Bangladesh made the call joining the international community to celebrate the entry into the force of the landmark Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) at a virtual event simultaneously held in New York, Geneva and Vienna on Friday.
In her address to the commemorative event organised by several UN Member States, Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Bangladesh to the United Nations in New York, Rabab Fatima said it was from that unwavering constitutional commitment that Bangladesh was among the first 50 countries to join this historic treaty to prohibit nuclear weapons.
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She said Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has been a strong global voice and advocate for nuclear disarmament, and led efforts to be one of the first signatories of the Treaty.
Bangladesh signed the Treaty on 20 September 2017; and ratified it on 26 September 2019, said the Bangladesh Mission in the UN on Saturday.
Recognising the dehumanising and devastating consequences of nuclear weapons, Ambassador Fatima called upon States that are yet to join, to do so, to attain universal application of this Treaty.
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Echoing Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s call for ‘peaceful use of nuclear technology’, Ambassador Fatima called for increased investment in research of nuclear technology for their peaceful use for the benefit of humankind.
She also called for continued global efforts to raise awareness against nuclear weapons, for a peaceful and nuclear weapons free world. Bangladesh, she said, would remain committed to reaching that goal.
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Fatima paid rich tributes to the ‘Hibakushas’, the survivors and victims of atomic bombings and contamination, and the generations of activists, whose tireless efforts raised awareness about the devastating impacts of nuclear weapons, which finally led to the adoption of this landmark nuclear ban treaty.
The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) is the first legally-binding international agreement to prohibit signatory states from developing, testing, producing, stockpiling, stationing, transferring, and using or threatening to use nuclear arms.
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The Treaty has so far been signed by 86 countries and ratified by 51. The Treaty came into force on 22 January 2021 after 90 days of deposition of Honduras' instrument of ratification with the UN Secretary-General on 24 October 2020.
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The event was co-organised by the missions of Austria, Brazil, Costa Rica, Indonesia, Ireland, Mexico, Nigeria, New Zealand, South Africa and Thailand. Among others, the heads of the International Committee of Red Cross and International Coalition to Abolish Nuclear Weapons also spoke at the event.
UN Secretary General Antoni Guterres sent a video message on the occasion.