Terumi Tanaka, Shigemitsu Tanaka and Toshiyuki Mimaki, from left, representatives of this year’s Nobel Peace Prize winner Nihon Hidankyo during the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony at the City Hall in Oslo on Tuesday
21:53 JST, December 10, 2024
OSLO (Jiji Press) — The Japan Confederation of A- and H-Bomb Sufferers Organizations, or Nihon Hidankyo, received the 2024 Nobel Peace Prize at an award ceremony in the Norwegian capital of Oslo on Tuesday.
The Nobel Peace Prize medal and diploma were presented to three hibakusha atomic bomb survivors, including Terumi Tanaka, 92, cochair of the group.
Nihon Hidankyo became the second Japanese recipient of the Peace Prize after the late Prime Minister Eisaku Sato in 1974. The latest milestone is expected to add momentum to efforts to abolish nuclear weapons.
The ceremony was held at Oslo City Hall and attended by a delegation from Nihon Hidankyo, including children and grandchildren of hibakusha.
In October, the Norwegian Nobel Committee named Nihon Hidankyo the winner of the 2024 Peace Prize “for its efforts to achieve a world free of nuclear weapons and for demonstrating through witness testimony that nuclear weapons must never be used again.”
The committee noted that the hibakusha group’s grassroots movement led to the development of the “nuclear taboo,” or a “powerful international norm” that stigmatizes “the use of nuclear weapons as morally unacceptable.” It added that this taboo is now “under pressure” due to nuclear threats in ongoing wars.
Established in 1956, Nihon Hidankyo has sent hibakusha to U.N. and other international conferences on nuclear disarmament to call for the abolition of nuclear weapons.
When the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, which worked with Nihon Hidankyo to promote the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, won the 2017 Peace Prize, two Nihon Hidankyo members, including Tanaka, were invited to the award ceremony.
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