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Nagasaki remembers bombing

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ASSOCIATED PRESS
A woman and a boy pray next to lanterns along a river, paying tribute to the victims of the atomic bombing in Nagasaki, southern Japan Tuesday, Aug. 9, 2011. Nagasaki marked the 66th anniversary of the world's second atomic bomb attack. (AP Photo/Kyodo News) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT, NO LICENSING IN CHINA, FRANCE, HONG KONG, JAPAN AND SOUTH KOREA
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Doves fly during a ceremony held in front of the Statue of Peace at Nagasaki Peace Park in Nagasaki, southern Japan Tuesday, Aug. 9, 2011 to mark the 66th anniversary of the world's second atomic bomb attack. (AP Photo/Kyodo News) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT, NO LICENSING IN CHINA, FRANCE, HONG KONG, JAPAN AND SOUTH KOREA

TOKYO >> The U.S. sent its first representative Tuesday to the annual memorial for the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, one of two horrific attacks that led Japan to surrender in World War II.

The Nagasaki bombing by the United States 66 years ago killed some 80,000 people. Three days earlier, the U.S. had dropped another nuclear bomb that killed up to 140,000 in the Japanese city of Hiroshima.

U.S. Charge d’Affaires James P. Zumwalt, the first American representative to visit the Nagasaki memorial, said in a statement that President Barack Obama hoped to work with Japan toward his goal “of realizing a world without nuclear weapons” — a commitment Japan has made repeatedly since the war.

Obama last year sent Ambassador John Roos to the 65th anniversary memorial of the bombing in Hiroshima, and Roos visited Nagasaki twice last year on other dates, according to the U.S. Embassy in Japan.

Zumwalt joined Nagasaki’s residents and mayor on Tuesday in observing a moment of silence at 11:02 a.m. (0202 GMT) — the moment the bomb dropped on the city on Aug. 9, 1945, in the closing days of war. Six days later Japan surrendered.

As in past years, a bell rang out in a prayer for peace and bomb victims who were children during the attack sang a Japanese song called “Never Again.”

Mayor Tomihisa Taue called on Japan to change its nuclear policy and reject not just atomic weapons but also nuclear power — as decades-old fears of radiation sickness were renewed in March by a nuclear power plant disaster following a massive earthquake and tsunami.

“Why must this nation that has so long fought for bomb victims once again live in fear of radiation?” Taue said. “The time has come to thoroughly talk about what kind of society we want and make a choice.”

He called for a shift from nuclear reactors — Japan has 54 along its coast — to renewable energy sources.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan promised Japan would work toward making society less dependent on nuclear power.

“We must never forget,” he said of Nagasaki, “and it must never be repeated.”

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