tv [untitled] May 5, 2011 5:30am-6:00am EDT
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on the good. video and to my. mind the old posts. are as history now with the palm of your. call. to judge you with us here on our team one thirty pm in moscow these are your headlines washington revises its promise to release the need to put pork so will some of the law in the saying it could instigate more violence constant backtracking bided ministration on its account of the mission against the al qaeda it is feeding more suspicion. that bin laden's death has put pakistan's army on the highest state of alert amid fears of backlash but people in the country are furious over the u.s. war on terror that they claim is fueling instability rather than curbing it and.
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the international criminal court wants to arrest program here for alleged war crimes against libyan civilians while the coalition forces accused of intervening in the north african country to stop its leader from jumping off the greenback an oil trade. when nuclear weapons were first used in one nine hundred forty five it changed the world forever up next we are asking the children of armageddon if such a tragedy will ever be repeated the documentary coming up. here. in. the nuclear age is sixty years ten cars down as far east peace is concerned soon to the last atomic bomb sometimes very similar to gun. perhaps in less than twenty or thirty yes or so that it's i
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would like to pass on my grandmother still radiated to the younger generations pokus tonight my dream is to not let it die. how great is the threat of nuclear war today. nuclear weapons have become the current your power. how do you explain that the five permanent members of the security council and they are the ones who have the nuclear weapons. over the five most powerful states in the world. united states russia britain france china. so india lots of just says that they're going to get into luker clubman pakistan israel's and there's still this constant use of ok no nuclear weapons a clear up at any time. without a trace he disappeared but we were around. june the cold war the war each about the mutually assured destruction so-called not intervened russia
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states that fear is gone however we are not out of the danger zones at all there are still some trying to sudden thousand nuclear warheads of which twelve thousand generate are approaching the fact. that. we should forget the rush him an artist. there's a new rhetoric at the moccasins with nuclear weapons. well. the weapons are for use as far as i know were inspired airship. what is the legacy of that weapon what does that hold in store for us. x.x. he was three years old when she was exposed to the bone when she was twelve she developed leukemia and she hoped that if she made one thousand paper cranes she would be killed.
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here i'm a soldier afghan deaths in the screamers became disillusioned peace. i thought the cold war was over and the nuclear threat a thing of the past it's not a nightmare is alive and well with the help of the military strategies of the nuclear powers other one hundred forty three thousand dead as he does she need to be slowly remembered as the triumph of the u.s. over japan. from hiroshima to the pacific islands where nuclear testing took place the decisions made by american strategists are taking a heavy toll on another generation mikey is a third generation he. or grandmother survived the radiation but he doesn't want
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the bomb to ever be used again. but i also discovered how alone much he wants because even here people don't care enough about this old weapon other than to be the highlight of the newseum. a lot easier than i am only talking to my friends about my activism. and they don't care about such serious matter sort of thing like . only the people who was there understand what happened under the mushroom cloud today it's not so it is very difficult in these peaceful time to make young people understand how tragic it was that he is the youngest died a hero she met peace memorial museum but she goes further than providing information our goal is to provoke fear and dread it but i don't want that children have never experienced an atomic bombing that's why i use simple language while trying to make an impact on a family it's in a city on it it was in you know at least let's look over here it was that turned
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wall see the airplane. in that airplane when they were carrying the bomb into that airplane. is about do you know what time it was. unable. it was eight fifteen. even i was in my house in front of the al char i had been used paper spread out and was treating it like i had just opened it and i filled the bluish white light coming in from the garden around the hole in our employ ankle and it.
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it was complete darkness and i couldn't move i was bullied under the house eventually i managed to get out by walking barefoot across a wooden board people were completely black and and her burnt queue miners were torn apart or on one of them women were walking naked in the streets covering themselves with their hands ashamed. that was about the time when everybody finished breakfast the heat was so intense that flash mounted and blackened just like when you burnt toast it was like that. but it was it about how they disfigured corpses were naked except with
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a lot since even. as it is the most of this was their own but it was left to identify the body is my skin rotted and almost pass on to my aunty destructed nanny to me cookie from herbs i drank his tea every day for the rest of the year since we didn't have medicine and we had just natural cures you know these are all children of us the they were all bad food to commit these abilities mum was trying to help but she was also a victim they didn't really have any medication so they used things like tamper all oil to try to heal people though they didn't know that with them it was a living hell of a leg hell on earth than them. and will this create that you brought your children here it will this is not a fun place to be you think you think you very much good morning do you see some black and launch boxes in other building please take your time to look at them.
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lloyd i can remember well it is freely how difficult i don't want to remember. rocky spight to convey the dreadful images runs counter to the priorities of our country actually japan looks for ways to rewrite its history we had many pictures of victims in the textbooks but. the committee says it is too. dark to invent young people and no. fact is fading away. japan has tendencies. umbrella of the u.s. in its current your policy their logic is it's a necessary evil you put
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a whip on the society you. feel the sole explanation of. the united states. has been introduced to this country as well. meant one means precipitate the end of the second world war and it's a poor poor people. i remember there was. one great exultation i was there lived a i've been fighting the japanese for four years i was a pearl harbor on a destroyer a morning bear. but as time went on and with the knowledge that we could have won the war with all that you. live in a rebel. hiroshima nagasaki there are get cities up to make one we were kicked intact because they wanted to know
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exactly how the effect was to be. why their prime we you know we cut off almost all. the wire in the area. now because pitch in a few mobs. three days after hiroshima it was not as much seventy five thousand. the annual commemoration of the bombing of matthew the opportunity to meet with tony fernandes actually the student had just returned from the united states. and i took an american history class and we started to use all the tonic gome literature rock art ought to go there was a tiff and then i'd have aspects drop an atomic bombs in japan let's think about
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and discuss this or. i was quite shocked by that question i realize but then it'd tell people about the consequences of that olmec why am i crying out. my grandmother never told me anything i only heard the whole story quite recently all right after it entered my second year of university. really i thought this could be the only time i hear it and i remember it's made me very happy go well you know along with her. did a share of just wrongly in the past it was just the two of us i was always around her as a group but it discovered that she or was a grandmother i didn't know. it to them with my grandma has always lead to get a feeling of guilt. but she has never shown any anger towards the united states. when you will of. all the
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straw and so they refer economical. it was such a devastating experience. and destroys the will of the people it's like. the sun goes and the story became a volunteer in the sky i had to the he was speaking the study group and all the experiences. about my mother i never talked about because she felt guilty it said she survived. the mother and sister never crying for help. and yes a good time we were all looking for her. she tried to teach her mother it and i told how moderate cling to it is an homage to blot all over her but it's how should
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i get. killed i think i was at school playing marbles when suddenly because dawn flashed man up and however i didn't see the flash of a turn of one of the farmhouses was burning and i was very scared to see that that's where my memory of the horror stops actual nine. the time of the snow my mother couldn't express herself normally i was so my father was here in a psychiatric hospital how i couldn't see her very own when the doctors didn't clean her condition to their home if. they thought my mother was so that my mother
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had become one saying that she was put away in a place like a brazen seeing her there made me so. yes if the bomb was the only thing enjoy my you will go insane. eat up and i get a bit more ungenerous norrish to talk about it but i must. say that cannot speak your. truth i mean of my daughter is a french woman. you know my daughter's child. kid you got the second child you got to fall out with pretty but he was born with six fingers. in it was this my fault. it's that i was exposed to the body. type of thing happens when i saw my grandchild covered in blood on his hands for the first time. this i saw the flash of the
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atomic bomb. that's you know. my oldest son had a problem with the wolf in the hearts and so very much so that. some of they had surgery and they found out that because it was genetic i blame myself if this is in the now more than. four i was not afraid once i told these that's of the bone would lead from one generation to the next one. when the young people are worried they can turn to the radiation effects research foundation established by american scientists after the bombs drop the institute gathers statistical studies on the victims that he goes into a medicine can. be done on my burrito and is he the
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box. what's on the bottom two of her children died of cancer and there are no is there a link. we have been doing research based on statistical models since one thousand forty eight but we have not found any linkage so we decided to just study the d.n.a. of his night. he will. generations . until now i hadn't really been afraid but i've heard that's my generation has more problems than the second generation farmer though. cause of. the diseases caused by the genetic mutations are such a tragedy. what are you sure you want to know. we also have newer information it's not really well understood
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a lot of experimental what are called transition a type of facts the facts that have not necessarily appear in the children of people exposed to radiation but maybe you can skip generations. until the results of the american japanese the nation's d.n.a. studies are now the younger generation is left wondering and given the social stigma attached to the radiation this scout who takes much and all the children. with my husband who was of sand but she's daughter was labeled to heat a coup showing the press that this look at this front of him to green that's when he proposed to me that i was he really bought a team. i was worried about what would happen to our children about time it was
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considered a transmittable disease so i didn't know what would happen. i thought well what if it happens it happens a. my love is stronger than my fear you know someone i still worry that my wife and daughter will be affected by the moment. my mother in law feels responsible and she suffers the most innocent discussed. i was born and raised in hiroshima outsiders always emphasize that i am film here ashima sure ashima sure ashima i don't enjoy that very much. does not agree with being for a series she must have been you know to eat it to make a contribution. i know it is and so since university alone to want to dot conflicts in the world. to the real is it turns out always the children. this
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is the lands in general. the nuclear powers are perfectly aware that their bombs are ten twenty one hundred. but with an down cynicism the military are searching for more flexible uses. there are discussions about the development of nuclear weapons of smaller caliber or of the capacity to penetrate the earth deeper american plans to develop what we call buster of weapons that we say will not spread radioactivity actually in such weapons only a short distance on the earth and stir up more radioactive debris and again in the case of ferocious that type of radioactive fallout was limited because of the severe burst weapon that's not the same as all of them you're sure you're building materials themselves contaminated by the force of the explosion and now we've moved
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in the second nuclear age. we have moved into an era when nuclear weapons are threatened for war fighting purposes if you simply have weapons that are stretch edges huge bombs that's more for deterrent but if you have smaller weapons that might be a temptation to use them to smoke out taliban's or what have you. while the super powers plan their next nuclear armageddon the family's appeal seemed like mantra. there is a surreal feeling. symbols and words are all that the japanese passed this have to confront the threat and these are loaded with the memory of having once been the bad guys or young people in japan it's sad to see much of a sucky. we should. forget about. we should all what. we know. how to get.
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something done. on streets then does it mean we should be quiet yet. that's why we can't be quiet until an arm. around thousand japanese politicians nation two years ago or perhaps it's time for japan to consider the possibility of our being nuclear weapons. as well as rocket technology we have abundant component abundant plutonium. it's hard to tell the public will react when the government decides to go nuclear. my
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supposition is if. south korea or north korea or if the united and the group of nuclear weapons or one night japanese public or change. the locus nuclear deterrence is a fact it's not good but it saddens me to think that we have found no other way to live in peace and also get on and on aim for japan acquires the bomb this means that the lesson of your ashima and nagasaki has been lost since i came out twenty first century will be the center of china this prediction scares many japanese and makes them think it's stronger with american states and know he does she know is
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not and it's a scream heralding a new chapter in human history the nuclear age stimulated by the scope of the devastation the united states launches its pursuit of the absolute weapon it selects the pacific ocean for its new board tory but this liberal tory isn't happening. imagine if. it was punching. and i. ran and job and that is one point six equivalent and she my shot every day for twelve years i would they still want that . they resists it. but then. the fight. evelyn lives in honolulu where she attends college like other inhabitants of the marshall islands an archipelago lost in the middle of the civic ocean she lives in exile forced the way by the fallout of
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nuclear testing fifty years later her island is still contaminated and the united states are not really taking full responsibility of what they did. they're seeing all. we're going to give you one would think and it just is just plain seemed fair to me. they were out there off the island and the island the marshal on is. it where you're like god intended you to be. my j is to. be a school and my people. the economy every country depends on american aid and the on balance dialog between the islanders and the almighty america tears a young woman apart how do you obtain justice from the united states when you are marshallese maybe with a memory the only weapon evelyn inherited the reason americans are giving us money
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because of the survivors i just go and make sure that their story doesn't like that they still remember it so that suffered more from the. without a conference i look up the title what i think a set of the bomb i did a presentation. and they were all shot because the they were like. what. knew there was there was a bomb the march on. and the even bigger than the one in the regime. number one yonder like where is the marshal. it's on the marshall islands. and to know why is and didn't x. is. actually named big moving there and one of them from there.
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