Peace Groups Urge Govt To Follow Senate, and Support UN Weapons Resolution
October 28, 2003
Peace Groups Urge Govt To Follow Senate, and Support UN Weapons Resolution
Friends of The Earth Australia
Australian Peace Committee
Campaign For International Cooperation And Disarmament (CICD)
Australian peace groups have urged the government to follow
yesterdays vote by the Australian Senate in support of the New Agenda
Resolution 'Towards a nuclear weapon free world: a New Agenda' supported
by South Africa, New Zealand, Brazil, Mexico, Egypt, Sweden and Ireland,
which is being put through the United Nations General Assembly's First
Committee on disarmament on 29October.
According to the groups:
"The New Agenda Resolution, as it is known, is a pro-active,
reasonable, and moderately - worded way forward toward nuclear disarmament
that presses the nuclear weapons states to honour their 30-year old obligations
under article VI of the nuclear nonproliferation treaty to proceed toward
the elimination of their nuclear arsenals. The New Agenda resolution expresses
strong concern over the prospect of nuclear proliferation brought about
by a nuclear-armed North Korea, while urging the nuclear weapons states
to come good on their own disarmament obligations.
Without progress toward nuclear disarmament there is a strong possibility
that we could be looking at a complete breakdown in the nuclear nonproliferation
regime in the near future. It is therefore desperately important that
Australia send a strong signal to the Bush administration that it must
face up to its responsibilities and obligations on nuclear disarmament,
instead of merely threatening other countries in a way calculated to push
them to do the very opposite of what we would wish them to do."
Australia has voted previously for the New Agenda resolution in UNGA.
We urge the government to support it again instead of abstaining as it
has done recently."
For more information contact:
John Hallam (FOE-A)
Ph: 02-9810-2598, 9567-7533
Irene Gale (APC)
Ph: 08-8364-2291
Pauline Mitchell CICD
Ph: 03-9663-3677
New Agenda Motion in General Assembly
The NAC motion moved by Australian Democrats' Leader, Senator Andrew Bartlett
passed the Senate today:
That the Senate-
(a)expresses concern about the growing risks posed by the proliferation
of nuclear weapons, the potential for further proliferation, plans for
the research, development, testing and deployment of new types of nuclear
weapons by the nuclear weapons states, and the broadening role being given
to nuclear weapons in security strategies;
(b)notes the New Agenda Coalition resolution introduced in the 58th United
Nations (UN) General Assembly First Committee entitled `Towards a nuclear-weapon-free
world: the need for a new agenda' and:
(i)notes that this resolution is similar to resolution A/RES/57/59 which
was adopted by the UN General Assembly in 2002 by a vote of 125 to 6 with
36 abstentions, and
(ii)commends the New Agenda Coalition for:
(a)setting out a series of practical and necessary steps to curb nuclear
proliferation and achieve nuclear disarmament, based on the thirteen disarmament
steps agreed by all state parties to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)
in 2000, and
(b)making changes to the draft resolution at the current session of the
UN General Assembly in order to meet the concerns of states such as Australia
which abstained on the vote in 2002, in particular to highlight the dangers
of nuclear proliferation and call on all states, including North Korea,
Israel, Pakistan, Iran and India, to subscribe to the NPT and accept full-scope
safeguards on their nuclear facilities;
(c)also notes the New Agenda Coalition resolution introduced in the 58th
UN General Assembly First Committee entitled `Reduction of non-strategic
nuclear weapons' and:
(i)notes that this resolution is similar to resolution A/RES/57/58 which
was adopted by the UN General Assembly in 2002 by a vote of 120 to 3 with
42 abstentions, and
(ii)commends the New Agenda Coalition for:
(a)drawing attention to the need to deal with this class of nuclear weapons,
of which there are more than 4 000 in the stockpiles of the nuclear weapons
states;
(b)making changes to the draft resolution at the current session of the
UN General Assembly in order to meet the concerns of states such as Australia
which abstained on the vote in 2002, in particular changes to address
the particular concerns surrounding the tactical nuclear weapons possessed
by Russia, and
(iii)expresses concern about the threat posed by non-strategic weapons
due to their portability, proximity to areas of conflict and probability
of pre-delegation in case of military conflict, and thus about the risk
of proliferation and of early, pre-emptive, unauthorised or accidental
use; and
(d)calls on the Government to support the New Agenda Coalition resolutions
in the 58th UN General Assembly First Committee `Towards a nuclear-weapon-free
world: the need for a new agenda' (item A/C.1/58/L.40) and `Reduction
of non-strategic nuclear weapons' (A/C.1/58/L.39) and consequential votes
in the UN General Assembly.