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“The first time was on 6 August, 1945, when I saw it flying high in the sky. “This is the second time I have seen the Enola Gay,” said Hiroshima survivor Minoru Nishino, 71, who was two kilometres from the epicentre of the blast, and still bears scars. When I saw it today, I was overcome by anger” The first time was on 6 August, 1945, when I saw it flying high in the sky.
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“This is the second time I have seen the Enola Gay.
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One demonstrator was charged with destruction of property, the other faces loitering charges, police said. Two men were arrested after a bottle of red paint, meant to symbolise blood, was thrown, denting a panel on one side of the plane, which is parked in the new annex to the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum. Holding pictures of hideously burned victims of the blast, six survivors and about 50 peace activists visited the new museum in Chantilly, Virginia, where the shiny, four-engined Boeing B-29 Superfortress has just gone on display. The Japanese survivors on Monday visited a museum exhibiting the aircraft, named the Enola Gay, on a trip that has jarred raw US emotions over Japan’s wartime role.