
Japan’s HIROSHIMA On a gloomy and soggy Friday morning, the Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and his wife Yuko welcomed the leaders of the Group of Seven as they began the summit’s formal first day.
Written by Chris Muhizi Minembwe Capital News 2:50pm Nairobi Kenya Time.
Outside the Peace Memorial Museum in the park, Kishida welcomed the incoming leaders one by one and led them inside. The museum depicts the actuality of the city being atomically bombed by American forces at the close of World War II.
Later, they posed for pictures in a line before the expansive concrete memorial created by famed Japanese architect Kenzo Tange, which includes an arch-shaped cenotaph where the names of everyone killed by the bomb are inscribed.
Kishida repeated on Thursday night that he wants to use the occasion to emphasize a goal of “a world without nuclear weapons,” despite ongoing disputes and escalating tensions.
The invasion of Ukraine by Russia has led to grave worries of a nuclear escalation, despite repeated Moscow’s veiled warnings. At the end of March, the UN’s top official for disarmament issues issued a warning that the risk of nuclear war was now greater than it had been during the Cold War.
In February, the Kremlin terminated New START, its final significant weapons control agreement with the United States.
The endeavor to pull back from the nuclear edge, according to Kishida, has been “losing momentum,” and he hopes to reenergize it. He declared, “I think it will be of great significance that the summit is held in the A-bombed city of Hiroshima on such a precious occasion.”
Leaders of the Group of Seven (G7) reaffirmed their commitment to provide Ukraine the financial and military help it needs in its conflict with Russia on Friday, saying they had made sure it has the fiscal support it needed for this year and the early part of 2024.
They said in a statement at the G7 leaders’ summit, which began on Friday in the Japanese city of Hiroshima, “Today we are taking new steps to ensure that Russia’s illegal aggression against the sovereign state of Ukraine fails and to support the Ukrainian people in their search for a just peace rooted in respect for international law.”
The situation in Ukraine and rising worries about China’s expanding global influence are at the forefront of the G7 leaders’ conference in the Japanese metropolis. The G7 countries include the United States, Japan, Germany, Britain, France, Italy, and Canada.
G7 members, notably Europe, said they are “engaging” with other nations to prevent the flow of their goods and technology into Russia through unfriendly states, a problem that has grown more urgent for members.
The G7 nations want to tighten down on any sanctions evasion that might increase Russia’s earnings.
Earlier this month, in advance of the meeting, Kishida paid a preliminary visit to the park and museum. At the time, he described it as the “starting point for all efforts toward nuclear disarmament.”
He particularly hoped that the presidents of the United States, United Kingdom, and France, all of which are nuclear-armed, would make a point of visiting the park.




