Representatives from 75 nations were among thousands of spectators who gathered to remember the moment The Japanese city of Hiroshima is marking the 65th anniversary of the world's first atomic bomb attack. For the first time, a representative of the United States, which dropped the bomb on the city, is attending. About 140,000 people were killed or died within months of the bomb being dropped by
With Gaza's economy devastated by years of sanctions and decades of conflict, many families send their children to work in the city's rubbish dumps, streets and workshops. Although Israel eased its blockade in mid-June - allowing in consumer goods - little has changed for Gaza's poorest families, who cannot afford the food and clothing in the market, and rely instead on aid handouts. Unemployment
At 8.15am on 6 August 1945 the lives of Setsuko Morita, her husband, Noboru, and those of everyone they knew changed forever. They were school pupils in Hiroshima, both freed from study to work in the fields on Japan's wartime food production, at the moment the Enola Gay dropped the atomic bomb on their city. Their portraits are among those of 65 survivors in a London exhibition opening tomorrow,
Saddam Hussein's most loyal deputy, Tariq Aziz, has accused Barack Obama of 'leaving Iraq to the wolves' by pressing ahead with a withdrawal of combat troops in the face of festering instability and a surge in violence. In his first interview since he was captured shortly after the fall of Baghdad more than seven years ago, Iraq's former deputy prime minister and long-time face to the world said t
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