Religious leaders and legislators present nuclear abolition call to the United Nations

September 29, 2015

Leaders of the major religious faiths and interfaith networks, joined forces with parliamentarians and mayors from around the world to call on world leaders to “commit to nuclear abolition and to replace nuclear deterrence with shared security approaches to conflicts.”

The call was made in a joint statement presented yesterday to Mogens Lykketoft, the President of the UN General Assembly, as world leaders gathered at the UN for the opening session of the UN on its 70th anniversary year.

Críona Ní Dhálaigh, Lord Mayor of Dublin, signs the statement
Críona Ní Dhálaigh, Lord Mayor of Dublin, signs the statement

The statement, calls specifically on world leaders to negotiate “a nuclear weapons convention or framework of agreements that eliminate nuclear weapons,” a proposal advanced by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and supported by over 130 countries.

The joint statement was adopted in Hiroshima on August 6th – the 70th anniversary of the nuclear bombing of that city, and is endorsed by religious leaders, mayors and parliamentarians from Australia, Austria, Bangladesh, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Cameroon, Canada, Costa Rica, Czech Republic, Denmark, Ecuador, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Iceland, India, Indonesia, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Jordan, Malawi, Marshall Islands, Mauritania, Mexico, Monaco, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nigeria, Norway, Pakistan, Portugal, Saudi Arabia, Scotland, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, Uganda, United Kingdom, United States and Zimbabwe.

“The experience of Hiroshima reminds us of why nuclear weapons must be abolished,’ said Mr Kazumi Matsui, Mayor of Hiroshima and President of Mayors for Peace. ‘As long as nuclear weapons exist, anyone could become a Hibakusha (nuclear victim) at any time.’

Saber Chowdhury, Co-President of PNND, presents the statement to UNGA President Mogens Lykketoft.
Saber Chowdhury, Co-President of PNND, presents the statement to UNGA President Mogens Lykketoft

The joint statement was coordinated by Religions for Peace, Mayors for Peace and Parliamentarians for Nuclear Non-proliferation and Disarmament.  It was presented to the President of the UNGA by Saber Chowdhury (PNND Co-President and President of the Inter Parliamentary Union), Dr William Vendley (Secretary-General of Religions for Peace), Randy Rydell (Senior Adviser for Mayors for Peace) and Jonathan Granoff (PNND Council Member and President of the Global Security Institute).

The delegation also presented Mr Lykketoft with a nuclear abolition resolution adopted by the US Conference of Mayors in June this year.

‘We join together to highlight the continuing risks of a nuclear catastrophe – whether by accident, miscalculation or intent – and the moral and security imperative to achieve nuclear abolition,’ said Dr William Vendley, Secretary-General of Religions for Peace.

‘Nearly 16,000 nuclear weapons remain in the world’s arsenals costing $100 billion annually – funds that could instead be used to implement the Sustainable Development Goals,’ said Mr Saber Chowdhury MP, Co-President of PNND and President of the Inter Parliamentary Union. ‘We reaffirm UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s description of the abolition of nuclear weapons as a “common good of the highest order.”

Paul Quiles, Mayor of Cordes-sur-Ciel andd former France Defence Minister, signing the statement
Paul Quiles, Mayor of Cordes-sur-Ciel andd former France Defence Minister, signing the statement

“In special ways mayors are responsible for protecting the safety and welfare of their citizens, as well as for preserving and promoting cultural and environmental values and heritages; parliamentarians for national policies and laws for the benefit of present and future generations; and religious leaders for advancing the shared moral principles and respect for the well-being of all people regardless of ethnicity, nationality or religion.

Together—as mayors, parliamentarians and religious leaders— we support the common good of nuclear abolition. We reject nuclear weapons, which threaten our humanity, contravene our moral principles, violate international law and thwart the safety and well-being of current and future generations.”

The joint statement was also presented to the United Nations in Geneva – the traditional location for disarmament negotiations – at a special event on Sep 22 to commemorate the International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons.

Th event was organised by UNFOLD ZERO, hosted by the Permanent Mission of Ecuador to the United Nations and cosponsored by the UN Office of Disarmament Affairs (UNODA) and the NGO Committee for Disarmament. It featured a screening of the movie “The Man Who Saved the World”, a welcome speech by Ecuador Ambassador Maria Espinosa and a presentation by Marco Kalbusch, Secretary of the Conference on Disarmament and Head of the UNODA in Geneva.

For more information see:

Ambassador Espinosa presents joint statement to Marco Kalbusch (UNODA)
Ambassador Espinosa presents joint statement to Marco Kalbusch (UNODA)

 

Contacts:
Alyn Ware, alyn@pnnd.org +41 788 912 156
Kyoichi Sugino ksugino@rfp.org  +1 212 687 2163
Shinichiro Murakami  mayors@pcf.city.hiroshima.jp +81-82-242-7821

Special message from Stanislav Petrov just before the screening of "The Man Who Saved the World" at the United Nations in Geneva
Special message from Stanislav Petrov just before the screening of “The Man Who Saved the World” at the United Nations in Geneva
nike