Statement by H.E. Archbishop Paul Richard Gallagher,
Secretary for Relations with States and International Organizations
and Head of
the Delegation of the Holy See,
at the Thirteenth Conference on Facilitating the Entry into Force of the
Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT)
22 September 2023
Mesdames Co-Presidents,
The Holy See thanks Italy and South Africa for their work as Article XIV
Coordinators and congratulates Norway and Panama on assuming this
responsibility. I also wish to thank Mr. Robert Floyd for his challenging and
encouraging statement.
Since the dawn of the nuclear age, States have detonated over two thousand
nuclear explosive devices, subjecting countless persons to adverse health
effects of ionizing radiation, and contaminating our common home. These terrible
humanitarian and environmental consequences demonstrate that nuclear weapons
“represent a multiplier of risk that offers only an illusion of peace”.[1]
After four decades of concerted efforts, the international community achieved
agreement on such a ban, with effective verification meant to ensure that any
nuclear explosive test runs the risk of being detected. Twenty-seven years after
the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) opened for signatures, this
great achievement remains only partially fulfilled.
Amid threats of nuclear use and the ongoing efforts to modernise nuclear
weapons, achieving the entry into force of the CTBT becomes more vital than
ever. In this regard, the Holy See welcomes the eight States that have ratified
the treaty since the last session of this conference and calls upon all States that have not yet done so, especially the eight remaining Annex II
States, to sign and ratify the treaty as a major utmost priority. In the
meantime, the Holy See urges all States to continue adhering to the zero-yield
moratorium on nuclear testing.
Mesdames Co-Presidents,
The CTBT makes up just one element of the wider disarmament and nonproliferation
regime, centered on the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and complemented
by the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW). With this in mind,
my delegation urges the CTBTO Preparatory Commission to explore all possible
ways to build upon this complementarity by collaborating with TPNW States
Parties on universalisation, verification and compiling historical data on past
nuclear tests, including the human costs of such testing. Such collaboration can
help lay the groundwork for a restorative approach to addressing the harms
caused by nuclear explosive testing.
Thank you, Mesdames Co-Presidents.
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