
*NGO Signatories to the statement
To be delivered 5 September 2003
Mr Chairperson, Distinguished Delegates, and Colleagues,
1.
The Comprehensive Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) is an integral part of our
global efforts to achieve international security for all, free from the threat
of weapons of mass destruction. All states should recognise that action on the
CTBT is all the more important in light of the rising hostilities across the
globe. From ongoing casualties in Iraq, the unstable tension on the Korean peninsula,
and the precariousness of the NPT, the dire necessity of a comprehensive test
ban is evident. Implementation of the Comprehensive Test-Ban Treaty will take
the world one important step closer to the kind of global security framework
it desperately needs. States presently resisting the CTBT are undermining their
own security as well as the security of the world.
2.
The CTBT was brought about largely through the hard work and determination of
NGOs and millions of ordinary people around the world. In all of these years,
the NGO community has never faltered in its advocacy for a test-ban treaty.
People throughout the world understood that ending nuclear testing was essential
for three powerful reasons: to halt the spiralling arms race; to obstruct the
emergence of new nuclear powers; and to prevent further devastation of human
health and the global environment, already contaminated from the more than 2,000
nuclear tests have been conducted in the 20th century. It is estimated that
atmospheric testing directly produced 430,000 fatal human cancers by the year
2000. Eventually, that total will be 2.4 million. If the horizontal and vertical
proliferation of nuclear weapons leads to new rounds of testing, as we believe
that it will, deleterious impacts on public health and social well-being can
only increase.
2a.
The health burdens of nuclear testing, uranium mining, and other impacts of
nuclear weapons development have fallen most heavily on colonised, indigenous,
or minority groups: aboriginal people in Australia, Micronesian and Polynesian
Pacific Islanders, Uygur people in China, Western Shoshone people in Nevada,
the Kazakh people in the former Soviet Union, and, most recently, tribal villagers
in Pokhran, India and Chaghi, Pakistan.
3.
We are profoundly disappointed with the countries that failed to attend the
second Conference on the EIF of the CTBT in November of 2001, especially those
states whose signature or ratification is essential for entry-into-force. We
welcome, however, at the support for the CTBT demonstrated by three of the Nuclear
Weapon States- France, Russia, and the UK- and we call on them to maintain and
strengthen their support. We also welcome the statement issued in September
of 2002, by the 18 Foreign Ministers in support of the Treaty, the June 19th
declaration by the Organisation of American States – despite the objection
of the United States – in support of the Treaty, as well as the statement
from Prime Minister Koizumi on Nagasaki Day, calling for the Treaty to enter-into-force.
4.
It is crucial to the stability and future of the non-proliferation regime in
its entirety that the CTBT enter-into-force, as was unanimously confirmed at
the 2000 Review Conference. Among the 13 practical steps for systematic and
progressive nuclear disarmament identified in the Final Document of that Conference,
the very first two are devoted to the CTBT and nuclear testing. These steps
stress the importance and urgency of signatures and ratifications, without delay
and without conditions to achieve the early entry-into-force of the CTBT. Furthermore,
the document calls for maintaining the moratorium on nuclear-weapon test explosions
pending the EIF of the Treaty. The urgency of the Treaty entering-into-force
has not waned in the three short years since that unanimous document; indeed,
these goals are in serious danger of being undermined today.
5.
A ban on testing is an essential step towards nuclear disarmament because it
helps to block dangerous nuclear competition and new nuclear threats from emerging.
However, it must be recognised that technological advances in nuclear weapons
research and development mean that a ban on nuclear test explosions by itself
cannot prevent qualitative improvements of nuclear arsenals. Efforts to improve
nuclear arsenals and to make nuclear weapons more useable in warfare will jeopardise
the test-ban and non-proliferation regimes. We call on all states possessing
nuclear weapons to halt all qualitative improvements in their nuclear armaments,
whether or not these improvements require test explosions.
6.
In this context, we are alarmed by recent disclosures of proposals by the present
US administration for the research and development of a new generation of earth-penetrating
nuclear warheads and new types of "low-yield" warheads, as well as
proposals to reduce the time necessary to resume underground nuclear testing.
Research, development, production, or testing of such weapons by the United
States or any state could lead to a dangerous nuclera action-reaction cycle
that would not only undermine the test ban, but international security as a
whole.
6.a.
Although US Secretary of State Colin Powell said on August 7, 2003, that the
US “has no intention of testing nuclear weapons” at this time, Powell
also noted that “we can’t rule it out forever.” This pledge
is hardly reassuring given the view of other senior officials in the Bush administration
that nuclear testing might be needed to develop and produce new types of nuclear
weapons or to maintain the reliability of the US stockpile. Such research could
lead to development and proposals to resume nuclear testing within the next
two to three years.
6.b.
These disclosures underscore the link between nuclear testing and continued
US reliance on nuclear weapons for security. They also reveal an appalling disregard
of the NPT commitment to ban nuclear testing permanently.
7..
We recognise that any new step in the field of security generally often involves
some risk, but the CTBT has been carefully designed so that its benefits greatly
outweigh any possible risks. The CTBT establishes a far-reaching global monitoring,
verification, and compliance system. A series of independent studies, most recently
by the US National Academy of Sciences in 2002, have all concluded that the
system is capable of detecting nuclear explosions in all environments with a
high degree of confidence, thereby deterring potential treaty violators. We
commend the PrepCom and Provisional Technical Secretariat for their work in
establishing the International Monitoring System and International Data Centre,
which are already proving their capabilities beyond expectations. We support
efforts to promote the civil and scientific applications of the CTBT verification
technology as a means of recouping costs and expanding the range of CTBT stakeholders.
8.
We oppose attempts by some states to delay full construction of the CTBT's verification
system. Such behaviour signals a lack of political commitment, harms efforts
to increase the number of parties to the Treaty and prevents the system from
demonstrating its full technical capabilities, thereby giving comfort to those
who question the Treaty's verifiability. We deplore efforts by a small number
of states to obstruct finalisation of the on-site inspection (OSI) arrangements
for the Treaty by not paying their dues, not participating in discussions on
the OSI manual, or by adopting unreasonable positions in those negotiations.
Six years after discussions on the manual first began, we should expect it to
be ready. We call on all signatories to provide the political, financial and
technical support necessary for the earliest feasible implementation of all
elements of the CTBT's verification system.
9.
We believe that global security would be enhanced if all states with nuclear
test sites engaged in confidence-building processes, including transparency
measures at those sites, during the interim period prior to their complete elimination.
In this regard, we note with interest the Russian proposal for mutual confidence-building
measures with the United States following the CTBT's entry-into-force. We applaud
Ambassador Hoffman's visit to the Novaya Zemlya test site earlier this year
and encourage the United States and Russia, as well as India, Pakistan, and
China to pursue initiatives to increase transparency at their test sites to
dispel concerns about ongoing activities at those sites, including subcritical
tests.
10.
Despite overwhelming international support for the CTBT, 12 key states have
not yet signed and/or ratified, unnecessarily delaying entry-into-force. We
are particularly displeased with the policies of the Bush administration, which
is not even seeking Senate approval for ratification. Although the US remains
a signatory, it was the only country to oppose the retention of the CTBT on
the UN agenda in November 2001. The US has declared its intent not to contribute
financially or to participate in non-IMS activities of the Preparatory Commission
of the CTBTO, including preparations for on-site inspections. In addition, through
employing a narrow reading of the rules, the United States prevented the CTBTO
Provisional Secretariat from making a statement at the 2003 PrepCom of the NPT
as they had the year before.
11.
But most importantly, this conference must train its attention and its future
efforts on achieving the signatures and ratification of those states that are
required by the stipulations of Article XIV, in order for the Treaty to enter-into-force.
The Democratic People's Republic of Korea, India, and Pakistan must sign and
ratify the CTBT. China, Colombia, the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, Egypt, Indonesia, Iran, Israel, the United States, and
Viet Nam must now ratify, without further procrastination. The longer these
states wait to join the Treaty, the greater the chance that some nation may
begin testing and set off a dangerous
international action-reaction cycle of military and nuclear confrontation.
11.a
Since the last Article XIV Conference, only Algeria has set an honourable example
by moving from the signatories’ to the ratifiers’ list. What are
the prospects for the next two years? Let us take a closer look at the problems
relating to the Treaty’s entry-into-force as stipulated in Article XIV
and its associated Annex II.
11.b
Of the twelve states whose ratification is needed for the Treaty to enter-into-force,
four have thus far failed to fully act upon their expressed intentions. Their
laggard performance in fully acting on that commitment is affecting the commitment
of other states. Each state must navigate competing priorities and complex legislative
processes, but that can no longer remain an excuse for delayed ratification.
We strongly urge, Colombia, Indonesia, Viet Nam, and the Democratic Republic
of the Congo to make a concerted effort to complete ratification before the
end of this year. The world cannot tolerate any more procrastination.
11.c
We are disappointed that progress in China has ground to a halt. There does
not appear to be any domestic political obstacle in the way of completing the
ratification process,
and we therefore strongly urge China to also complete ratification before the
end of the year.
11.d
Three Annex II countries in the Middle East have attached conditions to their
ratification of the Treaty. This is profoundly self-defeating. All the states
in the region are in favour of the creation of a zone free of weapons of mass
destruction, as expressed in a long line of UNGA resolutions. The full adherence
of each of these states to the Treaty could only help to advance that common
objective. We call on Israel, Egypt, and Iran to cease the counterproductive
finger pointing and abandon the conditions they have attached to ratification.
We find it significant that all of the Annex II states in the region are signatories,
and we strongly urge other countries in the region that have not yet signed
the Treaty to do so immediately.
11.e
We welcome Pakistan's participation in this conference as an observer; we are
disappointed that India chose to stay away. Given the series of crises with
grave nuclear overtones that have shaken the sub-continent since the 1998 nuclear
explosions, it should be self-evident that another round of tit-for-tat testing
would adversely affect regional and international security. More so than any
other region in the world, South Asia needs a nuclear-test-ban. We urge these
two nations to embrace the CTBT as symbolic of their mutual desire to move back
from the brink and to cultivate peaceful relations.
11.f
It is perhaps ironic that this tour d'horizon leaves us with two such dissimilar
nations: the Democratic Republic of Korea and the United States of America.
Unfortunately, they hold in common a desire to retain the option of conducting
nuclear tests. Neither one of them has provided the world with assurances that
it will not exercise that option in the next two years – before the next
Article XIV Conference. We hope that in context of the six-nation talks now
underway, the issue of adherence to the CTBT will feature alongside the issue
of adherence to the NPT. It would be an excellent confidence-building measure
for North Korea to sign the CTBT and for both countries to proceed toward ratification.
12.
It is the fundamental responsibility of the CTBT States Parties to urge the
prompt signature and ratification of the remaining 12 Annex II countries, who
must do so without delay and without conditions or reservations. States Partids
must also endorse the continuation of the current global nuclear test explosion
moratorium until such time as the CTBT enters-into-force. On these points, there
is no room for compromise.
13.
NGOs are ready to make greater contributions to the efforts for entry-into-force.
In particular, they will be able to do so if the interaction between governments,
parliaments, NGOs and the media is intensified. Governments, for instance, should
report to their parliaments on activities to implement the decisions of earlier
Article XIV Conferences and their plans for future activities. The matter of
entry-into-force should be discussed at regional intergovernmental meetings
and parliamentary bodies linked to such organisations. The Provisional Technical
Secretariat should be asked to assist the President in compiling the reports
from States Parties on their individual and collective initiatives, and to make
them available to all Parties on a regular, perhaps bi-monthly basis. NGOs,
in the meanwhile, will increase our own efforts at monitoring and reporting
these initiatives, and disseminating this information to the public and to the
media. We will also continue our advocacy efforts aimed at the CTBT hold-out
states. Through a strengthened network of NGOs, governments, international bodies
and the media, we can promote further initiatives, intensify public discussion,
promote solidarity, and exert broad pressure on the hold-out states in question.
14.
Entry-into-force of the CTBT is truly within reach. But as a result of the actions
of a handful of states, the viability of a verifiable, comprehensive ban on
nuclear tests – and the future of the NPT itself – is in jeopardy.
No single government should be allowed to stand in the way of the historical
opportunity to permanently end the scourge of nuclear testing, an indispensable
step towards eliminating nuclear weapon threats and preventing nuclear war.
15.
This presentation was prepared and supported by NGOs who have worked for a comprehensive
test-ban treaty for many years, in many countries, and in many ways. On behalf
of the world’s citizens, we urge you to do all that is within your power
to ensure the entry-into-force of the CTBT and the full implementation of all
elements of this historical Treaty.
Thank you.
NGO Signatories to the Statement:
AAPSO (Afro-Asian Peoples Solidarity Organisation)
The Acronym Institute for Disarmament Diplomacy
Action for UN Renewal, United Kingdom
Albanian Ecological Club - International Friends of Nature
Amandamaj ry, Finland
Amici della Terra (Friends of the Earth, Italy)
Arbeitsgemeinschaft Gerecht Wirtschaften, Austria
Arms Control Association, USA
The Arms Reduction Coalition (CORE), United Kingdom
Artists for Peace, Sweden
Association Médicale pour la Prévention de la Guerre Nucléaire,
Belgium
(section of IPPNW)
Association of Physicians and Medical Workers for Social Responsibility,
Kenya
Associazone Italiana Medicina per la Prevenzione della Guerra Nucleare
(affiliate of IPPNW)
The Atomic Mirror, British Office
Australian Education Union
Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND), United Kingdom
Center for Antiwar Action, Belgrade, Serbia
Center for Encounter and Active Non-Violence, Bad Ischl, Austria
Center for Russian Environmental Policy, Moscow
Cumbrians Opposed to a Radioactive Environment (CORE), United Kingdom
Disarmament and Security Centre, Christchurch, New Zealand
Dutch Medical Association for Peace Research (NVMP) (affiliate of IPPNW)
East Midlands CND Region, United Kingdom
"Ecotopia" magazine, Greece
European Union of Women
For Mother Earth International
Friedens- und Begegnungsstätte, Mutlangen, Germany
German Peace Society - United War Resisters
Global Mothers - Women in Action for Environment and Peace
Global Network against Weapons and Nuclear Power in Space
Global Resource Action Centre for the Environment (GRACE), USA
Greenpeace International
Grandmothers for Peace, Finland
Institute for Law and Peace (INLAP), London
International Club for Peace Research
International Federation of Social Workers
International Fellowship of Reconciliation (IFOR)
International Human Rights Observer (IHRO)
International Institute for Peace, Vienna, Austria
International Peace Bureau
International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW)
International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW),
Dem.Republic Congo
International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW),
Germany
International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW),
Poland
International Progress Organisation
Japan Congress against A-and H-Bombs
Latin American Circle for International Studies (LACIS), Mexiko City
Lawyers` Committee on Nuclear Policy, USA
Liaison Committee for Peace and Security, Denmark
Littleborough Peace Group, Lancashire, England
Malaysian Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War
Mama Terra / For Mother Earth, Romania
Medical Association for Prevention of War, Australia
MEDACT (Medical Action for Global Security), United Kingdom (affiliate
of IPPNW)
Merseyside Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, Liverpool,
United Kingdom
National Council of Women of New Zealand (NCWNZ)
New Zealand Federation of Business and Professional Women
NGO Committee on Disarmament, Geneva
Norske Leger mot Atomwapen, Norway (affiliate of IPPNW)
Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
Organizacion de Medicos contra violencia, Costa Rica (affiliate of
IPPNW)
Oesterreichische Mediziner gegen Gewalt und Atomgefahren (OMEGA)
(Austrian affiliate of IPPNW)
Pacific Campaign for Disarmament and Security (PCDS)
Pax Christi International
Pax Christi USA
Peace Council Aotearo New Zealand
Peace Depot Japan
The Peace Foundation Aotearo / New Zealand
Peace Moves Coalition, Penzance, United Kingdom
Peacequest International
People with Disabilities Uganda
Physicians for Gobal Survival, Canada (affiliate of IPPNW)
Physicians for Social Responsibility, USA
Physicians for Social Responsibility (IPPNW), Switzerland
Project on European Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Project Plowshare Calgary, Canada
Reseau "Sortir du nucléaire", France
SERO, The Swedish Renewable Energy Association
Servas International
Soka Gakkai International
Stop-Essais / Abolitions des Armes Nucleaire, France
Swedish Fellowship of Reconciliation
Swedish Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War
Trade Union Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, Ireland
Universal Esperanto Association
Verification Research, Training and Information Centre (VERTIC), London
Wallasey CND, Wirral, United Kingdom
West Midlands Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, United Kingdom
Western States Legal Foundation , USA
Woking CND, Surrey, United Kingdom
Women against Nuclear Power, Finland
Woman and Children Development Organisation, Lahore, Pakistan
Women for Peace, Finland
Women's Federation for World Peace, Austrian Section
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF)
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), Aotearo / New
Zealand Section
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), Australia
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), Bolivia
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), Costa Rica
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), Netherlands
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
(WILPF), France
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), Germany
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), India
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), Italy
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), Norway
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), Russia
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), United States
World Union of Catholic Women's Organisations
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