China News Service, July 27. According to Kyodo News Agency, the Hiroshima High Court also ordered the distribution of health manuals for victims of nuclear explosions to all plaintiffs following the first instance of the "black rain" lawsuit that fell shortly after the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, Japan.

Regarding this ruling, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said on the 26th that he would waive the appeal.

The data picture shows Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga.

  According to reports, the verdict that the victims of nuclear explosions should be widely recognized, including internal exposure, has been finalized.

As the deadline for appeals on the 28th is about to come, the Japanese government has made a political judgment.

  Yoshihide Suga stated that he would immediately issue a handbook to the plaintiff, and he also stated that he would "study as soon as possible" regarding the relief of victims of the same position.

Japanese media said that the elderly who had been exposed to the black rain finally saw the road to relief.

  According to previous reports, on August 6 and 9, 1945, the US military dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki respectively.

The radioactive materials produced by the nuclear explosion, dust and water vapor condensed into "black rain" and landed.

People suffer from diseases due to being caught by the "black rain" or eating water and crops contaminated by the "black rain".

  The Japanese government divides the radioactively contaminated areas of nuclear explosions into severely polluted areas and lightly polluted areas according to the length and area of ​​the "black rain" rainfall. Only residents in the heavily polluted areas suffering from nuclear radiation diseases can be identified as victims of nuclear explosions and enjoy Relevant treatment provided by the government.

  In recent years, some people in the lightly polluted area of ​​Hiroshima have filed a lawsuit with the Hiroshima District Court, requesting the Hiroshima Prefecture and Hiroshima City Governments to identify them as victims of the nuclear explosion and issue a health manual for the victims.

The government previously believed that the identification of the victim "lack a reasonable basis."