Fiji Sun

Marshalls still to decide on UN nuke ban treaty

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Majuro: Six Pacific nations are expected to sign a United Nations treaty banning nuclear weapons when it opens for signature later this week, but the Marshall Islands won’t be one of them.

Tim Wright, the Asia Pacific Director of the Internatio­nal Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, said that the island countries that have said they would sign the treaty this week include Palau, Fiji, Samoa, Tuvalu, Solomon Islands and Vanuatu.

Marshall Islands President Hilda Heine said her government was still considerin­g whether to sign the treaty.

This is despite the Marshall Islands ambassador to the UN, Amatlain Kabua, earlier this year joining with representa­tives of over 120 nations who voted in favour of the UN resolution supporting the treaty. President Heine said obviously the Marshall Islands - from its own experience - doesn’t want anyone to ever use nuclear weapons, but she said the big question was how does the world effectivel­y eliminate this threat?

She said it was actually pretty complicate­d and the treaty ‘deserved due time for considerat­ion and consultati­on’.

The Marshalls was ground zero for 67 US nuclear weapons tests conducted at Bikini and Enewetak atolls between 1946 and 1958.

It also hosts the Reagan Test Site, a major US Army missile testing facility at Kwajalein Atoll. While the treaty bans the use or possession of nuclear material, it also prevents its signatorie­s from encouragin­g other countries to do so.

 ??  ?? The Marshall Islands, once a US nuclear test site.
The Marshall Islands, once a US nuclear test site.

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