Close X
Monday, December 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Activists Want Canada To Push For Nuclear-Free World Despite Stephane Dion's Reticence

The Canadian Press, 29 Mar, 2016 11:43 AM
    OTTAWA — Anti-nuclear campaigners who want Canada to push for a global ban on nuclear weapons are concerned that Foreign Affairs Minister Stephane Dion is showing a definite lack of enthusiasm for that goal.
     
    Dion said in a speech earlier this month that the current global security environment is simply not conducive to a ban on nuclear weapons because some states just won't relinquish them.
     
    Cesar Jaramillo, executive director of the peace group Project Ploughshares, says there's never a perfect time to push for such a ban and the time to start is now.
     
    Nuclear disarmament and security will be front and centre later this week as U.S. President Barack Obama hosts his final Nuclear Security Summit in Washington.
     
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is to attend the two-day meeting, which is focused on curbing nuclear terrorism by cracking down on the trafficking of materials needed to build such a weapon.
     
    Obama announced the initiative in a landmark speech in Prague in 2009, in which he expressed his aspiration for a nuclear-free world, even if it didn't come in his lifetime.
     
    Earlier this month, Dion said in a speech in Geneva that any negotiations to ban nuclear weapons would have to include all countries that possess them.
     
     
    "Without the participation of the countries possessing nuclear weapons, a ban would not bring us any closer to our shared goal of a world free of nuclear weapons," Dion said on March 2.
     
    "Indeed, premature action risks undermining international stability by creating a false sense of security, without any reliable underpinnings."
     
    Dion's remarks largely flew under the radar but anti-nuclear activists took note.
     
    "The reality is that there will never be ideal international security conditions for nuclear disarmament," Jarmillo said Monday.
     
    "Nuclear abolition will be a complex, multifaceted undertaking that will need to coexist with international security crises of varying gravity," he added.
     
    "Nuclear disarmament measures must be started, implemented and concluded in geopolitical conditions that are predictably less than perfect."
     
    Paul Meyer, a retired diplomat who once served as Canada's disarmament ambassador, said Dion should be pushing harder for a progress on broader disarmament in spite of the geopolitical obstacles. He cited Canada's leadership in championing the anti-landmine treaty in the 1990s.
     
    "Minister Dion should recall that if Canada had only been willing to consider 'incremental' progress on the disarmament of landmines back in 1997 we would still be in a world awash with these weapons," Meyer wrote in a recent column in Ottawa's Embassy newsweekly.
     
    This week's Washington summit on curbing the trafficking of nuclear components comes amid periodic reports of the theft of radioactive material that could be used to build a so-called "dirty bomb."
     
    Jaramillo said preventing nuclear terrorism is a worthy and urgent objective.
     
    "But it cannot be understood in isolation from the broader multilateral dynamics related to nuclear disarmament and the slow pace of progress toward that goal," he added.
     
     
    "It is still early in the Liberal government and it may still be formulating its stand on nuclear abolition. So far, however, there has been little change from the Conservative government concerning Canada's core positions in this regard."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Analysts Suggest Calgary Byelection A Litmus Test For Alberta Tory Survivability

    The Calgary Greenway seat became vacant last November when Tory legislature member Manmeet Bhullar was killed in a chain reaction highway crash after he got out of his vehicle to help a stranded motorist.

    Analysts Suggest Calgary Byelection A Litmus Test For Alberta Tory Survivability

    Federal Government Says B.C. LNG Decision Coming After 90-Day Review

    Environment Minister Catherine McKenna said Monday she expects the federal cabinet to be ready to make a decision after another 90 days on the proposed $36-billion Pacific NorthWest LNG export project near Prince Rupert.

    Federal Government Says B.C. LNG Decision Coming After 90-Day Review

    Vancouver Still Leads The Country In Traffic Congestion

    Vancouver Still Leads The Country In Traffic Congestion
    Vancouver remains Canada's most congested city, followed by Toronto and Montreal, but the study shows all three are inching toward improvement.

    Vancouver Still Leads The Country In Traffic Congestion

    Federal Budget Expected To Defer Some Liberal Campaign Promises

    Federal Budget Expected To Defer Some Liberal Campaign Promises
    The Trudeau government's maiden budget will make it easier for jobless Canadians to collect employment insurance benefits and will target some additional EI measures at workers in energy-producing provinces hit hard by the plunge in oil prices.

    Federal Budget Expected To Defer Some Liberal Campaign Promises

    Spotlight Set To Fall On Jian Ghomeshi Case As Judgment Looms

    More than a month after the sexual assault trial of Jian Ghomeshi captured the country's attention, the spotlight is set to fall once again on the disgraced broadcaster and his accusers as an Ontario judge delivers his decision this week.

    Spotlight Set To Fall On Jian Ghomeshi Case As Judgment Looms

    Car2Go Won't Wait For Toronto To OK Its Full Car-share Service; Restarts March 31

    Car2Go Won't Wait For Toronto To OK Its Full Car-share Service; Restarts March 31
    The move by Car2go's car-sharing offering would bring its Toronto operation into line with what's already available in other North American cities.

    Car2Go Won't Wait For Toronto To OK Its Full Car-share Service; Restarts March 31