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---------- Forwarded message ---------
De: Joseph Gerson, Campaign for Peace, Disarmament & Common Security <
joseph@cpdcs.ccsend.com>
Date: dj., 15 d’ag. 2024 a les 17:41
Subject: 2024 WORLD CONFERENCE SUMMARY REPORT
To:
July 26-August 9 Tokyo, Hiroshima, Nagasaki
Summary Report
This is not a comprehensive report. It includes a number of highlights and
references to key points in a number of speeches during Gensuikyo’s World
Conference against A- & H- Bombs held in Hiroshima and Nagasaki August 2-9.
By way of background, held annually since 1955, the World Conference has
been a keystone event for the Japanese nuclear disarmament and peace
movement, which continues to be an essential social movement with deep
resonance in Japanese political and social culture. In addition to bringing
several thousand activists and students for conferences, rallies,
workshops, and the official Hiroshima ceremony (@ 4,000 this year), it also
brings together diplomats whose countries advocate nuclear weapons
abolition, leading movement figure from Asia, Europe, and the United States.
[i] The conference, and Hiroshima Declaration (I played a small role in
drafting it, which was posted to the CPDCS Elist, and from there by
Pressenza and shared by others), serves as the foundation for activities
across Japan for the coming year. It also provides some direction, and
certainly inspiration, for the internationals who participate and their
organizations.
The conference focuses on preventing nuclear war, eliminating nuclear
weapons, and provision of support for Hibakusha. The two primary – and
repeated – foci at this year’s conference were support for the Treaty on
Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons and preparation for the 80th anniversary of
the A-bombings in 2025. A million and a half petition signatures urging
Japan to join the TPNW have been collected so far, with 40% of
municipalities and a majority of governors (even some conservatives) having
endorsed the call for Japan to join the TPNW. It is reported that 70% of
Japanese support Japan joining the TPNW.
With the average age of Hibakusha now being 85.5 years old, there is a
deepening appreciation of what will be lost as the last of them die. It is
believed that given their ages, the 80th anniversary will provide the last
opportunity for them to send their ringing warning that nuclear weapons
must be abolished: “Human beings and nuclear weapons cannot coexist.” Note
as well that even second generation Hibakusha are now getting older, with
some in their 70’s.
Among the differences from conferences in the past was the focus on the
increasing reliance of U.S. allies and the US on extended nuclear
deterrence which increases the danger of nuclear war.
https://8pb4f8bbb.cc.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001FgvjkENZ8rewmkQYtpWITMxslEtpyfVuzqAzPJxQ0xJi9WHrEEXLj_LxobCrGsPZdNaXWWdl-znV8-GBCxxg_vX79ivqda9dUVRThV9A43bkVNeX-hFtu4reN8NuDmq21IU_RSb-37xpu7xeVfO1GInLN2DLs6ZcVPGKbgYGSnrAO7kBuZ-MHS7tUVCASu9BMZgOYSeemYw=&c=4t-DpRrmpTvBtLavQnQKj1Ybgs95Eqh1oekDbq6CeEt26hf-cjX97A==&ch=6VRn-y_x7dV7AveGokxoJRSKfSxLEq2Ri8F05dbWu6QhBApxixLu9Q==
Russia
too has increased its reliance on nuclear weapons.
There were many references by Japanese (including Hibakusha) and by
international speakers to the Gaza and Ukraine Wars and their potentials to
trigger escalations to wider – even nuclear – war. Tanaka Terumi, the
co-chair and former general secretary of Hidankyo (the Japan Confederation
of A- & H- Bomb Sufferers Organizations) said that Israel is attempting to
exterminate Palestinians. There was a diplomatic kerfuffle when the mayor
of Nagasaki disinvited Israel’s official representative to the city’s
official ceremony. The G-7 responded by not attending, and Japan’s
equivalent of the New York Times editorialized that, “… while the Group of
Seven countries condemn Russia, their response to Israel’s ruthless
military actions with little attention to humanitarian concerns, remains
tepid. By not attending the Nagasaki ceremony, the American and British
envoys brought this ethical “double standard” to the A-bomb arena.”
In the wake of Prime Minister Abe’s assassination and the attempt on
Trump’s life security was tighter for the official Hiroshima commemoration
than at an airport. In the blazing sun, we had four different inspections
and had to switch lines back and forth. Given Mayor Matsui’s tepid
Declaration, the high point of which was his call for Japan to join the
TPNW, the dehumanization of the inspections hardly seemed worth the
suffering. That said, the media did report that a call for peace had gone
out from Hiroshima.
There were also numerous condemnations of the LDP government’s expanding
military commitments and the deepening integration of the Japanese and U.S.
militaries for “seamless” joint operations, The new joint command likely to
be led by a U.S. general. In the Japanese peace movement, this is seen as
deepening Japanese subservience to the U.S. and the deepening
U.S.-Japan-South Korean alliance which was secretly imposed on Japan in
1952 as a condition for ending the post-war military occupation.
Other differences included an increased reliance on video and zoom talks.
They included talks by Ambassador Kmentt (the Austrian “father” of the
TPNW), several European movement leaders, and by Terumi Tanaka.
International civil society participants were 72 in number. There was a
much larger South Korean delegation than in the past, mostly from SPARK, as
well as Korean hibakusha. They are planning an international tribunal about
the A-bombings of Koreans in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Also participating were a core group of young and very impressive Filipino
organizers, Rex Alex an inspiring leader of the Gaza Genocide encampment at
SUNY Stony Brook (and soon to be an intern at the U.N.), and the leader of
Spain’s TPNW coalition. Together they provided encouraging testimony to the
promise of a rising generation.
In speeches and in Gensuikyo’s Hiroshima Declaration there was a difference
between Gensuikyo’s approach to the Ukraine War and that of most of the US
peace movement. Rooted in the U.N. charter, Gensuikyo’s condemnation of
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is absolute with no reference to NATO
expansion as a provocation. Instead of calling for a ceasefire and
negotiations, they echo the UN General Assembly’s call for total Russian
withdrawal from Ukrainian territories and resolution of the war on the
basis of the United Nations charter. (In a private conversation, I found
that there is some recognition that some form of compromise will likely be
inevitable.)
I was struck by several of the South Korean speakers citing a major change
in North Korea. Kim Jung-Un has renounced the policy and ambition of
reunification, stating that the core conflict is between two hostile Korean
states, with of course the U.S. seen as the power behind the ROK government
and the driver of Northeast Asian tensions.
My roles were meeting colleagues in Tokyo, supporting my grandson for an
interview for the New Japan Women’s Association’s newspaper (Shinfujin has
@ 200,000 members) about the progressive curricula at the Cambridge high
school to encourage gender respect and feminist history and values. I
co-chaired and was a keynote speaker at Gensuikyo’s international
conference, which brought together about 250 Japanese movement leaders and
internationals. I spoke in the Hiroshima rally (about 3,500 people), in 2
workshops about grassroots organizing for the TPNW and with Minister
Batyrkhan Kurmanseit of the Kazakh embassy (whose ambassador will chair of
the 2025 3rd meeting of states parties of the TPNW) and a Mexic
<#m_-6187834964122143557_>an diplomat. I also was a keynote speaker in a
program at Nagasaki University.
Several points raised in the International Conference and workshops:
- I was impressed by the depth of the talk by the Kazakh embassy
councilor. He focused on the USSR’s disastrous abuse of 468 nuclear weapons
tests at Semipalatinsk, which is about 20 times the size of Hiroshima. This
has led Kazakhstan to take the lead in working to prevent future nuclear
weapons tests and to serve as the chair for the 3rd TPNW Meeting of States
Parties in 2025. A contradiction, he noted, is that Kazakhstan is the
world’s leading producer of uranium for nuclear power plants. This
has caused
divisions within Kazakhstan, especially between younger and older
generations, <#m_-6187834964122143557_> and in response there will be a
referendum <#m_-6187834964122143557_>.
- I am always deeply moved by the talks of Abacca Anjain Madison of the
Marshall Islands, where the U.S. conducted more than 60 nuclear weapons
tests, and still uses Kwajalein atoll as the target for ICBM missile tests.
The isolation, poverty, and dependence on the U.S. of the Marshall Islands
– with only 50,000 people - is heart rending. It always brings to mind the
Cowboys and Indians paradigm of extreme abuse rooted in racism as well as
militarism.
- Yayoi Tsuchida of Gensuikyo reported with her participation in July’s
NPT PrepCom. She spoke about the first day’s criticisms of Russian’s
invasion of Ukraine, the deployment of Russian nuclear weapons to Belarus,
and Russia’s nuclear weapons exercises. Russia, she said, seemed isolated.
With sarcasm she reported that the U.S. stated that it is working for peace
and disarmament with no mention of Gaza. Needless to say, she also
expressed frustration about the PrepCom’s lack of progress toward the
nuclear weapons states fulfilling their Article VI commitment to good faith
negotiations for the complete elimination of the world’s nuclear arsenals.
- Kate Hudson of Britian’s CND spoke via video recording and focused on
the dangers of the Gaza and Ukraine Wars and the increasing nuclearization
of NATO, including deployment of new B-61-12 nuclear warheads to Britain.
As several others did, she asserted that we are in a pre-war, not post-war
world.
- I was impressed by the report by Maribel Hernandez, the young director
of the Alliance for Nuclear Disarmament in Spain. They have a broad and
diverse coalition of about 60 organizations who are pressing for Span to
join the TPNW. The previous platform of the now ruling Spanish Socialist
Party called for joining the TPNW, but they have backed off. Her talks also
focused on the 1966 Palomares nuclear accident in which 2 A-bombs fell from
a U.S. bomber with serious health impacts on nearby communities.
- Heinz Bierbaum, Chair of the Board of the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation,
gave what I thought was a deeply grounded speech about the multi crises
facing humanity: military, economic, environmental, and cultural, not the
least being the emergence of the new bloc system.
In rally speeches
- Solidarity messages were received from the Lao, Vietnamese, Austrian,
and Irish governments and the International Committee of the Red Cross. I
was surprised and impressed by a message from the former CEO of Google in
Japan. He condemned Japan’s increasing militarization including the goal of
2% GDP military spending and the export of weapons. Technology, he urged,
should be used only for civilian purposes. Japan, he said, with its massive
turn back to militarism is becoming “strange,” And those involved in the
LDP’s funding scandal should have been indicted.
- Diplomats from Austria, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, and Cuba, and U.N. High
Representative for Disarmament Izumi Nakamitsu addressed rallies either in
person or via video.
- In a video statement, Austrian ambassador Kmentt addressed the “bleak
outlook” and condemned the nuclear powers threats and nuclear modernization
for the long-term, their abandoning previous arms control agreements, and
the deployments of new intermediate range missiles (in Europe and
Asia-Pacific.) He pointed to the nuclear threats in Ukraine, Korea, South
China Sea, Taiwan, and South Asia, and spoke about the limitations of
deterrence. The way out he asserted is building the TPNW.
- The representative from the Indonesian embassy spoke of her country
having joined the TPNW, its importance, and the need to stop the killing in
Gaza.
- Okinawans (and others) condemned the recent US and Japanese cover ups
of sexual assaults against Okinawan women. (This has been a brutal pattern
since the U.S. occupation of Okinawa began in 1945. Also condemned the
continuing construction of a massive new U.S. naval and air base at Heneko,
and the Japanese military buildup in Okinawa and its remote islands in
preparation for a possible war over Taiwan.
Additional notes:
The Japan Communist Party, which has a long had members in the Japanese
Diet, has articulated a comprehensive policy, essentially consistent with
our Common Security recommendations, which it is advocating. The former
head of the JCP, Shii, recently met with senior Chinese Communist officials
and urged a common security policy.
Osaka is ruled by the Japan Restoration Party, a fascist party to the right
of the LDP.
On August 8 there was a major earthquake in the Nankai Trough. No one was
hurt, but in the past earthquakes in that location have triggered
megaquakes. This led Prime Minister Kishida to cancel plans to visit
several countries so that he could be in Japan in case of a major quake and
emergency. While some people horded supplies against a possible megaquake,
life proceeded largely as usual, with many people traveling for the Obon
holiday.
On the subject of Kishida, he is about as unpopular as Biden was before he
withdrew from the election. Not unlike Biden, in mid-August he announced
that in September he would step aside for another LDP leader to become
prime minister. The opposition Constitutional Democratic Party is more
hopeful than in the recent past that they have a chance of defeating the
LDP (but don’t get your hopes too high!).
[i] In addition to diplomats and the United Nations, civil society
participants came from Australia, France, Germany, India, Marshall Islands,
Nepal, The Philippines, Republic of Korea, Spain, Russia, Vietnam, United
Kingdom, United States, ICAN, IPB, and WILPF
Hibakusha hold banners at Hiroshima rally
93 year old Nagasaki Hibakusha gives his heart-rending testimony
With my grandson Mateo Martinez-Gerson at Lantern Ceremony
Japanese Activists with U.S., Vietnamese, and Russian World Conference
Delegates
Campaign For Peace, Disarmament & Common Security
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