ICAN statements at the UN for International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons

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September 26th is the International Day for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, and this year,  people all over took action for a nuke-free world. At the UN’s New York HQ, that action translated into vocal and active support for Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, during the UNGA’s events marking the day and – most importantly – at a high-level ceremony where 7  countries signed and 4 countries ratified the the Nuclear Ban Treaty. ICAN was at both events, and took the opportunity to deliver two powerful appeals to the world leaders, urging them to join the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.

Address at the High Level Signing Ceremony

Full statement by Beatrice Fihn, Executive Director of ICAN :

Excellencies, Distinguished Colleagues,

The United Nations was born out of the horror of the Second World War as a global forum to prevent such atrocities from occurring again. Humanity faced devastation like we had never seen before and a new threat to our very existence, nuclear weapons.

This imperfect body was created not to solve all the world’s problems, but to give the best of humanity a way to unite, to empower those often forgotten and left behind, and at it’s best moments, to correct the course of history before it is too late.

It has taken seven decades for the UN to take the key step in fulfilling its founding mission to eradicate the nuclear terror — banning nuclear weapons.

We are here today, well on our way in entering this Treaty into force, through the unmatched power of dialogue, cooperation, and negotiation.

We are here today because our heroic colleagues at the ICRC the UN and its agencies reminded us of the unacceptable and inhumane destruction wrought by nuclear weapons, and that no adequate humanitarian response is possible.

We are here today on the backs of activists and campaigners from civil society and faith communities, who reached across generations to build a new movement to ban nuclear weapons. The ICAN network that stretches across over 100 countries and includes over 500 organisations.

We are here today due to gifted diplomats who patiently and skillfully crafted a treaty that finally put the reality of nuclear weapons within the context of humanitarian law by correctly labeling them as indiscriminate weapons of mass destruction that no state should possess.

We are here today because this body finally opened its doors to the people affected by nuclear weapons — the hibakusha and so many test survivors. And when people hear their stories, whether they be fellow citizens or global leaders, they are compelled to act.

We are here today because of you — the courageous leaders who heard the call of your citizens, of civil society, of the world and chose action over rhetoric

This world we face often feels like a reality television show where the media follows every twist and turn and diplomacy is conducted over Twitter or through photo-ops.

But in this quiet room, away from the media glare, we see what actual leadership looks like. You are responding to the reality of the nuclear threat with real action…meaningful action that will ultimately correct the course of history.

This is the UN at its best. This is the power of civil society. This is the greatness of humanity in the face of great peril.

Thank you for your leadership. Know that you have a determined ally in the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons.

Thank you.

 

Address at the UN General Assembly event marking the International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons

Full statement by Ray Acheson, Director of Reaching Critical Will (ICAN partner organisation), and member of ICAN’s steering group:

I’m speaking today on behalf of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons. With 532 partner organisations in 103 countries, we are a truly global movement. We were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2017 for our work with governments to bring to fruition the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.

We’re speaking here today as a voice of passion and persistence in the quest to make our world more secure, more just, and more equitable. For us, abolishing nuclear weapons is about preventing violence and promoting peace.

Some say this is a dream, that we live in a time of uncertainty and change, that we can’t or shouldn’t try to eliminate nuclear weapons now. But when is there not uncertainty and change? It is the only constant in our world.

What is true is that we live in a time where we spend more money developing new ways to kill each other than we do on saving each other from crises of health, housing, food security, and environmental degradation.

What is also true is that after 73 years, we still live under the catastrophic threat of the atomic bomb.

We should have solved this. We haven’t only because a small handful of governments say they have a “right” to these weapons to maintain “strategic stability”.

It is neither strategic nor stable to deploy thousands of nuclear weapons, risking total annihilation of us all. It is neither strategic nor stable to spend billions of dollars on nuclear weapons when billions of people suffer from our global inability to meet basic human needs for all.

And it is certainly neither strategic nor stable to reject and to undermine a treaty that prohibits these weapons.

In July 2017, the most democratic body of the United Nations adopted the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. 122 governments supported the Treaty then. Now, they are signing and ratifying it. Significant progress has been made towards its entry into force. More will join today, at a special ceremony here in the UN. If you haven’t yet joined, we encourage you to do so. If you can’t do it today, do it tomorrow. Every new signature and ratification builds momentum for the abolition of nuclear weapons.

We know some of you are experiencing pressure not to sign or ratify this treaty, just as many of you were subjected to pressure not to support the development of the treaty, not to participate in negotiations, and not to vote for its adoption. The governments that espouse the “value” of the bomb don’t want this treaty to enter into force.

This is because they already feel its power. They know what it means for their policies and practices of nuclear violence. It is already disruptingthe financial flows needed to maintain the industry around nuclear weapons. Just today, ICAN campaigners visited BNP Paribas offices around the world to demand the bank divest from nuclear weapons.

This treaty is about bolstering the rule of law and protecting humanity. No one is safe as long as nuclear weapons exist. The death and destruction they cause cut across border, across generations. They undermine the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals. They undermine our commitments to preventing climate change, promoting peace and equality, and protecting human rights.

 This treaty is the new international standard on nuclear weapons. It compliments, but is not subordinate to, existing agreements aimed at controlling nuclear weapons. It goes further than any of these other instruments, making it clear that the possession of nuclear weapons is illegitimate, irresponsible, and illegal.

We know there is more work to be done. We have proven, collectively, that we are not afraid of hard work. So to all those governments and activists listening: please keep at it. The world changes when people work together relentlessly to change it. Don’t give up. Stand strong, stand together, and make it clear that we are living in a new reality in which nuclear weapons are illegal and where the only option for any reasonable state is to reject and eliminate them.

 It’s time to sign the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.