb over Hiroshima. A single blast unleashed heat, fires, winds, and radiation that killed 70,000 people instantly (another 70,000 would be dead from injuries and radiation by the end of the year), destroyed the entire city, and changed the world forever. Three days later, on August 9, the US dropped a second bomb on Nagasaki, killing 75,000. The medical, environmental, social, and political repercussions of the most inhumane weapons ever built have persisted to this day.

The survivors of the first nuclear war—the hibakusha—have traveled the world to tell their stories and to appeal for the abolition of nuclear weapons. The mayors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, who share the leadership of the international network Mayors for Peace, speak to the world each year, on the anniversary of the atomic bombings, about the need to work for peace and to ensure that what happened to their cities can never be repeated.

The recently elected mayor of Hiroshima, Kazumi Matsui, read the following statement this morning in Hiroshima’s Peace Park.

Peace Declaration

August 6, 2011

Sixty-six years ago, despite the war, the people of Hiroshima were leading fairly normal lives. Until that fateful moment, many families were enjoying life together right here in what is now Peace Memorial Park and was then one of the city’s most prosperous districts. A man who was thirteen at the time shares this: “August fifth was a Sunday, and for me, a second-year student in middle school, the first full day off in a very long time. I asked a good friend from school to come with me, and we went on down to the river. Forgetting all about the time, we stayed until twilight, swimming and playing on the sandy riverbed. That hot mid-summer’s day was the last time I ever saw him.” Read more…

The revolution begins in Tel Aviv

August 3, 2011

by Hillel Schenker

[Originally published in Palestine-Israel Journal]

Two young people who caught my eye in the endless stream of people in Tel Aviv last night were wearing proudly wearing t-shirts with the slogan “Revolution!” stamped on the front. No busses, no organized political mobilizations, just endless streams of people, marching in the heart of Tel Aviv – near the heart of the Israeli military-industrial complex – the Kirya (Israeli Pentagon), the huge office and apartment towers, with the three Azrieli Towers looming in the distance. 100,000 people in Tel Aviv alone, 150,000 throughout the country.

They were mainly young, secular and Ashkenazi, but also groups with signs representing South Tel Aviv, the Hatikva Quarter, Jaffa, all predominantly Sephardi neighborhoods. And Russians proudly carrying signs in Russian proclaiming that we are here too. And some young Ethiopian girls, whooping it up. And Arabs from Jaffa, even a smattering of ultra-Orthodox Haredim. Someone was carrying a placard which looked like the ghost of Che Guevera. And someone else wore a t-shirt with a picture of Gandhi on the back.

The predominant slogan was “The people demand social justice!” And periodically, a loud rumbling cry emerged from sections of the crowd, like a wave – people simply feeling their strength and empowerment. Read more…

A Nigerian doctor’s first experience at the ATT PrepCom

July 18, 2011

by  Hakeem Ayinde, MD

Up until one year ago, I worked with the Nigeria Police Force as a medical officer, giving care to police, their families and jail inmates. We treated many policemen who were wounded in the line of duty. In many cases, they were wounded by heavy guns and I often wondered how the criminals got those guns. It was frustrating to feel as though I could not do anything about it. Knowing I could add my medical voice and act as an advocate for my patients led me to join IPPNW. Participating in the Arms Trade Treaty (ATT) Preparatory Committee (PrepCom) meeting was my first experience with IPPNW`s Aiming For Prevention campaign. Read more…

Arms Trade Treaty Day 3: IPPNW Members Meet with US Ambassador Mahley

July 14, 2011
by

By Shannon Gearhart, MD and Hakeem Ayinde, MD

US Ambassador Donald Mahley (on left) discussing the public health role health professionals can provide in the reporting and monitoring of arms activity.

Today, we welcomed Kathryn Hawk, an ER resident from Yale University who has been an active member of PSR since medical school in Philadelphia. She joined other attendees including:
● Robert Mtonga, M.D., official delegate of the Zambian delegation, IPPNW Co-president and medical director of the International Action Network on Small Arms (IANSA) Public Health Network;
● Donald Mellman, M.D., a neurosurgeon from Florida and IPPNW local leader;
● Cathy Falvo, M.D., former PSR-US board member and pediatrician;
●Maria Valenti, IPPNW Aiming for Prevention coordinator;
● Garrett FitzGerald, IPPNW Development Associate;
● Shannon Gearhart, M.D., preventive medicine resident at Mount Sinai School of Medicine;
● Omolade Oladejo, M.D., medical officer for the Nigerian Ministry of Defense;
● Gurshaant Singh, M.D. academic advisor, Monash Univeristy, Melbourne;
● Hakeem Ayinde, M.D., former medical officer with the Nigeria Police medical department

In the morning, several attendees met with US Ambassador Donald Mahley. During the informal meeting we discussed the public health role health professionals can provide in the reporting and monitoring of arms activity. According to Ambassador Mahley, collection of public health data on small arms activity, such as ED admissions of gun shot wounds, is currently sporadic and unorganized. However, the government believes in the use of data on the influx of weapons as an indicator of the amount of illicit trade.

IPPNW Health Panel at ATT Prepcom, United Nations

July 12, 2011

Dr. Robert Mtonga (left) panel moderator and IPPNW Co-president, and Peter Herby, Head, Arms Unit, Legal Division, International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) during IPPNW's side panel at the Arms Trade Treaty.

July 11, United Nations, New York City –– IPPNW organized and presented a panel of distinguished speakers to address “Implementing a Robust ATT: The Role of Health, Development, Women” at a side event to the 3rd PrepCom for the Arms Trade Treaty (ATT) at the United Nations in New York City. The panel was sponsored by the Mission of Zambia to the UN and was very well received by a standing room only crowd of over 75 attendees that included state delegates including a member of the US delegation, NGOs and representatives of UN and other agencies.

The session was led off by IPPNW’s co-president Robert Mtonga MD from Zambia, who also serves as Medical Director of the International Action Network on Small Arms (IANSA) Public Health Network, and is on the official Zambian delegation for the PrepCom. He set the stage by explaining that the goal of the forum was to provide practical suggestions on how to help support the implementation of a humanitarian-based ATT, with a special emphasis on how public health will both benefit from, and can contribute to, its success.
Read more…

ICAN-Africa launched in Livingstone

July 11, 2011

Senior ICAN campaigner Arielle Denis encourages participants at IPPNW's African Regional Meeting to work for a nuclear weapons convention during a Target X event in Livingstone, Zambia.

ICAN-Africa was launched at the 6th African Regional Safe Communities Conference in Livingstone, Zambia, during the week of July 4. Senior campaigner Arielle Denis joined IPPNW’s African leaders and representatives from the World Health Organization, the University of South Africa, Mozambique University, the Zambian Ministry of Health, and the Zambian Road Traffic Safety Agency to discuss the ways in which the nuclear abolition issue presents itself in the larger context of armed violence, human rights, and development in Africa, and to draft a campaign plan that can engage civil society groups and governments in the region to work for a Nuclear Weapons Convention.

The Safe Communities Conference itself, chaired by IPPNW Co-president Robert Mtonga, addressed a broad range of safety and security problems including landmines, domestic injuries, interpersonal violence, deaths and injuries from small arms and light weapons, and even traffic injuries, which are a growing problem in African countries. The conference drew more than 80 researchers, physicians, NGO representatives, and officials from the WHO and governments. Read more…

US Conference of Mayors calls for Nuclear Weapons Convention, troop withdrawals

June 23, 2011

The people responsible for managing US cities—the ones elected to keep the schools open, to maintain roads and bridges, to ensure public health and safety, and to advocate for the needs of their communities—sent a message to the rest of the country this week about the costs of war and preparing for war. The message, contained in two resolutions adopted by the US Conference of Mayors, was that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have to end, that the US needs to lead the way in ridding the world of nuclear weapons, and that the hundreds of billions of dollars now being lost to these misplaced national spending priorities should be redirected “to meet vital human needs” at home.

The resolution on military spending noted a couple of obvious facts: that the wars started by President Bush and continued by President Obama are costing about $126 billion a year and that more than 6,000 American soldiers have died in Iraq and Afghanistan. The mayors went a step further, pointing out in the same sentence that at least 120,000 civilians have been killed in those countries since these wars began. Americans don’t hear that fact often enough.

The nuclear disarmament resolution reproves the Obama administration for its plan to spend $185 billion on nuclear weapons modernization and infrastructure programs between now and 2020—amounts even greater than the Reagan administration spent on nuclear weapons at the height of the Cold War. The mayors called for a halt to this spending and urged the administration, instead, to work for the implementation of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon’s five-point plan for global nuclear disarmament, including the completion of a nuclear weapons convention by 2020. In strong contrast with those Americans who take an isolationist attitude, the US mayors spoke proudly of their participation in Mayors for Peace and aligned themselves with their colleagues in 4,700 cities and 150 countries who have declared that “cities are not targets” of nuclear weapons and have set their sights on a world free of nuclear weapons by 2020.

The contrast between two visions of where the world will stand in 2020—ramped up to produce, maintain, and endanger all of us with nuclear weapons for the rest of the 21st century; or free of a catastrophic threat to human survival that only exists because we allow it to exist—could not be starker. Both these resolutions reflect a growing sense of interconnectedness among municipal leaders in many countries who face similar challenges, are increasingly making common cause with each other across national boundaries, and know from experience that every dollar spent on war and the weapons of war is a dollar that cannot be spent, in the mayors’ own words, “to meet vital human needs, promote job creation, rebuild our infrastructure, aid municipal and state governments, and develop a new economy based upon renewable, sustainable energy and reduce the federal debt.”

The mayors may have gotten through to President Obama, who announced an accelerated schedule for troop withdrawals from Afghanistan a few days later, echoing what the country’s municipal leaders had said about the need to redirect national spending priorities. Let’s hope he heard them about nuclear weapons, as well.

IPPNW, which launched the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) in 2007, and Mayors For Peace, whose Cities Are Not Targets campaign is part of the 2020 Appeal for a nuclear-weapons-free world, work collaboratively to build public and governmental support for a nuclear weapons convention.

USA and Iran: Pride and Prejudice

June 22, 2011

Gunnar Westberg

The most frequent question to me during my three visits to Iran was: How can we convince the West that our country is not going to produce nuclear weapons? The question I hear in Europe and USA is:  When will Iran have nuclear weapons? There seems to be a need for a dialogue. No one wants a war. It might still happen and may escalate into a nuclear genocide.

Why does Iran have a nuclear program? The country has enormous reserves of oil and gas. Why then nuclear power? During the sixties and seventies, the time of the Shah, the reason was probably first of all a part of the “Westernization” of the country. After the Islamic revolution in 1979 it became a symbol of the nation’s independence and defiance against foreign pressure. Read more…