Peace Culture
- A New Paradigm for a Nuclear-Free World-
2nd United Cities and Local GovernmentiUCLGj World Congress
October 30, 2007 Jeju, South Korea
Dr. Tadatoshi Akiba, Mayor of Hiroshima, Japan, President of Mayors for
Peace
Thank you for your introduction. My Dear Colleague,
Mayor Deetman, Your Excellency Jorge Sampoio, Honorable Mayor Bertrand Delanoe,
Mayor Moncayo Gallegos, Father Smangaliso Mkhatshwa, Fellow Mayors, Ladies and
Gentlemen,
It is an honor and privilege for me to address you here, and since I am
the mayor of Hiroshima, Ifd like to talk about nuclear weapons, which
Hiroshima was the first ever to experience.
On that fateful day sixty-two years ago, at 8:15 AM to
be exact, one single bomb attached to a parachute exploded approximately 600
meters above my city and its population of 350, 000.@@A flash, followed by an enormous blast
created literally a living hell on Earth.
Even before the bomb actually exploded, those within a
500-meter radius had received a lethal dose of radiation. They were already fated to die. With the temperature above 4,000 degrees
centigrade, most of those near the hypocenter were instantly evaporated. The eyes of young girls watching the
parachute were melted. Their faces
became giant charred blisters. The skin
of people seeking help dangled from their fingernails. Their hair stood on end. Their clothes were ripped to shreds. People trapped in houses toppled by the blast
were burned alive. Others died when their eyeballs and internal organs burst from their bodies|Hiroshima
was a hell where those who somehow survived literally envied the dead.
Within that year, 140,000 had died. Many who escaped death initially are still suffering from leukemia, thyroid
cancer, and a vast array of other afflictions.
But there was more.
Sneered at for their keloid scars, discriminated against in employment
and marriage, unable to find understanding for profound emotional wounds,
survivors suffered and struggled day after day, questioning the meaning
of life.
Many cities in the world actually have had experiences
similar to this. I do not have time to mention all the names of cities that are members
of this organization and Mayors for Peace that can tell you similar stories
of overwhelming disaster.
And a similar message comes out of such
experiences. The message in Hiroshima from our agony is a beam of light now shining
the way for the human family. To ensure that gno one else should ever
suffer as we did,h the hibakusha have
continuously spoken about experiences they would much rather forget, and we
must never forget their accomplishments. I firmly believe they have been instrumental in preventing a third use
of nuclear weapons.
However, despite their best efforts, vast arsenals of nuclear weapons remain
in high states of readiness|deployed or easily available. Proliferation is gaining
momentum, and the human family still faces the peril of extinction. This is because a handful of old-fashioned
leaders, clinging to an early 20th century worldview in thrall to the rule of
brute force, are rejecting global democracy, turning their backs on the reality
of the atomic bombings, the message of the hibakusha and the majority voices of the nations and citizens of the world.
However, here in the 21st century the time has come
when these problems can actually be solved through the power of the
people. Former colonies have become
independent. Democratic governments have
taken root. Learning the lessons of
history, people have created international rules prohibiting attacks on non-combatants
and the use of inhumane weapons. They
have worked hard to make the United Nations an instrument for the resolution of
international disputes. And now city
governments, entities that have always walked with and shared in the tragedy
and pain of their citizens, are rising up.
In the light of human wisdom, they are leveraging the voices of their
citizens to lift international politics.
We mayors know the trials and tribulations of our
citizens. We know how precarious and
hard-won their economic wellbeing is. We
know what it takes to build and maintain a livable city. Henceforth we are not going to let anyone
just blow away our lives and livelihoods and blast our cities to bits and
pieces. There are some things which are
criminal, and we must state most clearly and urgently that ecivicidef, the
destruction of cities and the snuffing out of the lives and civilization, is
right up there with genocide and other high crimes.
More simply, gCities suffer most from war.h That is why Mayors for Peace, with 1,793 city
members (actually, that is the official count but thanks to the approximately
20 or 30 mayors who joined to this organization yesterday, we now have more
than 1,820 from 123 countries and regions around the world), is actively
campaigning to eliminate all nuclear weapons by the year 2020. The time is long past for hoping and praying
that our national governments will protect us from the nuclear danger. They only multiplied those dangers during the
Cold War, and in the 15 years since the end of the Cold War they have only marginally
reduced their massive arsenals, while nuclear proliferation and the advent of
international terrorism have exacerbated the situation.
Eleven years ago the International Court of Justice
told them, in no uncertain terms, that they were under an unequivocal legal
obligation to get to work immediately on agreements eleading to nuclear
disarmament in all its aspects.f And
still nothing! Some experts are so
disheartened by this abject failure that they openly wonder whether it will
take the actual use of a nuclear weapon to elicit real leadership.
My friends, you and I know who the victims of that
nuclear attack would be: the innocent citizens of your city, my city, and our
cities! We do not have the luxury of
waiting around to see if such an atrocity would have the desired effect! We are left with no recourse but to
intervene.
Tomorrow you will be adopting the Jeju
Declaration. Itfs a very important
document and among its many vital points will be one that we may call for
short: Cities Are Not Targets. With that
Declaration you will be claiming, on behalf of the majority of humanity that
now lives in cities, that cities are no longer passive hostages to the
threatened destruction of our cities.
This will be a great milestone.
But it is one thing to claim a right, and another to exercise it!
With the Jeju Declaration we, the representatives of
the cities of the world, are saying that our citizens must be represented in
decisions of global importance. I believe that Mayors for Peace and UnitedCities and Local Governments
can ensure that we are represented in a fully professional and effective
manner in all relevant international forums. It will take some time and pressure, but we
will take our seat at the table and our voice will be heard. That is our right, and anything less would be
a betrayal of the sacred trust our citizens have placed in us.
In three weeks, the Executive Conference of Mayors for Peace will meet
in Florence, Italy. We will be considering an ambitious new phase
of the 2020 Vision Campaign. Despite the
disappointment of the 2005 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference,
we will make every good faith effort toward success at the 2010 Review
Conference. If our governments should
fail again in 2010, we will not wait quietly for the 2015 Review. We will intervene with countries of good
faith around the world, and we will intervene effectively.
Let there be no doubt that the Decade of Disarmament declared
by the United Nations will be the decisive decade for humanity. Will we eliminate nuclear weapons or will
they eliminate us? There can be no more
emuddling through.f We either take the
bull by the horns or it gores us. All
the nonproliferation measures in the world will come to naught as long as tens
of thousands of nuclear weapons and hundred of tons of weapon-grade fissile
material continue to threaten our planet.
They have got to go. I wish it
could be done sooner than 2020, but I challenge anyone to justify why it should
be done even a day later.
Mayors for Peace is a network of cities that welcomes
participation from anywhere in the world, conducting City Diplomacy by
utilizing this network. However, we are
advocating more. It can be described as
a paradigm change, or paradigm shift, in conducting affairs of the world. The global community could learn a great deal
in designing the future by how the networks such as UCLG and Mayors for Peace
work. These networks represent the
paradigm I am talking about, one based on cooperation, reconciliation, dialogue,
negotiations, partnership, humanity, trust and caring. There are many more words to describe this, but in Hiroshima, we call this
paradigm the Peace Culture.
It must replace the war culture paradigm, which has ruled the world too
long, if we are to survive the 21st century.
To accomplish this goal, I would like to urge all
members of UCLG who are not yet members to also join Mayors for Peace. On a more modest level, I would like to ask
your help in this so that we have at least 2020 members for our 2020
Vision. Please join us in standing up
for our cities and against nuclear weapons.
Thank you very much.
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