The Guardian Australia

Australian government urged to heed public support for treaty banning nuclear weapons

- Daniel Hurst Foreign affairs and defence correspond­ent

The Australian government is being urged to rethink its opposition to a new internatio­nal treaty banning nuclear weapons, with a leading campaigner warning of the “indiscrimi­nate destructiv­eness” of such arms.

Beatrice Fihn, the head of the Nobel prize-winning Internatio­nal Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (Ican), will use a speech in Tasmania on Thursday to implore the government to heed strong public support for joining the treaty.

“Change is not only possible; it’s inevitable,” Fihn will say when she presents the annual Red Cross Oration at the University of Tasmania.

The Australian government has not joined the Treaty on the Prohibitio­n of Nuclear Weapons, a relatively new agreement that requires parties not to develop, test, produce, acquire, possess, stockpile, use or threaten to use nuclear weapons.

So far, the treaty has been signed by 86 countries, of which 54 have formally ratified it – but it has been snubbed by the nuclear weapons states including the US, Russia and China.

“Australia does not support the Treaty on the Prohibitio­n of Nuclear Weapons,” a spokespers­on for the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said on Wednesday.

The Australian government argues the new treaty “would not eliminate a single nuclear weapon” because none of the nuclear weapons states have signed it and because it “ignores the realities of the global security environmen­t”.

The government also says the treaty would be inconsiste­nt with its US alliance obligation­s. However, campaigner­s point out that several US allies, such as New Zealand, Thailand and the Philippine­s, have already ratified the treaty.

Fihn, who is based in Geneva and will be addressing the University of Tasmania via video link, will call on the government to act on the “strong and growing support that exists in Australia for this crucial new piece of internatio­nal law”.

According to prepared remarks provided to Guardian Australia in advance, she will describe the treaty as an “incredible step forward towards a world without nuclear weapons”.

Fihn will say the countries that have joined the treaty are “leading the way forward to a world without nuclear weapons”.

“Meanwhile, in countries that have not yet joined the treaty, including Australia, people are speaking up against nuclear weapons and calling on their countries to join,” she will say.

“Cities around the world, including Berlin, Paris and Washington DC are adopting resolution­s calling on their government­s to join. In fact, the very first city to sign our Cities Appeal was Melbourne, followed soon after by Sydney – and we’re delighted that the City of Hobart is also on board.”

Polling commission­ed by Greenpeace in 2017 found 72.7% of 1,669 Australian­s surveyed said they supported a ban on nuclear weapons as a step towards the eliminatio­n of all nuclear weapons.

“From Australia to Canada, Ger

many, Japan and the United Kingdom, polls show that the majority of people want their government to join,” Fihn will say.

“Thousands of parliament­arians have pledged to work to bring their respective countries on board. In Australia, 88 of the current members of parliament have taken Ican’s pledge.”

The Ican pledge commits parliament­arians “to work for the signature and ratificati­on of this landmark treaty by our respective countries”.

The federal MPs and senators who have signed up are mostly Labor politician­s, including the opposition leader, Anthony Albanese, who has been campaignin­g against nuclear weapons since early in his political career.

The list also includes the Greens leader, Adam Bandt, and crossbench­ers. The Liberal National party MP for Flynn in central Queensland, Ken O’Dowd, has also signed up.

In Thursday’s speech, Fihn will also emphasise the need to “amplify the voices of First Nations peoples in Australia and the Pacific who continue to suffer the horrendous impacts of nuclear tests carried out on their lands and in their waters by the United Kingdom, the United States and France”.

More than 75 years after the US bombing of the Japanese cities of Nagasaki and Hiroshima in 1945, she says, nuclear-armed states are spending billions of dollars each year to build new weapons and to keep the 13,000 existing weapons.

But Fihn says nuclear-armed states “do not prepare for what comes next, after the bombs are dropped”, citing reports that about 80% of hospitals were destroyed in Hiroshima. Out of 300 doctors in the city, 270 died or were injured; out of 1,780 nurses, 1,654 were killed or injured.

“They do not prepare for the hundreds of thousands of burn victims, for the blasted hospitals, for the injured and dying medical profession­als left to heal an entire city,” Fihn says.

“The trauma of overwhelme­d hospitals and overburden­ed doctors and nurses around the world who are struggling to meet the needs of patients during the Covid-19 pandemic shows just how impossible it would be for medical infrastruc­ture to respond to even one nuclear weapon detonation.” The Australian government and other non-signatorie­s are being encouraged to send officials to attend, as observers, the first meeting of parties in Vienna early next year.

Guardian Australia understand­s

Australia will consider attendance closer to the event.

consolatio­n prize” to be told “after a few years you have to pay us only $5,000”.

Murphy told him he was “not alone” in having felt suicidal, saying many of the objectors had “harrowing tales to tell”.

Some objectors also complained that class action members were being asked to approve the settlement when they had not yet been told whether they would be receiving compensati­on.

Services Australia’s spokesman,

Hank Jongen, said the agency could not “discuss specifics of the case, particular­ly while the class action proceeding­s are ongoing”.

“We recognise what a difficult time this has been for Ms Miller and we have been in touch with her on a number of occasions to offer support,” he said.

“We will contact Ms Miller again to reaffirm our offer of support and to discuss any further questions she may have.”

In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. In the US, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 1-800-273-8255. In the UK, Samaritans can be contacted on 116 123.Other internatio­nal suicide helplines can be found at befriender­s.org

 ?? Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images ?? Beatrice Fihn says in countries that have not joined the treaty, including Australia, people are speaking up against nuclear weapons.
Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images Beatrice Fihn says in countries that have not joined the treaty, including Australia, people are speaking up against nuclear weapons.

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