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AP’s powerful photographs indicate the scars of Nagazaki atomic Bomb

Nagazasaki, Japan (AP) – 80 Atomic Bombian of Atomic Bombians in Nagasaki, Japan, Associated Press publishes extraordinary survival of one survival.

Sumituse Tanaguchi, who died in 2017, was 16 when the US B-29 cast a bomb in the city. The scars on his back, burned green, and testified that day, on August 9, 1945, according to invisible testimony.

Photos, published in 2015 by Eugene Hoshiko, AP photographer in Tokyo, showing more than the remains of extreme harassment. Taniguchu viewed them as warnings, the evidence shown freely and so no one did not say that he did not see the horrible effects of nuclear.

Even after his death, Taniguch’s inheritance endures. Like a Co-saususperson Yenhon Hidankyo, the Japanese organization of the US Bomber in Hiroshima and Nagasachi, decades helping tools to lead nuclear gifts.

When Nohon Hidankyo was given the Nobel Peace Prize Award in 2024, many remembered a quiet, moving taniguchi’s voice, and scars refused to hide.

Here are genuine news from 2015, published in the 70th anniversary of the attack:

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Smoke slowly with left-handed arm, tanigusu graduated Sumitueru in his 86-year-old body to show two tourists from Nagasaki.

70 years, he is a web of wounds covering his back, and three rotten back ribbons and are constantly distressing. His wife is still using a cream that softenes every morning to reduce the irritation of scars. Not a day passing without pain.

He was 16 and at work as a powerful bookman where a powerful explosion was erupted. He had been about 1.8 kilometers (1.1 miles) from the “Fat Man” bombing plutonium in the Aug 9, 1945 miles, killed more than 70,000 people. Six days later, Japan offered, completed World War II.

Speaking in a weak word for a struggle, he told the article last month to wander for three days with the Daze, not knowing the seriousness of his injury. He saw something like a rotten fabric hanging on his back, the shoulder and arm: it was his skin.

He would spend the following 21 months lying in his stomach, receiving treatment with his rainfall, a meat decay, and the bones. He kneels, and he heard nurses passing away from the hall that asked each other when a boy breathes. “I just killed me,” she thought.

Because he lived so long, as one of the epidemic in the country grew, he met jointly to the council to extend an arm.

Taniguchi hopes that no one else will have to suffer about the pain of nuclear weapons. He leads Nagasaki who survives a group working against the increase in nuclia, although the aging and pneumonia makes it difficult to play a visible role. After many years, his words are taken by frustration.

“I want this to be the end,” he said, smashing his shirt back.

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This is a photographic gallery that is selected by photographers associated with the characters.

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