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It was nearly 70 years ago on 6 and 9 August 1945 that the atomic bombs were dropped on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. These are tragedies that are to be remembered and must never happen again, Isabel Apawo Phiri, associate and acting general secretary of the World Council of Churches (WCC), said.

“Our thoughts and prayers go out to the hundreds of thousands of people who suffered these terrible attacks and to the aging survivors among them who still cry ‘Never again’ today,” Phiri said in a statement released on Tuesday, 5 August.

“We also pray for those whose lives and lands have been shattered as a result of the many nuclear tests which followed World War Two—in the Pacific, Central Asia, the western United States and elsewhere,” she said in the statement.

In their July 2014 meeting the 150 delegates of the WCC Central Committee declared that “nuclear weapons cannot be reconciled with real peace” and must be eliminated.

They went on to say that using the energy in the atom to create something that threatens life is a “misuse of God’s creation.”

The WCC is calling on its member churches to pray for leaders around the world who rely on nuclear weapons for their security to remember and learn the lessons of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and to rid themselves of their nuclear arsenals.

The majority of nations around the world reject weapons of mass destruction, and the WCC, its member churches and partners look to that majority  for “conclusive action to eliminate nuclear weapons because of what these weapons do to humanity and the environment,” the statement said.

WCC statement on the 69th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki

Central Committee statement towards a nuclear-free world