Naha City
Third Human Security Forum 80 years after the war
- Lecture / Seminar
- Real-life event
Schedule
2025.08.31(日)
Open:13:30 Start:14:00
Venue
Ryukyu Shimpo Hall 〒900-0021 Ryukyu Shimpo Headquarters Building 1-10-3 Izumizaki, Naha City, Okinawa Prefecture
Charge
Advance booking discount 2000 yen (Free for high school students and younger)
2,500 yen Same-day (Free for high school students and younger)
Contents
Panelists: Keiichi Inamine (former governor of Okinawa Prefecture) /Takashi Hiraoka (former mayor of Hiroshima) /Tomihisa Tagami (former mayor of Nagasaki)
Absent: Masaru Sato (writer, former chief analyst at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs) was absent due to poor health
Ryukyu Shimpo (Newspaper publisher) will hold the “3rd Human Security Forum” together with the Gorbachev Foundation Japan Office. Under the title “Peace Triangle” 80 years after the war, people with experience as mayors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, who have inherited the atomic bombing experience, are invited to Okinawa. In a turbulent world, I think about peace and nuclear abolition.
Sato Masaru (Sato Masaru)
Born in 1960 in Tokyo Metropolitan Prefecture. Her mother is from Kume Island. Joined the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1985 and served as chief analyst at the International Information Bureau Analysis Section 1. As a writer, he has received many awards, including the Mainichi Publishing Cultural Award Special Award for “The National Trap.” Honorary Doctor of Meio University.
Inamine Keiichi (Inamine, Keiichi)
Born in 1933 in Dalian, China. He was elected for the first time in the 1998 Okinawa gubernatorial election and served 2 terms until 2006. He was involved in hosting the G8 summit in Okinawa in 2000 and establishing the “Okinawa Peace Prize.” Ryuseki is currently participating.
Hiraoka Takashi (Hiraoka Takashi)
Born in 1927 in Osaka. After working as the editor-in-chief of the Chugoku Shimbun, etc., he served 2 terms as the mayor of Hiroshima from 1991. They appealed the illegality of nuclear weapons at the International Court of Justice in The Hague, the Netherlands, and put effort into registering the “Atomic Bomb Dome” as a World Heritage Site.
Tagami Tomihisa (Taue Tomihisa)
Born in 1956 in Goto-shi, Nagasaki Prefecture. He was elected for the first time in the 2007 mayoral election when he ran in a hurry, and served 4 consecutive terms. While in office, he also served as the chairman of the Japan Non-Nuclear Declaration Local Government Council and vice chairman of the Peace Mayors Council, and appealed for nuclear abolition both domestically and internationally.
Organizers: Gorbachev Foundation Japan Office, Ryukyu Shimpo (Newspaper publisher)