NEWS

06.08.2015
Hiroshima/Nagasaki atomic blasts still echo, 70 years on
Seventy years after the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japanese Red Cross Society hospitals are still treating thousands of survivors for long-term health effects, with nearly two-thirds of deaths among them due to cancer.
Hiroshima/ Geneva (IFRC/ICRC)

“Even after so many decades, we continue to see the catastrophic health impact from the use of nuclear weapons on these two cities,” said ICRC President Peter Maurer. “What more compelling argument could there be for the complete elimination of nuclear weapons, especially as most of the bombs in the arsenals of nuclear armed states today are more powerful and destructive?”

With nearly 200,000 survivors still alive it is expected that many thousands will continue to need care for radiation related illnesses in the coming years, while the psychological impact of the bombings continues to haunt even those survivors not physically ill.

“This commemoration is a reminder of the indiscriminate humanitarian consequences of nuclear weapons,” said Tadateru Konoe, the President of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies who is representing the Movement at Peace Memorial Ceremonies in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. “It is a reminder that these consequences travel across space and time and that, once unleashed, they can never be contained.”

In the year last year alone, the Japanese Red Cross Hiroshima and Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Survivors Hospitals treated 4,657 and 6,030 survivors respectively.

Nearly two-thirds (63 per cent) of atomic bomb survivor deaths in the hospital through March 2014 were attributed to cancers of which the primary types were lung cancer (20 per cent), stomach cancer (18 per cent), liver cancer (14 per cent), leukemia (8 per cent), intestinal cancer (7 per cent) and malignant lymphoma (6 per cent). Over this period, more than half of all deaths at the Nagasaki Red Cross hospital (56 per cent) were due to cancer.

The Japanese Red Cross Society has run hospitals for atomic bomb survivors in Hiroshima since 1956 and in Nagasaki since 1969. The hospitals have together handled more than 2.5 million outpatient visits by atomic bomb survivors and more than 2.6 million admissions of survivors as inpatients.

The 70th commemoration of the atomic bombings comes just months after the failure of the Review Conference of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons to agree on moves forward towards their elimination. ENDS
For further information, please contact:

International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC):
  • Francis Markus, Public Relations Officer, ICRC, Geneva
Mobile: +41 79 244 64 24, Email: fmarkus@icrc.org - Twitter: @francis_markus

International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies:
  • Benoit Matsha-Carpentier, Team Leader, Public Communications, IFRC Geneva
Mobile: +41 79 213 24 13, E-mail: benoit.carpentier@ifrc.org - Twitter: @BenoistC