Korean forced laborers remember Nagasaki attack
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 TOKYO — Kim Jong-ki was an 18-year-old forced laborer digging tunnels for a Japanese arms manufacturer in Nagasaki 65 years ago, on the day a US aircraft dropped an atom bomb on the city. Like  the other estimated 1,000 Koreans toiling below ground, Kim worked from  dawn to dusk in the port city where Mitsubishi Heavy Industries was  churning out warships, torpedoes and other wartime hardware. “We  were given only poor meals but no payment,” Kim, now 83 and living in  his home country, told AFP by telephone. “Every day we saw American  warplanes flying from right to left for aerial bombardments of the  city.” This year marks the 65th anniversary of the  US raid which made Japan the only nation that has ever been attacked  with atomic bombs — first on Aug. 6, 1945 in Hiroshima, and three days  later in Nagasaki. Source: The Daily Tribune URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100810com6.html | 
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