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From Oslo and Nayarit to Vienna

March 3, 2014

Starting in Oslo, Norway, in March 2013, with a follow up in Nayarit, Mexico, in February 2014, a majority of states have jointly entered into a process that focuses on the humanitarian impacts of nuclear weapons. We don’t know yet exactly where this process will lead, but there is no doubt that the international community, with a vast majority of states, clearly declares that nuclear weapons are too dangerous and too harmful both for humans and the environment to be kept around in a state ready for use. We also know that the process—with a humanitarian focus—will continue to move forward when States and NGOs gather in Vienna in Austria later this year.

Nuclear weapons protest

IPPNW Germany activists symbolically sweep nuclear weapons into the trash during a recent protest.

There is, perhaps, no wonder that the small minority of States armed with nuclear weapons—and apparently addicted to them— have so far stayed away from the process.  Nevertheless, they will have to come on board sooner or later, unless they have a desire to be left out altogether. They simply have no choice.  Like smokers who have no real reason to continue smoking, the nuclear-armed states have no real reason whatsoever to cling to their completely useless, immoral, inhuman, and tremendously expensive nuclear weapons.

Last weekend, I told my oldest grandson, who is 12, about the recent conference in Nayarit and the exciting results that came out of it. During our talk he asked me why somebody does not simply ask the few nuclear armed states why they claim to need their nuclear weapons and for what purpose. When we discussed this further, we could not think of any significant reason that they could come up with, only bad excuses, like deterrence, peacekeeping, and such meaningless and outdated rubbish.  We agreed that his question is absolutely in place, and that the only real answer to it is total nuclear weapons abolition in our lifetime.

“Ridding the world of nuclear weapons will take courage”

February 27, 2014

ICAN closing statement to the Second Conference on the Humanitarian Impact of Nuclear Weapons

February 14, 2014

[Ray Acheson of WILPF’s Reaching Critical Will project and a member of ICAN’s International Steering Group, read the following statement during the closing session of the Second Conference on the Humanitarian Impact of Nuclear Weapons in Nayarit, Mexico.]

Ray Acheson speaks on behalf of ICAN

Ray Acheson speaks on behalf of ICAN

I am speaking on behalf of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, a coalition of over 350 organisations in 90 countries.

We have been given over the past two days a chilling reminder of what nuclear weapons are, and what they do.

They do not bring security. They bring death and destruction on a scale that cannot be justified for any reason. Read more…

Mazda “Make Things Better” Award to small arms project by IPPNW affiliates

February 20, 2014

By Antti Junkkari, Dr. Kati Juva, Finland, and Dr. Ehase Agyeno, Nigeria

An exciting new South/North project of Physicians for Social Responsibility (PSR), Finland in cooperation with the Society of Nigerian Doctors for the Welfare of Mankind (SNDWM), Zambian Healthworkers for Social Responsibility (ZHSR), and IPPNW just got a financial boost from the “Mazda Make Things Better Award.” The Mazda award was launched at the summit of Nobel Peace Laureates in October, 2013 in Warsaw, and the joint IPPNW project “Raising awareness on small arms through interactive radio programmes” has now won the first of these awards! Raypower project Nigeria - Lets start (2) Read more…

“Point of no return”

February 14, 2014

“Somewhere Over the Rainbow” is playing in the conference hall in Nayarit following the chair’s declaration that this conference has been “the point of no return” in the humanitarian initiative to achieve a world without nuclear weapons.

Without getting overly specific, he called for an appropriate process in an appropriate forum that would have the goal of a legally binding instrument that would outlaw nuclear weapons by the 70th anniversary of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

The ICAN campaigners erupted into applause at the conclusion of his statement. This is exactly what we wanted coming into Mexico, and we can now leave knowing that the road to Austria has been clearly marked.

More details in a more sober mood later. Now off the the ICAN party!!

Friends don’t let friends…

February 14, 2014
Robock in Nayarit

Alan Robock at the podium in Nayarit, describes climate impact of a nuclear war.

The head of the Civilian Protection division of Mexico’s Ministry of the Interior destroyed Mexico City after lunch yesterday. Which is to say, he conducted a classic IPPNW “bombing run,” showing the overwhelming casualties, physical destruction, and radiation effects of a nuclear detonation over this country’s capital. And if anyone didn’t draw this conclusion for themselves, he confirmed that neither his agency nor anyone else would have the resources to help the surviving victims of such a catastrophe. Read more…

Wasting no time in Nayarit

February 13, 2014
Setsuko Thurlow offers Hibakusha testimony

Setsuko Thurlow offers Hibakusha testimony

The Second International Conference on the Humanitarian Impact of Nuclear Weapons opened in Nayarit, Mexico this morning, and the initial speakers wasted no time in expressing their conviction that an understanding of what nuclear weapons can do requires that we ban and eliminate them.

If there was any lingering doubt that Mexico convened this conference as a springboard to action, that doubt was removed by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Dr. José Antonio Meade Kuribreña, who said the abolition of nuclear weapons should have happened yesterday. Read more…

The ban is coming, despite the boycott

February 13, 2014
Bengal tiger at the entrance to the conference hall...keeping an eye out in case one of the P5 tries to crash the party?

Bengal tiger at the entrance to the conference hall…keeping an eye out in case one of the P5 tries to crash the party?

As delegations from 146 States began to arrive at the venue for the Second International Conference on the Humanitarian Impact of Nuclear Weapons, more than 100 civil society activists organized by ICAN completed a two-day campaigners meeting to ensure that we will have an impact of our own on what transpires here in Nayarit on Thursday and Friday. Read more…

ICAN arrives in Nayarit

February 12, 2014
Sunset over Nayarit

Sunset over Nayarit

The Pacific Ocean laps up onto the beach behind our hotels; large, brightly colored parrots squawk “hola” from the trees; there’s a pair of Bengal tigers with a cub at the bottom of the steps from my room; and right around the corner is a spacious conference room with banners outside for the Second International Conference on the Humanitarian Impact of Nuclear Weapons. The man who shuttles me to my room is curious to know what this is all about, and in no time at all he gets it that something very different from the usual business or government conference is about to happen in Nayarit. He expresses real pride that Mexico would host a large group of countries that want to eliminate nuclear weapons from the world. Read more…

“Human beings have to stop keeping nuclear arms”

January 31, 2014

NHK-TV in Japan aired a profile of Dr. Masao Tomonaga, IPPNW’s Regional Vice President for North Asia and Director of the Japanese Red Cross Hospital in Nagasaki. Dr. Tomonaga will join the Japanese delegation to the Second International Conference on the Humanitarian Impact of Nuclear Weapons in Nayarit, Mexico on February 13 and 14. He will speak about the long term health effects of nuclear weapons during a session that will also include Co-President Ira Helfand, who will present the findings from IPPNW’s updated Nuclear Famine report.

“Now that the inhumane nature of nuclear weapons has been clarified,” Dr. Tomonaga says during the profile, “we should move ahead and abolish them.”

Masao Tomonaga

 

The P5 are on the run…but toward or away from Nayarit?

January 27, 2014

Thanks to our friend John Burroughs at the Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy for tipping us off to the latest piece of evidence that the humanitarian framework for nuclear disarmament is causing indigestion and sleepless nights for the P5, its allies, and its think tanks.

A new “consensus statement” from the conservative Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) warns the nuclear-armed states that this new focus on humanitarian impact—in other words, what nuclear weapons actually do when used, regardless of who uses them—is “encouraging opposition to…nuclear deterrence.”

The CSIS is right about that. Read more…