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The
exhibition
„Hibakusha
Worldwide“ is
dedicated to
the millions
of people
whose lives
have been
affected by
the nuclear
industry:
Indigenous
people whose
homes were
turned into
nuclear
wastelands by
uranium
mining,
downwinders of
the nuclear
weapons tests,
the survivors
of the bombing
of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki,
the people
affected by
radioactive
fallout from
civil and
military
nuclear
accidents and
nuclear
meltdowns. All
of these
people would
all be better
off, if the
uranium had
been left in
the ground.
The
survivors of
Hiroshima and
Nagasaki are
called
„Hibakusha“.
Many have
dedicated
their lives to
the fight for
a better
world. By
telling their
stories, they
are working
for a world
with „No more
Hibakusha“.
All over the
world, people
are following
their
courageous
example and
are starting
to tell their
stories. As
physicians, we
are advocates
of our
patients, so
we consider it
our duty to
support them
in this
struggle. That
is why we
picked 50
places from
around the
world, where
the nuclear
industry has
caused
environmental
and health
problems. We
have carefully
researched
each one and
now present
the summary of
the scientific
evidence that
exists in form
of this poster
exhibition. It
is important
to realize
that this
exhibition is
not meant to
be
comprehensive.
Beside these
50 places,
there are many
more all over
the world
which would
just as well
deserve to be
in this
exhibition.
These posters
are
illustrations
of the
problem. They
are meant to
raise
questions, to
demonstrate
connections
and to show
the extent to
which we, as a
human race
have caused
harm to our
planet and to
our health.
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About this exbibition
"Hibakusha"
(被曝者)
is the
term the Japanese use for people
who survived the nuclear bombings of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Instead of
victimizing them, the term „Hibakusha“
denotes them as survivors. They are
the living reminders of the horror
that mankind is able to inflict upon
itself. And many of them have taken on
the responsibility to tell their
stories and to fight for a better
world – a world in which such a
catastrophe as the one they witnessed
will never be allowed to occur again.
In order to include the
victims of nuclear weapons testing,
like the downwinders from Nevada, USA
or Semipalatinsk, Russia, the term
„Hibakusha“ was soon „globalized“.
Hibakusha from Japan have been active
in reaching out to Hibakusha from the
Marshall Islands, Kazakhstan, Russia,
the US and French Polynesia, inviting
them to their conferences and
including them in their call „No more
Hibakushas!“
After the Fukushima
nuclear catastrophe in March of 2011,
the term „Hibakusha“ took on quite a
new meaning for many people. And it
dawned on many that nuclear energy and
nuclear weapons are really only two
sides of the same coin:
-
Both require uranium.
The mining of uranium has in
itself created „Hibakusha“, as
miners, local populations and
downwinders of uranium mines
suffer from the effects of
radioactive contamination and have
joined a global fight to keep the
uranium underground.
-
Both require uranium
enrichment.
Every country that has a military
nuclear program first had to start
with a civil nuclear program in
order to create eapon-grade
fissile material. At the same
time, every country that has a
civil nuclear program is able to
develop nuclear weapons. The step
is not too big once a uranium
industry and a civil nuclear
infrastructure exists.
-
Both pose proliferation
risks, as plutonium,
uranium and MOX-fuel are shipped
around the globe to power nuclear
reactors, but could just as well
be used for dirty bombs or nuclear
warheads.
-
Both can severely harm
the environment and people's
health. An accident in a
nuclear power plant, a plutonium
factory or a reprocessing plant
can release massive amounts of
radioactivity, contaminate air,
soils and water and cause helth
effects for many generations.
-
Both ultimately end
up creating more and more radioactive
waste – waste that needs
to be safely deposited and guarded
for hundreds of thousands of
years.
The exhibition
„Hibakusha Worldwide“ aims to show the
connections between the different
links of the nuclear chain: uranium
mining, enrichment, civil nuclear
accidents, reprocessing, nuclear
weapons testing, military nuclear
accidents, nuclear bombings and
nuclear waste. The
posters can be read one after the
other in order to get „the big
picture“ or they can be seen as a
resource library and used as a
basis for further research or
activity.The
exhibition will first be displayed
at the 20th World
Congress of the International
Physicians for the Prevention of
Nuclear War in Hiroshima, Japan in
August 2012. Until that time it
will only exist in its current
online form, which is liable to
change as improvements are still
being made to it. If you have
suggestions for changes, please
contact alexrosen (at) gmx.net.
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Acknowlegdements
This exhibition was created in
2011 and 2012 by an international network
of doctors and medical students, activists
and experts of the International
Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear
War:
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- Ahmed
Saada is a young
doctor from Mansourah, Egypt,
member of the IPPNW Board of
Directors and the Middle East
Regional Vice President of
IPPNW. He researched the
poster on the French nuclear
weapons test
site Reggane, Algeria.
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- Cesar
Aleman is a
medical student from
Managua, Nicaragua and
contributed the poster on
the radiactive accident at Goiânia,
Brazil
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- Vilena
Avaliani
is a psychiatrist from St.
Petersburg, Russia, who
contributed to the poster on the
Soviet nuclear weapons tests on
Novaya Zemlya, Russia
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- Elena
Bezsmertna is a
dental intern from Donetsk,
Ukraine and researched the
poster on the nuclear
meltdown at Chernobyl,
Ukraine
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- Katsuko Kataoka from
Hiroshima, Japan is Professor
Emeritus for Histologyand Cell
Biology at Hiroshima University
and the Secretary General of the
Japanese Physicians for the
Prevention of Nuclear War (JPPNW).
She contributed the poster on the
nuclear bombing of Hiroshima,
Japan
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- Tova
Fuller is a young doctor
from Los Angeles, USA who
contributed the posters on uranium
mining at the Spokane Reservation,
USA and the nuclear accident at
the Sequoyah nuclear facility, USA
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- Bill
Williams is a
General Practitioner from
Melbourne, Australia, Board
Member of the International
Campaign to Abolish Nuclear
Weapons, Australia and President
of the Medical Association for
Prevention of War, Australia.
He contributed the poster on
the uranium mine at Radium
Hill, Australia
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- Ulrike Ackert is
a pediatrician from Berlin,
Germany, who contributed the
poster on the nuclear facility in
Hanford, USA
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- Dale
Dewar is a medical
doctor and the Executive
Director of Physicians for
Global Survival from
Wynyard, Canada. She
contributed the posters on
uranium mining in North
Saskatchewan, Canada and
Elliot Lake, Canada
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- Soumya Shree is a
medical student from Pune, India
and contributed to the poster on
uranium mining in Jadugoda, India.
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- Anna Christina Kothe is
a medical intern from Cologne,
Germany who contributed the poster
on the US nuclear weapons tests at
Alamogordo, USA
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- Susanne Mudra is
a young doctor working in Hamburg,
Germany. She contributed to the
exhibition by resarching the
poster on the nuclear accident at
Tōkai-mura, Japan
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- Alix
Schou is a medical
student from Copenhagen,
Denmark and current European
Student Representative of
IPPNW. She researched the
accident of the US nuclear
armed plane at Thule,
Greenland.
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- Suheir Khajuria is
a young doctor from India now
working in the US and contributed
to the posters on the nuclear
accident at Three Mile Island,
USA, the nuclear bombings in
Nagasaki, Japan and Hiroshima,
Japan and the uranium mine on the
Spokane Reservation."
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- Tatiana
Mitova is a medical
student from Düsseldorf, Germany
who contributed to the poster on
the nuclear accident in Tomsk,
Russia
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- Ehase
Agyeno is an aspiring
cardiologist from Jos, Nigeria
and contributed to this
exhibition by researching the
posters on the French
nuclear weapons test site In
Ekker, Algeria and the
Uranium mining site in
Akokan and Arlit, Niger.
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- Ogebe
Onazi is a medical
intern from Makurdi, Nigeria and
is a member of the IPPNW Board
of Directors as International
Student Representative. He
contributed the posters on
uranium minig at Rössing,
Namibia, Witwatersrand, South
Africa and Mounana, Gabon.
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- John Loretz is
IPPNW's Program Director from
Boston, USA and contributed the
posters on uranium mining in
Shiprock / Tsé Bitʼaʼí and
Churchrock / Kinłitsosinil, USA.
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- Beverly Ho is a
young doctor from Manila,
Philippines and has done the
research on the French nuclear
weapons tests at Fangataufa and
Mururoa, French Polynesia as well
as the US nuclear weapons tests at
Kiritimati, Kiribati.
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- Katharia Schröder is
a young doctor from Gießen,
Germany and contributed the poster
on uranium mining in Têwo / Diebu,
China
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- Anna-Polina
Shurygina
is a young labratory doctor
from St. Petersburg, Russia
and compiled the information
for the poster on the Mayak
Production Association,
Russia.
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- Michael
Christ is IPPNW's
Executive Director from Boston,
USA and contributed the poster on
the Soviet nuclear weapon tests at
Semipalatinsk, Russia
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- Alexandra
Ritz is a young
gynecologist from Freiburg,
Germany and contributed to the
exhibition by researching the
poster on the
nuclear facility at La
Hague, France.
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- Nidia Rodriguez is
a young doctor from Quito, Ecuador
and contributed the poster on the
radioactive accident at Ezeiza,
Argentina
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- Stephi Rosen from
Cologne, Germany holds a degree in
Regional Sciences and has done
extensive research on the
situation of the Lakota tribe in
South Dakota, USA. She contributed
the poster on uranium mining in
the Black Hills / Paha Sapa, USA
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- Apil
Dev Neupane
is a young doctor from
Kathmandu, Nepal, who
contributed the poster on
the Lop Nor nuclear weapons
test site, China.
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- Saima Naz Akhtar
is a medical student from Bergen,
Norway and the current Norwegian
and European Student
Representative. She contributed
the poster on the British nuclear
facility at Sellafield, UK.
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- Tilman
Ruff
from Melbourne, Australia is an
infectious diseases and public
health physician, Associate
Professor in the Nossal
Institute for Global Health,
University of Melbourne,
Australia, member of the IPPNW
Board of Directors and the
Southeast Asia / Pacific
Regional Vice President of
IPPNW. He contributed to
the poster on the British
nuclear weapons tests at
Maralinga, Australia.
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- Arashdeep
Singh is a medical
intern from Jammu and
Kashmir, India and has
contributed to this poster
exhibition by researching
about the uranium mines at
Jadugoda, India and Olympic
Dam, Australia.
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- Shannon Gearhart is
a young doctors from New York, USA
and contributed the posters on US
nuclear weapons tests at the
Nevada Test Site, USA and the
accident of a nuclear armed US
plane at Palomares, Spain
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- Dmitry
Boychenko is a
gastroenterologist from St.
Petersburg, Russia, who
contributed to the poster on the
Soviet nuclear weapons tests on
Nevaya Zemlya, Russia
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- Sophie Gascoigne-Cohen
is a young doctor from Melbourne,
Australia and contributed the
poster on the British nuclear
weapons tests at Maralinga,
Australia
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- André
Michel is a young
psychiatrist from Geneva,
Switzerland and researched the
poster on the US nuclear weapons
test site at Amchitka, USA
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- Alex
Rosen is a
pediatrician from Düsseldorf,
Germany and researched the
posters on uranium mining
at Ranger Mine, Australia,
Jáchymov, Czech Republic,
the Erzgebirge, Germany and
Mailuu-Suu, Kyrgyzstan, as
well as the British nuclear
weapons test site at Emu
Field, Australia, the
nuclear submarine accident
at Chazhma Bay, Russia, the
multiple nuclear meltdowns
at Fukushima, Japan and the
Depleted Uranium
battlefields at Fallujah,
Iraq and Basra, Iraq.
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- Finally, we would like to
thank the support of the staff of
the IPPNW Central Office in Boston
and the continuous input of Dr.
Katsuko Kataoka on the title of
this exhibition.
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.
The
statements on the posters of this
exhibition do not necessarily represent
the view of IPPNW or its national
affiliates.
Responsibile
for content is Dr. Alex Rosen,
representing the editing team of the
exhibition "Hibakusha Worldwide", who
created this exhibition in close
cooperation with experts from all over the
world
Dr. Alex Rosen
can be contacted through e-mail at:
alexrosen - at - gmx.net
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