Key Points

The UN General Assembly met to commemorate the International Day Against Nuclear Tests. Officials warned that the world remains overshadowed by conflict and nuclear threats. They highlighted how the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty has dramatically reduced nuclear testing since the Cold War era. The day serves to increase awareness about the need for a nuclear-weapon-free world.

Key Points: UNGA Commemorates International Day Against Nuclear Tests

  • UN warns of world overshadowed by conflict and nuclear weapons
  • CTBT credited with reducing tests from 2000 to under a dozen
  • Nuclear technology also used for peaceful medical and energy purposes
  • 2009 UN resolution established August 29 as anti-test day
2 min read

UNGA commemorates Int'l Day against Nuclear Tests

UN officials warn of nuclear dangers as General Assembly marks International Day Against Nuclear Tests, calling test bans a moral and strategic necessity for global security.

"It is a moral and strategic necessity. - Izumi Nakamitsu, UN Disarmament Chief"

United Nations, Sep 4

The UN General Assembly (UNGA) met to commemorate and promote the International Day against Nuclear Tests.

"Today's commemoration takes place in a world overshadowed by conflict, mistrust and the looming shadow of nuclear weapons," said Izumi Nakamitsu, UN Undersecretary-General and High Representative for Disarmament Affairs, on behalf of UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, at the conference on Wednesday.

As trust between states continues to erode and investments in arsenals rise, the prohibition of all nuclear explosive testing is not merely a technical or procedural matter, she said. "It is a moral and strategic necessity."

Robert Floyd, executive secretary of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) Organization, said that 80 years after the first nuclear test and the bombings of Japan's Hiroshima and Nagasaki cities during World War II, not even one nuclear weapon has exploded in war around the world, reports Xinhua news agency.

He added that in the following 50 years, some 2,000 nuclear explosions scarred the planet, averaging "one test every week" during the Cold War.

Since the 1996 CTBT's opening, "fewer than a dozen tests" have taken place, making the treaty "a triumph for science, for multilateralism, for humanity," said Floyd.

Vivian Okeke, director of the International Atomic Energy Agency Liaison Office in New York, said that since its establishment, the agency has worked to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons while making nuclear science and technology available for peaceful purposes.

Nuclear technology diagnoses and cures diseases such as cancer, feeds the hungry, protects the environment, and provides clean energy that powers progress, said Okeke, stressing that "it is essential that nuclear technology is used safely and securely."

In December 2009, the 64th session of the UNGA declared August 29 the International Day against Nuclear Tests, adopting a unanimous resolution that calls for increasing awareness and education "about the effects of nuclear weapon test explosions or any other nuclear explosions and the need for their cessation as one of the means of achieving the goal of a nuclear-weapon-free world."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
It's encouraging to see progress since the CTBT. But we need more countries to actually ratify it. While nuclear energy for peaceful purposes is great for development, testing weapons is something humanity should leave behind forever.
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Aman W
The part about nuclear technology helping with cancer treatment and feeding the hungry is so important. In India, we're using nuclear medicine extensively. This is the kind of nuclear progress we need - not weapons testing.
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Sarah B
While I appreciate the sentiment, I wish the UN would be more forceful with countries that continue to modernize their nuclear arsenals. Commemorations are good but action is better. The world needs stronger enforcement mechanisms.
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Vikram M
"One test every week during Cold War" - that statistic is terrifying! We've come a long way but the threat is still there. India has maintained a responsible stance on nuclear weapons while developing peaceful nuclear capabilities.
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Nisha Z
Education and awareness are key. Many young people don't understand the horrors of nuclear testing. We need to teach this in schools globally. The environmental damage from those 2000 tests affects us all even today.

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