Support the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW)

On October 30, 2023, the Olympia City Council passed a resolution supporting the TPNW.   Thanks to Bob Zeigler, Mark Fleming and others who had a hand in this.  City Council member Clark Gilman strongly promoted this.

TPNW Resolution

 

 

Please SHARE and ENDORSE this interfaith statement for the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW):

Olympia’s Joanne Dufour will be going to New York and attending the upcoming meeting at the United Nations of nations that have ratified the TPNW.  She encourages us to share this interfaith statement and get faith communities (local and larger) to endorse it.  The deadline for endorsing it is November 22, 2023, but even after that, people can still read this and support the Treaty in other ways.

Dear colleagues and friends,

To celebrate the second Meeting of the States Parties of theTreaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), to be held 27 November-1 December in New York, we drafted a joint interfaith statement to be delivered to the States Parties. We would like to also thank the people who sent us inputs and participated in the drafting calls.

We invite faith groups at all levels, from local congregations to international organizations, to endorse the statement. Once you obtain Dapproval to sign on, please fill out this endorsement form by Wednesday 22 November EOD:

https://bit.ly/2msp-interfaith-endorse

Please also help spread the word by sharing this email with other organizations and networks you are part of. We would like to gather as many endorsements as possible from a wide variety of groups, in order to demonstrate to the States Parties that we are united as communities of faith to support and strengthen their work.

Quick links: 

Here the statement with A LIST OF SIGNERS as of early November 2023;  2MSP Interfaith Statement

 

 

The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) condemns NATO nuclear exercise in Europe and urges ratifying the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty:

Press release

Civil society calls for renewed push for all states to join nuclear test ban treaty

For immediate use

Geneva/Washington 24 October 2023

Nuclear weapons experts from across international civil society are calling on the international community to pressure the states that have yet to ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) to do so urgently and to urge Russia to re-ratify it.

Russia’s decision to revoke its ratification of the treaty by pointing to the United States failure to ratify it is a wake up call to states that still need to ratify the CTBT to do so, in order for the treaty to enter into force.

In the light of this, the signatories are calling for all countries that have signed and ratified the CTBT and the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) to urge the eight states that have yet to ratify the CTBT (China, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Egypt, India, Iran, Israel, Pakistan and the United States) to do so. In addition, the experts call for international pressure on Russia to reverse its de-ratification of the treaty.

They also urge all CTBT states with testing facilities to negotiate voluntary confidence building measures to ensure that ongoing experiments at former nuclear test sites are consistent with the the treaty.

Since the CTBT was adopted in 1996, none of the main nuclear-armed states have carried out a test, but the experts say Russia’s recent action, despite Moscow’s assurances it will continue to abide by the treaty as long as the United States does not carry out a test, is a retrograde step that increases the likelihood that nuclear-armed states will resume testing.

In a letter sent to every CTBT and TPNW state party and signatory, the experts say that although it has yet to enter into force, the CTBT is “one of the most successful and valuable agreements in the long history of nuclear nonproliferation, arms control, and disarmament …. since the conclusion of the treaty in 1996, it has been signed by 187 countries, and nuclear testing has become taboo.”

The signatories come from leading civil society organisations, including the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, the Arms Control Association, Soka Gakkai International, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, Physicians for Social Responsibility, Reaching Critical Will, the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, and the Project on Managing the Atom at the Belfer Center.

A full copy of the letter is available on request.

 

For more information and interview requests contact: 

Alistair Burnett, ICAN Head of Media: alistair@icanw.org +41 78 238 7179

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

About GlenAnderson 1514 Articles
Since the late 1960s Glen Anderson has devoted his life to working as a volunteer for peace, nonviolence, social justice, and progressive political issues. He has worked through many existing organizations and started several. Over the years he has worked especially for such wide-ranging goals as making peace with Vietnam, eliminating nuclear weapons, converting from a military economy to a peacetime economy, abolishing the death penalty, promoting nonviolence at all levels throughout society, and helping people organize and strategize for grassroots movements to solve many kinds of problems. He writes, speaks, and conducts training workshops on a wide variety of topics. Since 1987 he has produced and hosted a one-hour cable TV interview program on many kinds of issues. Since 2017 he has blogged at https://parallaxperspectives.org He lives in Lacey near Olympia WA. You can reach him at (360) 491-9093 glen@parallaxperspectives.org