Zürcher Nachrichten - Japan's atomic bomb survivors to accept Nobel Prize in Oslo

EUR -
AED 4.180037
AFN 72.270777
ALL 94.072481
AMD 418.914562
ANG 2.037836
AOA 1043.729181
ARS 1695.336459
AUD 1.651252
AWG 2.04876
AZN 1.899515
BAM 1.953671
BBD 2.293161
BDT 140.274702
BGN 1.92456
BHD 0.42913
BIF 3397.526703
BMD 1.1382
BND 1.475966
BOB 7.896258
BRL 5.944592
BSD 1.13854
BTN 108.510868
BWP 16.254005
BYN 3.317028
BYR 22308.718053
BZD 2.289865
CAD 1.618111
CDF 2589.404665
CHF 0.920781
CLF 0.026767
CLP 1053.472271
CNY 7.733442
CNH 7.728076
COP 3857.348081
CRC 518.226272
CUC 1.1382
CUP 30.162297
CVE 110.547653
CZK 24.224767
DJF 202.281259
DKK 7.474508
DOP 67.665916
DZD 151.751619
EGP 55.876496
ERN 17.072999
ETB 181.144491
FJD 2.579901
FKP 0.858561
GBP 0.856763
GEL 3.005215
GGP 0.858561
GHS 12.935602
GIP 0.858561
GMD 83.655968
GNF 9982.013148
GTQ 8.683387
GYD 238.166326
HKD 8.927499
HNL 29.877576
HRK 7.533633
HTG 148.865192
HUF 355.706847
IDR 20470.525213
ILS 3.398099
IMP 0.858561
INR 108.297729
IQD 1491.61097
IRR 1566163.062726
ISK 143.800226
JEP 0.858561
JMD 179.054915
JOD 0.806949
JPY 184.992202
KES 147.146334
KGS 99.535312
KHR 4567.030089
KMF 492.840401
KPW 1024.380309
KRW 1767.999828
KWD 0.352022
KYD 0.94885
KZT 545.695861
LAK 25609.497225
LBP 102131.456754
LKR 382.476561
LRD 207.01013
LSL 18.665708
LTL 3.360809
LVL 0.688486
LYD 7.301551
MAD 10.707613
MDL 20.135708
MGA 4880.032989
MKD 61.620632
MMK 2389.777711
MNT 4078.151899
MOP 9.198816
MRU 45.676217
MUR 53.666326
MVR 17.585086
MWK 1975.915126
MXN 19.955091
MYR 4.649659
MZN 72.742268
NAD 18.667613
NGN 1564.990484
NIO 41.663845
NOK 11.283072
NPR 173.617788
NZD 2.005264
OMR 0.437633
PAB 1.13854
PEN 3.890358
PGK 4.983019
PHP 70.126777
PKR 316.703795
PLN 4.291696
PYG 6920.338504
QAR 4.149304
RON 5.226156
RSD 117.354129
RUB 88.207855
RWF 1668.601054
SAR 4.273031
SBD 9.16149
SCR 15.090169
SDG 683.492044
SEK 11.063701
SGD 1.474367
SHP 0.849781
SLE 27.74365
SLL 23867.486987
SOS 650.485164
SRD 42.687619
STD 23558.439927
STN 24.926578
SVC 9.961971
SYP 125.807623
SZL 18.666607
THB 37.943052
TJS 10.53174
TMT 3.9837
TND 3.344885
TOP 2.740513
TRY 53.141401
TTD 7.729443
TWD 36.251094
TZS 2987.772476
UAH 51.040968
UGX 4172.380764
USD 1.1382
UYU 45.769329
UZS 13581.567161
VES 719.994173
VND 29935.226487
VUV 136.695954
WST 3.165202
XAF 655.231594
XAG 0.018964
XAU 0.000281
XCD 3.076043
XCG 2.051928
XDR 0.813834
XOF 653.898923
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.574022
ZAR 18.649349
ZMK 10245.167577
ZMW 20.728052
ZWL 366.499904
  • CMSC

    0.3100

    21.95

    +1.41%

  • CMSD

    0.2800

    22.18

    +1.26%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    65.61

    0%

  • BCC

    -2.1500

    75.48

    -2.85%

  • NGG

    -2.6900

    80.18

    -3.35%

  • GSK

    -1.1200

    51.3

    -2.18%

  • RYCEF

    0.0400

    19.14

    +0.21%

  • RIO

    -1.5800

    93.35

    -1.69%

  • BCE

    -0.4900

    21.02

    -2.33%

  • BTI

    -1.2000

    60.56

    -1.98%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.94

    -0.15%

  • RELX

    -0.2900

    31.38

    -0.92%

  • VOD

    -0.2150

    13.01

    -1.65%

  • AZN

    -5.7600

    183.86

    -3.13%

  • BP

    -0.8000

    36.15

    -2.21%

Japan's atomic bomb survivors to accept Nobel Prize in Oslo
Japan's atomic bomb survivors to accept Nobel Prize in Oslo / Photo: Odd ANDERSEN - AFP

Japan's atomic bomb survivors to accept Nobel Prize in Oslo

This year's Nobel Peace Prize will be presented Tuesday to Japan's atomic bomb survivors' group Nihon Hidankyo, which lobbies against the weapons now resurging as a threat 80 years after the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings.

Text size:

The three co-chairs of Nihon Hidankyo will accept the prestigious award during a ceremony starting at 1:00 pm (1200 GMT) in Oslo's City Hall, at a time when states like Russia increasingly threaten to break the international taboo on the use of nuclear arms.

"Nuclear weapons and humanity cannot co-exist," one of the three co-chairs, Terumi Tanaka, told a press conference on Monday in the Norwegian capital.

"Humanity may come to its end even before climate change brings its devastating impacts," the 92-year-old said.

Nihon Hidankyo works tirelessly to rid the planet of the weapons of mass destruction, with testimonies from survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, known as "hibakusha".

Around 140,000 people were killed in Hiroshima when the United States detonated an atomic bomb over the Japanese city on August 6, 1945.

A further 74,000 were killed by a US nuclear bomb in Nagasaki three days later.

Survivors suffered from radiation sickness and longer-term effects, including elevated risks of cancer.

The bombings, the only times nuclear weapons have been used in history, were the final blow to imperial Japan and its brutal rampage across Asia. It surrendered on August 15, 1945.

Tanaka was 13 when the bomb was dropped on Nagasaki, killing five members of his family.

On Monday, he expressed alarm at the resurgence of nuclear threats and urged Russian President Vladimir Putin to stop brandishing the threat to prevail in the war in Ukraine.

"President Putin, I don't think he truly understands what nuclear weapons are for human beings," he said.

"I don't think he has even thought about this."

- Firing signals -

Putin began making nuclear threats shortly after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. He signed a decree in late November lowering the threshold for using atomic weapons.

Russia has the largest nuclear arsenal in the world.

On November 21, Moscow fired its new Oreshnik hypersonic missile on the Ukrainian city of Dnipro in an escalation of the almost three-year war.

The missile is designed to be equipped with a nuclear warhead, but was not in this case.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Thursday that Moscow was ready to use "any means" to defend itself.

"It is crucial for humanity to uphold the nuclear taboo, to stigmatise these weapons as morally unacceptable," the chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, Jorgen Watne Frydnes, said on Monday.

"To threaten with them is one way of reducing the significance of the taboo, and it should not be done," he added.

"And of course, to use them should never be done ever again by any nation on Earth."

North Korea, which has increased its ballistic missile tests, and Iran, which is suspected of developing nuclear weapons though it denies this, are also seen as posing a threat to the West.

Nine countries now have nuclear weapons: Britain, China, France, India, North Korea, Pakistan, Russia, the United States, and, unofficially, Israel.

In 2017, 122 governments negotiated and adopted the historic UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), but the text is considered largely symbolic as no nuclear power has signed it.

This year's Nobel prizes in the other disciplines -- medicine, physics, chemistry, literature and economics -- will be awarded at a separate ceremony in Stockholm.

L.Zimmermann--NZN