BD's call to make world livable for present, future generations
Sunday, 4 October 2020
Bangladesh has urged the global community to use their resources for realising sustainable development goals (SDGs), and making this world safe and livable for present and future generations, reports UNB.
"Total elimination of nuclear weapons is a long overdue commitment. On this momentous 75th anniversary of the United Nations, let us re-commit....," said Foreign Minister Dr AK Abdul Momen.
He made the call at the high-level plenary meeting of the UN General Assembly in New York held virtually on Friday to commemorate and promote the International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons.
DrMomen said the pandemic has made it a rallying call more than ever before.
"Mass awareness and global advocacy need to be promoted and accelerated through effective partnership, including with civil society organisations," he said.
The foreign minister flagged a few points saying Bangladesh steadfastly supports the goal of a world free of nuclear weapons.
He said nuclear weapons themselves are the problems and as the former Secretary-General of UN Ban ki Moon stated that "there are no right hands to handle these wrong weapons."
Secondly, DrMomen said nuclear weapon states need to take concrete steps to cease nuclear arms race and also to get rid of the risk of nuclear weapons falling in the hands of the wrong people - terrorists.
In his third point, the foreign minister said nuclear-weapon-free-zones need to be established in all parts of the world through ratification by the nuclear weapons states, they also must ratify the related protocols to all treaties establishing such zones.
While sharing his fourth point, DrMomen said, the potential of nuclear technology for benefit of humankind and inalienable rights of States for research, production and peaceful use of nuclear energy, without discrimination, must be fostered through effective international cooperation.
The foreign minister said the United Nations was created from the ashes of the Second World War.
The devastation and human suffering caused by the nuclear bombing shook the world and the collective conscience of humankind, he said adding that the UN, in its very first resolution, envisioned a world free of nuclear weapons.
DrMomen said 75 years have passed yet their present and future generations continue to live under the threat of nuclear catastrophe.
And now, he said, the Covid-19 pandemic has presented before us the long-established truth in a more glaring way that stockpiles of weapons fail to save human beings.