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Full text of Hiroshima-Nagasaki Declaration of Nobel Peace laureates, 18 May 2009.
HIROSHIMA - The following is the full text of
''The Hiroshima-Nagasaki Declaration of Nobel Peace Laureates''
published Monday in the Chugoku Shimbun newspaper in Hiroshima.
The Hiroshima-Nagasaki Declaration of Nobel Peace Laureates
Sixty-four years ago, the horror of atomic bombs was unleashed on
Japan, and the world witnessed the destructive power of nuclear
weapons. Today, with just a year until the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) Review Conference convenes at the
United Nations in the spring of 2010, we, the undersigned Nobel
Peace Laureates, echo U.S. President Barack Obama's call for a
world without nuclear weapons and appeal to the leader of every
nation to resolutely pursue this goal for the good of all.
We find ourselves in a new era of proliferation. Despite the near
universal ratification of the 1970 treaty, which binds states to
nuclear disarmament, little progress has been made to fulfill this
pact and eliminate nuclear weapons from our world. On the contrary,
as the nuclear powers have continued to brandish their weapons,
other nations have sought to produce their own nuclear
arsenals.
We are deeply troubled by this threat of proliferation to
non-nuclear weapon states, but equally concerned at the faltering
will of the nuclear powers to move forward in their obligation to
disarm their own nations of these dreadful weapons.
The fact that humanity has managed to avoid a third nuclear
nightmare is not merely a fortunate whim of history. The resolve of
the A-bomb survivors, who have called on the world to avert another
Hiroshima or Nagasaki, has surely helped prevent that catastrophe.
Moreover, the millions who have supported the survivors in their
quest for peace, as well as the reality of our collective
restraint, suggest that human beings are imbued with a better,
higher nature, an instinct for inhibiting violence and upholding
life.
In the months leading up to the NPT Review Conference, this higher
nature must rise to guide our efforts. Nations are now reviewing
progress in the treaty's implementation and mapping a path forward.
For the first time in many years, the opportunity exists for
genuine movement toward reducing and eliminating nuclear arms.
As this process unfolds, world leaders will be faced with a stark
choice: nuclear non-proliferation or nuclear brinkmanship. We can
either put an end to proliferation, and set a course toward
abolition; or we can wait for the horrors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
to be repeated.
We believe it is long past time for humanity to heed the warning
made by Albert Einstein in 1946: ''The unleashed power of the atom
has changed everything save our modes of thinking, and we thus
drift toward unparalleled catastrophe. We shall require a
substantially new manner of thinking if mankind is to
survive.''
We know that such a new manner of thinking is possible. In the
past ten years, the governments of the world, working alongside
international institutions, non-governmental organizations, and
survivors, have negotiated treaties banning two indiscriminate
weapons systems: landmines and cluster bombs. These weapons were
banned when the world finally recognized them for the humanitarian
disaster they are.
The world is well aware that nuclear weapons are a humanitarian
disaster of monstrous proportion. They are indiscriminate, immoral,
and illegal. They are military tools whose staggering consequences
have already been seen in the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
and the long-term impacts of those attacks. Eliminating nuclear
weapons is indeed a possibility -- more than that, it is a
fundamental necessity in forging a more secure planet for us
all.
As Nobel Peace Laureates, we call on the citizens of the world to
press their leaders to grasp the peril of inaction and summon the
political will to advance toward nuclear disarmament and abolition.
To fulfill a world without nuclear weapons, and inspire a greater
peace among our kind, humanity must stand together to make this
vision a reality.
(The 17 laureates are Betty Williams, Mairead Corrigan Maguire,
Adolfo Perez Esquivel, Desmond Tutu, Oscar Arias Sanchez, The Dalai
Lama, Rigoberta Menchu Tum, Frederik W. de Klerk, Carlos Felipe
Ximenes Belo, Jose Ramos-Horta, Jody Williams, John Hume, Kim Dae
Jung, Shirin Ebadi, Wangari Maathai, Mohamed Elbaradei and Muhammad
Yunus)
© 2009 Kyodo World News Service
Source: International Atomic Energy Agency, www.iaea.org.