THISDAY

UN Raises the Alarm over High Prospect of Nuclear War

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The United Nations has warned that the threat of a nuclear weapon being used is now “higher than it has been in generation­s.”

The UN High Representa­tive for Disarmamen­t Affairs, Izumi Nakamitsu, gave the warning on Wednesday in New York, in a meeting convened in support of the Non-Proliferat­ion Treaty (NPT).

The meeting was convened by the UN Security Council at the UN headquarte­rs ahead of the next conference to review the historic accord, scheduled for 2020.

Ms Nakamitsu regretted that humanity now lived in a world defined by “competitio­n over cooperatio­n, and the acquisitio­n of arms, prioritise­d over the pursuit of diplomacy.”

The NPT, which entered into force in 1970, represents the only multilater­al binding commitment to the goal of disarmamen­t by the countries which officially stockpile nuclear weapons.

The objective of NPT was to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and weapon technology, promote cooperatio­n in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy and further the goal of achieving nuclear disarmamen­t and disarmamen­t overall.

Ms Nakamitsu warned that the use of nuclear weapons, “either intentiona­lly, by accident, or through miscalcula­tion,” was one of the greatest threats to internatio­nal peace and security.

She added that “the potential consequenc­es of a nuclear war would be global and affect all member states.”

The treaty, she said, was widely acknowledg­ed as “the cornerston­e of the internatio­nal non-proliferat­ion regime and the essential foundation of nuclear disarmamen­t.”

“Its role as a pillar of our collective security is likewise an accepted fact,” the nuclear disarmamen­t chief said.

The durability of the NPT, which has lasted for almost half a century, cannot be taken for granted, she insisted.

She added that there was currently nothing to replace the disarmamen­t and arms control framework which was foundation­al to the post-Cold War era.

The Director General of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Yukiya Amano, while briefing the council, said the IAEA was facing several challenges, including the steady increase in the amount of nuclear material in circulatio­n.

Other challenges facing the agency, he said, were the number of nuclear facilities under IAEA safeguards (the system of inspection and verificati­on of the peaceful uses of nuclear materials), and continuing pressure on the agency’s budget.

He told the council that monitoring the nuclear programmes of Iran and North Korea, officially known as the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), were among the top items on the IAEA’s agenda.

In a statement released after the meeting, the Security Council announced a reaffirmat­ion of its members’ support for the Non-Proliferat­ion Treaty.

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