The Japanese city has angered Western diplomats by failing to invite Israel’s envoy to the commemoration event
FILE PHOTO: A vigil for the victims of the Nagasaki atomic bombing in 2020. © Carl Court / Getty Images
Senior diplomats representing Washington and London in Japan will not attend a ceremony in Nagasaki on Friday commemorating the victims of the 1945 US atomic bombing, because organizers declined to invite the Israeli ambassador, according to media reports.
British Ambassador Julia Longbottom announced her decision to skip the upcoming event at a press briefing on Tuesday. She lashed out at the move by city authorities to exclude Israel from the ceremony. Japanese officials said in June that they wished to pressure the Jewish state to seek a ceasefire in its military operation in Gaza.
The British diplomat said Israel has the right to defend itself, so the snub was wrong – unlike the omission of Russia and Belarus. The city of Nagasaki hasn’t invited those two countries to the annual commemoration since the outbreak of the Ukraine conflict in 2022, and local peace activists have reportedly accused the mayor’s office of double standards in relation to Israel.
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US Ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel will likewise skip this week’s event, with the diplomatic mission telling the media that he did not want to “politicize” it. He will instead attend a smaller-scale ceremony in Tokyo, the statement added. A lower-level official from the consulate in Fukuoka will attend in place of the ambassador.
Representatives of Australia, Italy, Canada, and the European Union will reportedly follow suit.
Mayor Shiro Suzuki reiterated his determination not to host Israeli Ambassador Gilad Cohen at the Nagasaki Peace Memorial during a press conference last week. He said: “It is not a political decision. It is a decision based on our hopes to hold the ceremony peacefully, solemnly and smoothly.” The Israeli envoy has called the situation “regrettable.”
Nagasaki was the second of two Japanese cities subjected to nuclear bombings by the US military in the late stages of World War II. Officials in Hiroshima have urged Israel to agree to a ceasefire, but stopped short of failing to invite Ambassador Cohen to the annual commemorative ceremony on August 6.
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