*Nuclear Abolition Flame*

*Flame lighting ceremony – Peace Park, Hiroshima August 5, 4pm*



Hiroshima Flame to travel the world for nuclear abolition



For immediate release

Contacts:

Alyn Ware (New Zealand/United States. Phone +1 646 752 8702)

Steve Leeper (Hiroshima. Phone +81 90 6433 8660)

Mayra Gomez (United States/Hiroshima. Phone +1 949 466 3036, or at Hiroshima
Grand Hotel +81 82-263-5111)

Mayor Bob Harvey (New Zealand/Hiroshima. Phone +64 21 986 107)



A torch to be lit from the Hiroshima Flame on August 5 will be carried on a
march around the world to promote the abolition of nuclear weapons – ending
up at the United Nations in May 2010 for a major inter-governmental
conference on nuclear non-proliferation.



The Hiroshima Flame, which stands in the Hiroshima Peace Park, was lit from
the embers of the nuclear explosion in 1945 in memory of those who
perished.  It will remain alight until all nuclear weapons are eliminated.



The World March for Peace and Non-violence
<http://www.worldmarch.co.nz/>will carry the Nuclear Abolition Flame
around the world, starting from New
Zealand on 2 October 2009 – the anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi’s birthday –
and then travelling through 90 countries involving millions of people in
concerts, rallies, exhibitions, conferences and other events along its
route.



‘The nuclear explosion was a horror that must never be repeated,” said Alyn
Ware, New Zealand coordinator for the World March. ‘The Hiroshima Flame will
be carried from city to city – country to country – around the world to
remind people that nothing justifies the incineration of hundreds of
thousands of innocent civilians and the maiming of hundreds of thousands
more through the blast, fire and radiation effects of a nuclear bomb.’



‘The World March is a demonstration of the desire of people from all
countries for the abolition of nuclear weapons, the end of war and the
promotion of non-violence at all levels of society,’ says Mayra Gomez, an
indigenous Bolivian who is organizing the August 5 torch-lighting ceremony.
‘It is receiving incredible support from Heads of State, United Nations
officials, Nobel Peace laureates, mayors, parliamentarians, indigenous
leaders, celebrities, religious communities, youth and other civil society
actors.’



*‘**To avoid a repeat nuclear catastrophe in the future we must act today.
We must create consciousness of the need for reduced tensions and
cooperation between peoples,’ says ** Rafael de la Rubia, International
Spokesperson of the World March and President of World without Wars. ‘**The
horror of Hiroshima and Nagasaki has not been consigned to history.  The
images of pain and absurd death continue to live in our consciences but at
the same time they feed our profound aspiration for a world where never
again will this atrocity be possible.’ ***



‘The time to abolish nuclear weapons is now‘ says New Zealand Mayor Bob
Harvey who is in Japan for the Mayors for Peace Assembly. Mayor Harvey will
be lighting the Nuclear Abolition torch from the Hiroshima Flame on August 5
to take back to New Zealand for the start of the World March. ‘New Zealand -
which has outlawed nuclear weapons and was recently declared the most
peaceful country in the world by the Global Peace
Index<http://www.visionofhumanity.org/gpi/home.php>– is a perfect
place to start this march around the world with the Nuclear
Abolition Flame. By the time it gets to the United Nations in May 2010 for
the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference, we hope that the
governments of the world will be ready to abolish nuclear weapons worldwide
through a global nuclear weapons treaty.’



‘Nuclear abolition has moved from being an elusive ideal to a realizable
goal,’ says Alyn Ware who organized the drafting of a model nuclear weapons
treaty now being promoted by the United Nations Secretary
General<http://www.gsinstitute.org/pnnd/updates/NWC.html>.
‘The Model Nuclear Weapons
Convention<http://www.un.org/ga/search/view_doc.asp?symbol=A%2F62%2F650&Submit=Search&Lang=E>demonstrates
the legal, technical and political measures that would enable
to complete elimination of nuclear weapons under effective international
control.’



‘Everyone can support by participating in the Nuclear Abolition Flame
regardless of whether or not they live along the route of the World March,’
says Ashley Woods – founder of the Nuclear Abolition
Flame<http://www.abolitionflame.org/>project. ‘As well as the physical
flame being carried around the world,
there is a virtual flame which is accessible world-wide on internet and
email. ’We encourage everyone to circulate the virtual Nuclear Abolition
Flame electronically and to encourage governments to act to prohibit nuclear
weapons in their countries and abolish them globally.’



‘Youth everywhere are participating in the World March because we want a
world of peace not war,’ says Una McGurk, coordinator of ENACT – youth
enabling action <http://www.enact.org.nz/> and promoter of Schools Peace
Week<http://www.enact.org.nz/component/content/article/1-home/9-whats-hot-right-now>which
includes the anniversaries of the nuclear bombings of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki. ‘Our future depends on the wise use of resources to provide
education, health, food, water, jobs and a clean environment for all - not
the destabilizing waste of over a trillion dollars on militaries and war.
Nuclear abolition is the first step towards such a world.’



ENDS



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