Nuclear Proliferation Treaty: 50
years after
Pope Francis speaks at the Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima, Japan (AFP) |
5 March 2020 marks the 50th anniversary of the Nuclear
Proliferation Treaty. Five decades after, the Church continues to make her
voice heard as the world advances on the path towards the reduction and
eventual elimination of nuclear arsenals.
By Benedict Mayaki
Since the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki during the
Second World War and the subsequent cold war between the Eastern and Western
political blocs, nuclear policies have been an important part of public life.
These debates have marked the climate between the superpowers and other
countries of the world and have been a source of concern for the Church.
In November 2019, Pope Francis, speaking in Nagasaki, Japan,
demonstrated the Church’s support for disarmament treaties and noted that
“Peace and international stability are incompatible if they are founded on the
fear of mutual destruction or the threat of total elimination.”
The Pope’s outspokenness on the condemnation of the
possession of nuclear weapons is a continuation of a trend of calls by the
Church for rejection of the “false sense of security” brought about by nuclear
weapons.
A habit of speaking out
Pope Francis’ 2015 encyclical, Laudato si’(on care for our
common home), reiterated the concerns of Pope John XXIII’s “Pacem in Terris” in
which he rejected war and offered proposals for peace. Laudato si’ provided
pastoral, ecological and ethical foundations against nuclear proliferation and
warfare, and challenged scientists and world leaders to adopt a greater sense
of responsibility towards the earth.
In an address to the members of the diplomatic corps
accredited to the Holy See in January 2019, Pope Francis urged the ambassadors
to embrace diplomatic means as we cannot fail to be “genuinely concerned by the
catastrophic humanitarian and environmental effects of any employment of
nuclear devices.”
On the 53rd World Day of Peace on 1 January
2020, Pope Francis reiterated his continuous calls for peace by referring to
the testimony of the lives of the survivors of the atomic bombs in Hiroshima
and Nagasaki. He said, “their testimony awakes and preserves the memory of the
victims, so that the conscience of humanity may rise in the face of every
desire for dominance and destruction.”
In October 2019, during the 74th session of
the General Assembly of the United Nations (UN), Monsignor Bernadito Auza, the
permanent observer of the Holy See to UN, reiterated the Holy See’s calls for
peace without nuclear threats. He proposed an attitude of dialogue and trust
and referred to peace treaties as “vital elements” for nuclear disarmament.
From nuclear non-proliferation to nuclear test ban
In 2014, during the Conference on the Humanitarian Impact on
Nuclear Weapons on Vienna, Pope Francis referred to nuclear weapons as “global
problem” and called on the need for a global ethic if we are to “reduce the
nuclear threat and work towards nuclear disarmament” if we are to work for a
more secure world.
“I am convinced that the desire for peace and fraternity
planted deep in the human heart will bear fruit in concrete ways to ensure that
nuclear weapons are banned once and for all, to the benefit of our common home.
The security of our own future depends on guaranteeing the peaceful security of
others, for if peace, security and stability are not established globally, they
will not be enjoyed at all,” he said.
The Nuclear Proliferation Treaty
On March 5, 1970, the Nuclear Proliferations Treaty (NPT)
entered into effect after being opened for signatures in 1968. The goal of the
NPT is to inhibit the spread of nuclear weapons and promote cooperation in the
peaceful use of nuclear energy.
The NPT, which has near-universal adherence, has 191
countries as signatories including the five nuclear-weapon states (the United
States, Russia, France, China and the United Kingdom). However, four UN member
states (India, Pakistan, Israel and South Sudan) are outside of the treaty.
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