The two U.S. atomic bombs that killed and injured half a million people in Japan 65 years ago continue to haunt new generations, concerned that they may have inherited genes altered by the radiation.


Katsuhiro Hirano is one of hundreds of thousands of descendants of the"hibakusha", the name given to the survivors of the attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki (west), where more than 200,000 people were killed on the spot or in the months that followed. " All those who belong to the second generation of 'hibakusha' have the same fear: to discover cancer at any moment," explains Mr. Hirano, 52, whose mother, now deceased, miraculously survived the destruction of Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, in the last days of World War II. Some 240,000 people are officially recognized as "hibakusha", which provides them with free medical care, but many others suffering from blast-related illnesses claim this status...

(©AFP / November 12, 2010 08h25)

HIBAKUSHAS