Arch. Gallagher: Holy See will
continue opposing nuclear weapons
Pope Francis with Archbishop Paul Richard Gallagher. (Vatican Media) |
Archbishop Paul Richard Gallagher, the Vatican Secretary for
Relations with States, addresses a United Nations General Assembly meeting on
the elimination of nuclear weapons.
By Robin Gomes
The Holy See said on Wednesday it will continue to argue
against both the possession and the use of nuclear weapons, saying the total
elimination of nuclear weapons is not only a security issue, but a moral,
humanitarian and environmental imperative.
The Vatican Secretary for Relations with States,
Archbishop Paul Richard Gallagher made the statement at a
high-level meeting at the 73rd session of the United Nations General
Assembly to mark the September 26 International Day for the
Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons.
Threat of annihilation
“The world is not safer with nuclear weapons; it is more
dangerous,” Archbishop Gallagher said. “A policy that relies on the
possession of nuclear weapons,” he said, “is contradictory to the spirit and
purpose of the United Nations because nuclear weapons cannot create for us a
stable and secure world, and because peace and international stability cannot
be founded on mutually assured destruction or on the threat of total
annihilation.”
Environmental, humanitarian consequences
Speaking about the environmental disasters and humanitarian
consequences of the use of nuclear weapons, the Holy See official whose
portfolio is equivalent to that of foreign minister, encouraged all countries
to make the Comprehensive Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) a
reality by ensuring its entry into force.
He pointed out that the Holy See has been a party to
the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) since the very
beginning, in order to encourage nuclear possessing states to abolish their
nuclear weapons, to dissuade non-nuclear possessing states from acquiring or
developing nuclear capabilities, and to encourage international cooperation on
the peaceful uses of nuclear material.
Trust
Stressing that disarmament treaties are not just legal
obligations but also moral commitments, Archbishop Gallagher said their entry
into force can only happen if there is mutual trust between states and
between citizens and their governments.
Archbishop Gallagher who has been participating in various
meetings of the 73rd UN General Assembly, has spoken on a
variety of issues such as human rights, migration, tuberculosis, death penalty
and Nelson Mandela.
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