In Hiroshima City, where the G7 Hiroshima Summit is being held,

I met a boy with a fan with such a message written on it.

I thought it was cheering for the leaders of each country, but what the boy wanted to support were the people who supported the operation of the summit.

In conjunction with the G7 Hiroshima Summit, many police officers have been dispatched from all over Japan to guard against terrorism and other incidents.

Meanwhile, on the 20th, there was a boy holding a fan with the words "Good luck to work" written near the Peace Park in Hiroshima City.

A boy in the second grade of elementary school visited from Fukuyama City, Hiroshima Prefecture. It was the police officers who were cheering with the fans that their mother had handmade.

Police officers who noticed the support said "Thank you" and "I will do my best," and wet wipes were presented to them, and they enjoyed interacting with each other.

According to the boy's mother, the boy longed to be a police officer and came to Hiroshima City to support police officers from all over the country.

The boy said, "It was hot today, but I was happy to receive a present."

According to the National Police Agency, the G7 Hiroshima Summit will have up to 2,4000 security personnel, making it the largest summit ever held in a regional area of Japan.

Emphasis is placed on so-called "visible security" to prevent terrorism by putting uniformed police officers in the foreground, and the police are mainly in charge of security at the venue where the Japan-U.S. summit meeting was held and the hotels where the leaders of each country are staying.