Cape Times

Anti-nuclear treaty forges ahead

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A TREATY banning nuclear weapons could come into force by the end of next year, backers of a campaign that won the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize said in an annual progress report yesterday.

The treaty aims to stigmatise nuclear weapons as previous treaties marginalis­ed landmines and cluster munitions. Signatorie­s promise to reject nuclear strategies and encourage others to follow suit.

The Nuclear Weapons Ban Monitor, published by Norwegian People’s Aid, said 19 states had adhered to the 2017 Treaty on the Prohibitio­n of Nuclear Weapons, putting it well on the way to the 50 ratificati­ons it needed to come into force.

“We’re pushing for getting 50 ratificati­ons by the end of 2019,” said Beatrice Fihn, the executive director of the Internatio­nal Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons.

“We have about 25, 30 countries that say that they will be ready by the end of 2019, so it’s definitely possible, “she said”

The big nuclear powers oppose the treaty because they say it could undermine nuclear deterrence, which they credit with preventing convention­al war.

Fihn said such arguments were ridiculous scaremonge­ring.

“If you follow that argument, that more nuclear weapons keeps us safer, then why have a problem with North Korea having nuclear weapons?” she said.

“It’s a little bit like the gun debate in the US – you feel safer, but all statistics and logic say that you are more likely to be shot if you have a weapon at home.”

US President Donald Trump has employed a high-stakes nuclear strategy to face down North Korea and Iran, and said on October 20 that Washington planned to quit the Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty which Mikhail Gorbachev, the last Soviet leader, and Ronald Reagan signed in 1987.

Fihn said the Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces prohibited missiles that were “meant to wipe out cities in Europe” and the new nuclear arms race made it urgent for countries to ratify the ban treaty.

The report identified 127 states as supporters of the treaty, especially in Africa and Latin America.

“The Europeans are the problem,” said Fihn.

Grethe Ostern, the report’s editor, explained that the treaty was compatible with Nato membership, but it was seen as disloyal to question the usefulness of nuclear weapons, and states were under pressure to oppose it.

“We know that states sometimes feel that developmen­t aid is sometimes put in the balance.

We know they feel that if they have visa arrangemen­ts with the United States, for instance, they feel that this is in the balance,” Ostern said. |

 ?? AP African News Agency (ANA) ?? A MIGRANT child pleads for a second bag of donated food for her family, in Tapanatepe­c, Mexico, Sunday. Thousands of migrants, who are part of a caravan of Central Americans trying to reach the US border, took a break in Tapanatepe­c, on their long journey. |
AP African News Agency (ANA) A MIGRANT child pleads for a second bag of donated food for her family, in Tapanatepe­c, Mexico, Sunday. Thousands of migrants, who are part of a caravan of Central Americans trying to reach the US border, took a break in Tapanatepe­c, on their long journey. |

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