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Buenos días. I am honored at this opportunity to address the Agency for the Prohibition
of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean. Let me offer my special thanks to the
Government of Mexico and to the OPANAL Secretariat for organizing this timely event.
It has been almost 40 years since my predecessor, U Thant, attended the first session of
OPANAL’s General Conference in this regard I feel honored to be the second Secretary General.
Today, I want to show my profound respect for your work and to highlight the urgent need to
make further progress on multilateral nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation.
We meet just before the 63rd anniversary of the Hiroshima bombing, and as preparations
continue for the 40th anniversary celebrations next year of the Treaty of Tlatelolco. This is a
fitting moment to reinforce the call for strengthened efforts to prevent nuclear proliferation and
to advance nuclear disarmament. And this extraordinary session of OPANAL is a most
appropriate platform to do so.
Regional approaches to nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation have a long and
distinguished history. The Antarctic Treaty and the Outer Space Treaty broke new ground by
designating vast geographic areas for peaceful uses only. The Tlatelolco Treaty established the
world’s first nuclear-weapon-free zone in a populated area and inspired similar zones in the
South Pacific, Southeast Asia, Africa, and Central Asia.
Today, the regional or territorial approach to disarmament covers most of our planet.
Virtually the entire Southern Hemisphere is now nuclear-weapons free. This progress has been
remarkable.
Many of the advances at the regional level are due to the work of Alfonso García Robles
-- who received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1982 -- and the tireless efforts of the Government of
Mexico in support of global nuclear disarmament.
Yet we cannot afford to be complacent. While two thirds of the world’s States are
signatories to nuclear-weapon–free zone treaties, the majority of the world’s population still lives
in countries that possess nuclear weapons.
And international efforts to prevent nuclear proliferation and achieve nuclear
disarmament continue to face significant challenges. Some of the nuclear-weapon-free zone
treaties have not yet entered into force. Several signatories have yet to complete the ratification
or accession process. Others have not brought the required IAEA safeguards agreements into
force. Elsewhere, whole regions have been unable to establish such zones, including the Middle
East. And some nuclear-weapon states have not concluded the relevant Protocols. Clearly, there
is still much work to do before we achieve our shared goal of a nuclear-weapon-free world.
The entry into force of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty would help to
prevent the upgrading of nuclear weapons. And the negotiation of a fissile material treaty in the
Conference on Disarmament would contribute to forestalling any further expansion of existing
arsenals.
Both initiatives would reinforce the global nuclear non-proliferation regime. I therefore
urge greater political support for the Conference on Disarmament as a crucial prerequisite to
achieve these aims.
In the meantime, international non-proliferation and disarmament efforts will continue to
face challenges. The nuclear test by the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea in 2006 was a
particularly severe setback for the non-proliferation regime. The world eagerly awaits full
implementation of the DPRK’s commitments to disable its nuclear programme.
A welcome step was taken last month when the Six-Party Talks agreed to establish
mechanisms to verify the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula and to monitor the
implementation of related commitments. I encourage the countries concerned to make further
progress. As Secretary-General of the United Nations, I stand ready to assist in any way I can to
help achieve the goal of a nuclear-free Korean peninsula.
On the Iranian nuclear issue, I am concerned about the continued absence of a resolution.
It can and must be resolved by peaceful means. I encourage all parties to follow up on the recent
round of talks in Geneva, with a view to reaching an early resolution of this issue in accordance with the relevant resolutions of the Security Council.
Excellencies,
Four decades after the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty was opened for signature, an
estimated 26,000 nuclear weapons reportedly remain in the world. It is obvious that we must
make greater progress globally on nuclear disarmament to bring this figure down.
But progress in nuclear disarmament is not an end in itself -- it will also help to
significantly reduce the risks of both nuclear proliferation and terrorism. After all, realistically,
nuclear disarmament can occur only in parallel with strict, iron-clad controls to prevent noncompliance.
The UN General Assembly and states parties to the NPT have repeatedly argued
that disarmament must include standards of transparency, verification, irreversibility, and that
they must be legally binding.
Accordingly, it is crucial to implement and build on the key components of the NPT in
tandem -- they are all part and parcel of the same universally agreed goal: a world without
nuclear weapons. The 2010 NPT Review Conference is a critical occasion for us all to
contribute towards robust, creative responses to the challenges facing the Treaty and to reaffirm
our commitment to the grand bargain embodied in it. I encourage all States to seize that
opportunity.
Of course, the prospects for achieving the twin goals of general and complete nuclear
disarmament and non-proliferation hinge on the international security environment. But we
cannot wait for a perfect security environment to come along. Rather, I believe that the process
of moving forward in disarmament, non-proliferation, and against terrorist uses of weapons of
mass destruction will itself contribute to international peace and security.
It is clear that disarmament and non-proliferation are of vital importance in shaping
international peace and security. But we must not lose sight of their close connections to our
development efforts. Today, countries around the world spend some 1.3 trillion dollars on their
militaries and on arms. We could make significant progress towards the Millennium
Development Goals if some of these resources were redirected to economic and social
development efforts. At a time of soaring food and fuel prices and global economic uncertainty,
the world cannot afford to ignore the development potential of disarmament and nonproliferation.
Ladies and gentlemen,
Multilateral cooperation remains absolutely indispensable to moving forward on
disarmament and non-proliferation. OPANAL is an important partner in these collective efforts
to free the world of nuclear dangers and I applaud your determination to do more to advance this
vital aim.
I urge all members of OPANAL to continue to demonstrate their leadership and their
efforts, and I call on you to work with members of other nuclear-weapon-free zones to promote
nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation and to reduce the risk of nuclear terrorism.
For my part, I look forward to cooperating closely with OPANAL on the range of issues
before you as together we pursue the goal of a safe and prosperous world for all of humanity. In
this spirit please accept my best wishes for a successful session.
Muchas gracias.
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