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"The World Is Watching"
Front page article from the News in Review,
the daily NGO newsletter from the Seventh Review Conference of the
Nuclear NonProliferation Treaty
No. 1, May 2, 2005
The full PDF of this edition of
the News in Review can be found here.
Today at the United Nations, highlevel officials from
across the globe will open the seventh Review Conference of the
Nuclear NonProliferation Treaty (NPT), widely regarded as one of
the most crucial reviews in the Treaty’s 35yearlong history.
Close to 2,000 nongovernmental organizational (NGO)
representatives have registered for this Conference, dwarfing the
number of those who attended the past Preparatory Committee conferences
and even the 2000 Review Conference. These organizations are truly
representative of civil society, comprising women, youth, hibakusha
(atomic survivors), mayors, educators, physicians, indigenous people,
grassroots organizers, nuclear lab watchers, think tank analysts,
national lobbyists and any other group fearful of the wrath wrought
by the nuclear age. They have come in droves to be the living proof
that the world wants complete, irreversible, verifiable nuclear
disarmament. Civil society attention to the efforts undertaken at
this Review is tremendous, both in New York and around the world.
Those not able to come to New York are closely watching to see what
happens will there be a balanced outcome document, or will this
Review Conference dissipate into an ineffective talk shop, paralyzed
with inaction like so much of the international disarmament machinery?
Undoubtedly, “compliance” will be the
most oftheard word in the halls of the UN this year. It is understood
that the US is likely to turn every discussion into one on Iran’s
and other NonNuclear Weapon States’ (NNWS) compliance with
the nonproliferation obligations, spelled out in Article II of the
Treaty. Meanwhile, NNWS, impatient with the lack of progress on
the disarmament front, will vigilantly highlight the need for Nuclear
Weapon States (NWS) to comply with their disarmament obligations,
articulated in Article VI. If a Final Document is to be reached,
all States parties, led by the very capable President of the Review
Conference, Ambassador Sergio Q. Duarte of Brazil, must strike a
balance between these core issues under the NPT.
Throughout these next four weeks, States parties will
be examining ways to strengthen the Treaty, hopefully in all its
aspects. The 2002 withdrawal of the Democratic People’s Republic
of Korea marred the world’s faith in the Treaty’s efficacy,
leaving wounds which have engendered many substantive discussions
on the issue of withdrawal and ways to prevent or ameliorate possible
future withdrawals. Among the proposals to strengthen Article X
include a GermanFrench proposal which requires countries that withdraw
from the NPT to return nuclear technology that was given to them
under Article IV of the Treaty.
Other pertinent issues also warrant substantive focused
discussions, including negative security assurances, the Middle
East, verification, nuclear testing, universality and the nuclear
fuel cycle. The Conference will have the opportunity to debate the
various proposals put forth by governments, nongovernmental organizations
and intergovernmental organizations, which tackle each of these
issues as a way to strengthen the Treaty as a whole.
Then of course, there is the issue of the 13 Practical
Steps, a unanimously agreed upon plan of action adopted at the 2000
Review Conference. Some, including the US and France, are insisting
that this consensusbased agreement is no longer relevant and should
not be regarded as a road map to a nuclear weaponfree world, as
many hoped it would be. Yet the majority of the world’s governments,
empowered with the full support of the NGOs, refuse to let this
hardwon agreement be cast aside by the States which continue to
revere these genocidal, ecocidal and suicidal weapons as vital to
their national security.
As of yet, however, no agreement has been reached
on an agenda. Lack of consensus on this primary procedural task
may negatively affect the amount of time paid to these critical
issues.
However, if the people of the world have any say in
the matter as is our right the Review Conference will fulfill the
mandate conferred upon it by the Strengthened Review Process; it
will look back at the past five years, assess the efficacy of the
Treaty, and seek ways to turn this thirtyfiveyear old agreement
into a true vehicle for freeing our world, forevermore, from the
plague of nuclear weapons.
Susi Snyder and Rhianna Tyson, WILPF
777 UN Plaza - 6th Floor - New York, NY - 10017 - Ph: 212.682.1265 - Fax: 212.286.8211 - info@reachingcriticalwill.org
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