Number of atomic bomb survivors falls below 100 000 for first time
Number of atomic bomb survivors falls below 100,000 for first time
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alt="Visitors stopping to look at the Atomic Bomb Dome in the centre of Hiroshima in June 28."/>Visitors stopping to look at the Atomic Bomb Dome in the centre of Hiroshima on June 28.
PHOTO: AFP
JapanTOKYO – The total number of officially recognised Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bomb survivors has fallen below 100,000 for the first time since the certification system began in fiscal year 1957, government data showed on July 1.
The number of survivors holding a health book, which entitles the holder to free lifetime medical care, stood at 99,130 as at the end of March, down 7,695 from the previous year, according to the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare. Their average age rose 0.55 years to 86.13.
As the 80th anniversaries of the 1945 US atomic bombings and end of World War II approach, questions are being raised about how best to support ageing survivors and pass on their stories.
According to the ministry, Hiroshima prefecture had the highest number of health-book holders at 48,310, followed by Nagasaki at 23,543 and Fukuoka at 3,957.
There were around 200,000 health book holders in fiscal year 1957, with the number peaking at more than 372,000 in fiscal year 1980 before beginning a steady decline. The number of holders fell below 300,000 in fiscal year 1999, and 200,000 in fiscal year 2013.
Individuals are recognised as “hibakusha”, or survivors of the atomic bombings, if they were within designated areas or in utero at the time of the attacks, entered either of the two cities within two weeks of the attacks or were exposed to radiation under conditions likely to affect their health.
While hibakusha are entitled
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