PAST -- COMPENSATION -- JAPAN

HIROSHIMA AND NAGASAKI

The events which led up to World War Il, the dropping of Atomic
bombs on Japan and those which prevailed after its’ conclusion, made for
a set of circumstances which saw the people of Japan who were affected
by the A-bomb, waiting for more than 10 years before any sort of
compensation was given to them.

Since Japan was fighting a war with

the United States and other countries,

and since the United States held

sovereignty over Japan for more than ten years after the war,

of compensation was delayed.

the matter

In terms of medical care, the people were

treated by Japanese hospitals and by the Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission
after the war.

Since the country was in a process of rebuilding,

direct

compensation for the survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was delayed
for some time.

However, in 1957, some time after United States military

forces had left Japan, a national law was passed which provided certain
kinds of compensation for certain classes of people who survived the
bomb blast, or who were exposed to radiation.

This law, which has been

amended several times either by administrative directives or through

other laws, provides a system of payments to A-bomb "sufferers".
Some of these payments are made directly through the central government,
and some of them to the prefectural governments which administer grants
from the central government for this purpose.
No.

41 dated March 31, 1957 follows:

An excerpt from the Law
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