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Does Abe indicate that he will join the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty?
According to the news from Japan's same network, Hiroshima, Japan, celebrated the 73rd anniversary of the atomic bombing on the 6th. Mayor Matsui mentioned the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in his peace declaration and suggested that the Japanese government make efforts to promote dialogue and coordination. However, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe once again stated that he would not join the Treaty, and the prospect of abolishing nuclear weapons was slim. The victims of the nuclear explosion strongly criticized that "the government will only talk about it."

With the stagnation of nuclear disarmament, the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons adopted by the United Nations last year has become the hope of Japanese nuclear explosion victims whose average age is over 82. After the ceremony, Yoshioka Yukio, secretary-general of the liaison meeting of Hiroshima nuclear explosion victims' groups who met with Abe, said angrily: "Japan should join the treaty as a nuclear explosion victim and make its own contribution, but the practice of (government-government) only escaping makes people very angry."

Ichichi Matsui pointed out that the appeal of nuclear explosion victims "sounded the alarm for breaking the temptation to possess nuclear weapons", and he also appealed to the world that "with the decrease of nuclear explosion victims year by year, it is more and more important to listen to their voices". He said that nuclear-armed countries that deny the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons should at least earnestly implement the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT). At the same time, he further advocated making the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons a "milestone towards a nuclear-weapon-free world".

A 73-year-old nuclear explosion victim called "because I am the youngest" and traveled long distances to call for ratification of the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty at overseas conferences. The victims of nuclear explosion in Japan are braving the cold and hot summer to collect signatures, hoping to complete the "nuclear waste" that failed in the two eras of Showa and Heisei.

According to Japan's NHK, 50,000 people attended the commemoration of "Nuclear Explosion Day" held in Hiroshima Peace Park on the 6th. According to the data, the Hiroshima nuclear explosion caused 3 104 1 18 deaths.

It must be banned.

The news comes from Netease News.