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Hiroshima May Host Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Conference

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Hiroshima, one of the two Japanese cities to have been hit by a nuclear bomb, is set to host the conference of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organization’s group of eminent persons, the Japan Times reported.

MOSCOW, September 26 (RIA Novosti) - Hiroshima, one of the two Japanese cities to have been hit by a nuclear bomb, is set to host the conference of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organization’s group of eminent persons, the Japan Times reported.

Hiroshima, one of the two Japanese cities to have been hit by a nuclear bomb, is set to host the conference of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organization’s group of eminent persons, the Japan Times reported.

The conference is slated to be held in the city late next year; it will bring together international experts and former statesmen.

Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida is expected to make the proposal on Friday at a “Friends of the CTBT” foreign minister meeting, the source said.

The meeting’s location will be highly symbolic, in light of the 70th anniversary of Hiroshima’s bombing at the end of the Second World War.

The treaty has a special meaning for Kishida, a native of Hiroshima. In an article to the US Council on Foreign Relations journal Foreign Affairs this past August, Kishida wrote that he hopes “that in 2015, seven decades after the atomic bombings, the world can take decisive action to prevent history from repeating itself.”

The group of eminent persons was created by the CTBTO last year, and includes about 20 members. Its officially stated goal is to advance the Test Ban Treaty’s ratification, and to “support and complement efforts to promote the Treaty’s entry into force” , using members’ “expertise, experience and political standing.”

The treaty has been signed by 183 countries, but has yet to be ratified by 20 of them, including the United States, Pakistan, China and India. For its part, Russia ratified the treaty in 2000.

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