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INTERVENTION BY THE HOLY SEE AT THE FIRST COMMITTEE OF
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE UNITED NATIONS ORGANIZATION ON DISARMAMENT
MATTERS
STATEMENT BY H.E. MSGR. CELESTINO MIGLIORE
8 October 2003
Mr. Chairman,
On behalf of my delegation, I wish to join the previous Speakers
in expressing our congratulations on your election and to assure you of our
complete cooperation as you guide the Committee’s work this year. I take this
occasion also to convey the Holy See’s continuing appreciation for the work for
peace done year after year in this United Nations setting.
If it seems impossible to have nations lay down their arms in
the present set of international relationships, perhaps the reason is because we
have not done sufficient preparation to give States and their leaders the
assurance that security can be obtained without the never ending development and
production of arms. This means that the conditions for peace must be built first
before we can enjoy the fruits of peace. The soil must be nourished before the
blossom appears.
That is why the work done by the United Nations and its agencies
in building a culture of peace is so important. If we are to aspire to general
and complete disarmament, we must first of all show a respect for life and the
dignity and human rights of individuals, reject violence, promote freedom,
justice, solidarity, tolerance and the acceptance of differences, and develop
better understanding and harmony between ethnic, religious, cultural and social
groups. This agenda is indeed vast, but if the world community does not embrace
it, we will continue to suffer the ravages of war.
The main purpose of the United Nations to maintain international
peace and security can be realized in many different ways, for it is a purpose
threatened and challenged on many fronts. In his address at the opening of this
session of the General Assembly, Secretary-General Kofi Annan spoke of the
"hard" and "soft" threats to peace faced by the UN. Among the hard threats are
terrorism and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, while the soft
threats include the persistence of extreme poverty, the disparity of income
between and within societies, the spread of infectious diseases, and
environmental degradation. Both types of threats are real and must be recognized
by all States.
Moreover, the Secretary-General emphasized that the UN does not
have to choose to confront one to the exclusion of the other; indeed the UN
cannot do so. This need and concern for a comprehensive view of international
peace and security are fully shared by the Holy See, as evidenced primarily by
its teachings on the nature of the human person, human dignity and a just social
order. It is from this starting-point that my Delegation has always addressed
this Committee.
Mr. Chairman,
The specific focus of the First Committee is on disarmament
matters, usually considered hard threats to be handled by a number of
multilateral initiatives and agreements. The importance of dialogue,
negotiation, diplomacy and reference to the rule of law in these proceedings
cannot be over-estimated. Though we have mediation and verification techniques
embodied in international law, they are not being sufficiently utilized, and
thus nations lapse into war. The steady application of the rule of law must be
supported as the means to peace rather than constant recourse to militarism. In
this regard, this Committee has a prominent role to play in insisting on
standards to curb the excesses of weaponry. Such work is a direct contribution
to build the conditions of peace.
Small arms ought to occupy our immediate attention, for small
arms and light weapons kill more than half a million people each year -
including 300,000 in armed conflict and 200,000 from homicides and suicides, of
which 90 percent are civilians. Throughout the 1990s, small arms were used in 47
of 49 major conflicts. To fully address the small arms problem, there must be
greater recognition that domestic laws and international policies are
interdependent, and that the legal and illegal markets for small arms are
inter-related. Many illicit transfers start out as legal ones. In this regard,
my Delegation re-iterates its view that attention should be focussed on two
important issues: State responsibility for illicit transfers and a legally
binding agreement on the international arms trade.
The proliferation of small arms augment armed conflicts and
diminishes the opportunities for human development. People in developing
countries are more than twice as likely to die from small arms than their
counterparts in the developed countries. Small arms impede the tasks of aid
workers and relief agencies. The prevalence of such weapons discourages teachers
and children from going to school and farmers from taking their goods to market.
The reconstruction of war-torn societies is made all the more difficult when
such weapons are widely available. Governments should see this fact as not just
a problem of national security but of human development. A human rights approach
to small arms puts people at the centre of the analysis and highlights that it
is up to governments to take action.
Mr. Chairman,
The vast majority of Cold-War arms control thinking relied on
the concept of Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD). Everyone knows that this
deterrence concept was based on a terrifying foundation: that one bloc's
security can be defended by threatening the annihilation of the other bloc's
population. The horrible prospect of global nuclear warfare was thought to be
enough to ensure some form of peace and security, while over time both bilateral
and multilateral agreements sought to reduce this possibility by encouraging and
verifying the reduction of nuclear weapons in the world. This was made concrete
in one particular case by the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
The end of the Cold War should have seen the end of MAD policies
that held the world in fear, but events over the past year have led to a certain
resurgence in this thinking. With it have come a real weakening of the NPT
regime and multilateral efforts for disarmament and non-proliferation. By
exploiting certain loopholes in the NPT and engaging in covert proliferation
activities, some States are once again banking their security on the possession
and threatened use of nuclear weapons. These steps should be alarming to
everyone. As my Delegation has insisted on many previous occasions, nuclear
weapons are incompatible with peace in the 21st century.
As governments prepare for the 2005 Review of the
Non-Proliferation Treaty, the question of proliferation of nuclear weapons in
all its aspects must be addressed. In the new age of terrorism the world has
sadly entered, in which the fear of a terrorist attack with nuclear devices is
present, the world community must give life to the following words, contained in
the Final Document of the NPT 2000 Review, which all NPT States Parties agreed
to: [...] the total elimination of nuclear weapons is the only absolute
guarantee against the use or threat of use of nuclear weapons."
The other weapons of mass destruction, chemical and biological
weapons, also present serious problems. Like the peaceful uses of nuclear
energy, many chemical and biological agents are used for legitimate and even
beneficial purposes, but some of these can be easily converted into
weapons-grade material only to be bought, sold and transported without
detection. Multilateral inspection agencies, such as the IAEA for nuclear
materials and the OPCW for chemicals, are vital to ensuring compliance and
verification, and the lack of such an agency for the Biological Weapons
Convention needs to be remedied quickly. Stringent export controls on the part
of States who produce these materials would help stem illicit transfers and hold
States more accountable for licit ones.
It is an unfortunate fact that many arms control treaties
contain loopholes and weak points in terms of compliance, verification and
enforcement. None of these weaknesses should, however, divert our attention away
from the seriousness of the threats posed by these weapons. Stronger enforcement
measures, perhaps by developing interdiction agreements and policies among
States, may be one way of making sure that international law is upheld and
vindicated. Making transparent, verifiable and irreversible reductions in
offensive weapons is the most direct approach to disarmament. However, at the
same time multilateral security assurances in line with changing geo-political
realities among States and, perhaps most importantly, internal political reforms
have been shown to eliminate the need for such weapons in the first place. These
assurances and reforms have certainly been effective in encouraging the nuclear
disarmament already undertaken by a number of States under the NPT regime.
Mr. Chairman,
All the steps that must be taken in the disarmament process may
seem at times overwhelming. But if they are seen in the context of building a
culture of peace, they are not perhaps so daunting, with a view to combat both
the hard and soft threats to our collective peace and security and guarantee the
survival of humanity. What is essential to fulfill the peace agenda is to change
the attitude of both States and individuals. We must realize that violence is
not the inevitable lot of mankind. We have already constructed the broad
framework of international law and have, in the United Nations, the political
instrument to implement that law. The knowledge of these gains already achieved
by humanity should fill us with hope that recourse to violence and war can be
overcome by renewing a political commitment to a multilateralism which is based
upon the values of responsibility, solidarity and dialogue. The steady
application of disarmament steps can indeed light the way forward.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
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