Close X
Friday, October 11, 2024
ADVT 
International

Led By Us, Western Powers Boycotting Nuclear Ban Negotiations: Haley

Darpan News Desk IANS, 27 Mar, 2017 12:22 PM
    Western nuclear powers and 37 other countries led by Washington are boycotting the negotiations on banning nuclear weapons that began on Monday, US Permanent representative Nikki Haley announced.
     
    She cited the danger posed by international outlaws who will not abide by any treaties or laws as a rationale for her country, France, Britain and the others to stay away from the negotiations on a legally binding treaty to ban nuclear weapons.
     
    India abstained from voting on the General Assembly resolution last year that called for the negotiations. It could not be ascertained if India was participating in the negotiations that started on Monday.
     
    While China and Pakistan also abstained on the resolution, Russia joined the western nuclear powers in voting against it.
     
    The Democratic Party administration of President Barack Obama opposed the Assembly resolution to set up the nuclear weapons ban negotiations and President Donald Trump is continuing the policy.
     
     
    "In this day and age we can't say honestly that we can protect our people by allowing the bad actors to have them," Haley told reporters outside the General Assembly chamber where the meeting on the negotiations was taking place.
     
    "We have to be realistic," she said. "Is there anyone that believes that North Korea would agree to a ban on nuclear weapons?"
     
    In defiance of the UN, North Korea is developing nuclear weapons and missiles to launch them.
     
    Haley instead pitched the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) as the route to disarmament.
     
    France's Deputy Permanent Representative Alexis Lamek said the NPT remains the cornerstone of nuclear disarmament efforts. A new treaty to ban all nuclear weapons will divide the parties to the NPT, he said.
     
    British Permanent Representative Matthew Rycroft also backed that approach. He sadi that his country was for a step by step approach within existing multilateral system.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Police Identify Officer Who Killed Unarmed Missouri Teen, Allege Young Man Robbed Cigars

    Police Identify Officer Who Killed Unarmed Missouri Teen, Allege Young Man Robbed Cigars
    Police on Friday identified the officer who fatally shot an unarmed black teenager in a St. Louis suburb and released documents alleging the young man had been su

    Police Identify Officer Who Killed Unarmed Missouri Teen, Allege Young Man Robbed Cigars

    India-US partnership never mattered more: John Kerry

    India-US partnership never mattered more: John Kerry
    Asserting that India-US partnership "has never mattered more," US Secretary of State John Kerry has spoken of the possibilities of a shared future that...

    India-US partnership never mattered more: John Kerry

    Chinese airline sued for rejecting HIV-positive passengers

    Chinese airline sued for rejecting HIV-positive passengers
    Three HIV-positive passengers have sued a Chinese budget airline after they were denied boarding on a plane, Global Times reported Friday...

    Chinese airline sued for rejecting HIV-positive passengers

    In status-conscious South Korea, Pope Francis turns heads with compact local car

    In status-conscious South Korea, Pope Francis turns heads with compact local car
    SEOUL, South Korea - Pope Francis' choice of wheels during his five-day South Korean visit has surprised many in this painfully self-conscious country, where big shots rarely hit the streets in anything but expensive luxury cars.

    In status-conscious South Korea, Pope Francis turns heads with compact local car

    Amid bedlam in Missouri, Obama tentatively tiptoes into topic of race relations

    Amid bedlam in Missouri, Obama tentatively tiptoes into topic of race relations
    WASHINGTON - The first time Barack Obama touched a racially heated debate during his presidency, he wound up getting scorched.

    Amid bedlam in Missouri, Obama tentatively tiptoes into topic of race relations

    Applications for US unemployment benefits increase to 311k; averages at pre-recession levels

    Applications for US unemployment benefits increase to 311k; averages at pre-recession levels
    WASHINGTON - More people applied for U.S. unemployment benefits last week, although jobless claims continue to be close to pre-recession levels.

    Applications for US unemployment benefits increase to 311k; averages at pre-recession levels