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Presentation on

"Conference of States parties to the regional zones"

to the forum

"PARLIAMENTARIANS, THE NUCLEAR NON-PROLIFERATION TREATY AND NUCLEAR-WEAPON-FREE ZONES"

 

           I would like to begin by thanking the Parliamentary Network for Nuclear Disarmament and Parliamentarians for Global Action (New Zealand) for inviting me to take part in this forum with a presentation concerning the international Conference of States Parties and Signatories to the Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone Treaties.

 

           It will come as no surprise to those present at this event when I reiterate Mexico's conviction that disarmament must play a central role in the collective security system, within which compliance with multilaterally-negotiated obligations is the best way of preventing the development of doctrines that claim to endorse unilateral decisions and so-called actions of a preventive nature.

 

           The ongoing presence of threats to international peace and security including the continued existence of large arsenals of nuclear weapons and the lack of progress in the main international disarmament and non-proliferation fora should motivate the States to embark on new initiatives.   Mexico decided to contribute once again with the announcement at the United Nations last October that it is ready to host an international Conference of States Parties and Signatories to the Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone Treaties in 2005.

 

           Mexico supports the establishment of nuclear-weapon-free zones as it considers them to be an instrument through which the ultimate objective of returning to a world free of nuclear weapons can be reached. The importance and validity of this type of zone have been ratified at the international and regional level in recent decades since the Treaty of Tlatelolco was opened for signing on 14 February 1967, thereby establishing the first nuclear-weapon-free zone in a densely-populated region.

 

           Following the passing of the indefinite extension of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons in 1995, as well as the opening to signature of the Treaty of Bangkok in 1995 and the Treaty of Pelindaba in 1996 several States began to consider the merits of holding an international meeting so that the States that belonged to nuclear-weapon-free zones could increase and strengthen cooperation while at the same time sharing experiences about applying the provisions of the treaties which establish such zones.

 

           This concern, shared by a large number of States, was addressed with the resolution promoted by Brazil entitled "Nuclear-Weapon-Free Southern Hemisphere and Adjacent Areas", passed by the General Assembly with an overwhelming majority.   I would like to acknowledge the active role played by the New Zealand delegation in the United Nations to generate greater support for the objectives the resolution sets out to meet. The Mexican delegation has worked assiduously towards the same goal.

 

           This year the resolution 59/85 was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly with 171 votes in favour, 4 against (France, the United Kingdom, the United States and Palau) and 8 abstentions (Bhutan, India, Israel, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Pakistan, Russian Federation and Spain).   Mexico and New Zealand were among the 19 States Members who were joint sponsors of the resolution which welcomes the announcement that an international conference of States Parties and Signatories to   the Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone Treaties will be held in Mexico in 2005 with the aim of working towards the common objectives envisaged by the aforementioned treaties.

 

           As noted earlier, the Government of Mexico took this initiative at the United Nations with the backing of the States Parties of the Treaty of Tlatelolco and in support of the decision taken in this regard in 1999 by the General Conference of the Agency for the Proscription of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean (OPANAL in Spanish). States Parties of the Treaty of Tlatelolco welcomed the offer made by the Mexican government to host such conference with Resolution 460 adopted on 23 November 2004 by the XVII Special Session of the General Conference of OPANAL. It is expected that the Secretary General of OPANAL, Ambassador Edmundo Vargas Carreño will be the secretary of the international conference.

 

           The aim of this conference is to promote better coordination between the States parties and signatories to the Treaties of Tlatelolco, Pelindaba, Bangkok and Rarotonga, to ensure the strict observance of the legal regimes that these zones have created and to support the establishment of additional nuclear-weapon-free zones in other parts of the world.

 

           It is hoped that the Political Declaration which comes from the Conference will make a contribution to the work of the 2005 NPT Review   Conference.   At this stage the planned declaration has already been agreed on by the States parties to the Treaty of Tlatelolco and consultations with representatives of other zones to facilitate its adoption in Mexico are now underway.

 

           Mexico hopes that a large number of delegations of States Parties and Signatories to the Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone Treaties will attend this event and that those governments which are able to offer support so that delegations from other States can participate, will do so.   I am certain that once again the contribution of the government and the people of New Zealand to the cause of nuclear disarmament will be in evidence.

 

           I would like to conclude by affirming that the results of the international Conference of States Parties and Signatories to the Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone Treaties should also contribute to the deliberations on the establishment of nuclear-weapon-free zones in the Middle East and South Asia, which would be an effective way of responding to one of the recommendations made by the High-Level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change.

 

 

Wellington, 8 December 2004.