MEXICO
PERMANENT
MISSION OF MEXICO
THE GENERAL INTERCHANGE OF OPINIONS OF THE CONFERENCE ON MEASURES TO FACILITATE
THE TAKE EFFECT OF THE TREATY OF COMPLETE PROHIBITION OF THE NUCLEAR TESTS
(CTBT).
INTERVENTION
OF THE REPRESENTATIVE OF MEXICO,
AMBASSADOR OLGA PELLICER
New
York, NY
11 of November of 2001.
Sir President,
For Mexico, this Conference is a link in the chain of efforts in favor of
international La Paz and the security. The CTBT, whose take effect we wished to
encourage, is a key piece for the disarmament and the nonproliferation of the
nuclear weapons. Objectives that, for decades, have been occupying a
high-priority place in the foreign policy of Mexico.
The adoption of the Treaty, already five years ago, was a clear recognition
on the part of the international community of the danger that represents the
accomplishment of nuclear tests. Its complete prohibition, when preventing the
development and qualitative improvement of new arms, is a significant
measurement for the international security and a step advanced in ' the
systematic process to obtain the nuclear disarmament.
Sir President,
When finalizing the cold war, like many of the States reunited in this
Conference, we had the hope of which could fortify the measures in favor of La
Paz and the development and advance towards the materialization of our
aspirations in the matter of disarmament.
Today, when beginning the new millenium, we stated that our expectations are
far from becoming in fact. While new and complex problems increase the
insecurity in the world, the interest persists in some circles to develop
nuclear weapons and resurge theories that grant to the possession and
improvement of these arms a strategic paper for the national security.
In such circumstances, one accentuates the threat of the use and
proliferation of nuclear weapons. Frightful perspective to the light of which
the intention acquires all its sense that it has summoned to us here to work in
favor of the take effect of the CTBT.
Sir President,
The support of a great number of States to the objectives of the Treaty has
been unquestionable. In forums of great political relevance, like the General
Assembly of the UN, the Security Council, the Conference of Examination of the
Treaty on the nonProliferation of the Nuclear weapons celebrated in 2000 and
other conferences and meetings of high level, the States are had it jeopardize
to work for their take effect and to maintain, while this happens, a moratorium
of nuclear tests.
With a support of such magnitude, we must be asked then what it has
prevented that the Treaty between in vigor. The answer to this question is not
simple. The Treaty establishes a complex system of verification and perhaps
many States require of a special attendance to improve their understanding, to
identify the concrete benefits that are derived from the same one and, of this
form, to accelerate their procedures of ratification. For these countries, it
is possible to fortify the activities that already are carried out in the frame
of the program of external relations and international cooperation of the
Preparatory Commission of the Organization of the Treaty.
Perhaps other countries find that the ratification of the Treaty does not
occupy a high-priority place in its internal agendas to the light of
necessities of more urgent character. It is necessary that these countries take
into account the fundamental value from the Treaty within the continuous and
systematic process of disarmament and not-proliferation of nuclear weapons and
contribute surely with their ratification to the consolidation of a world but.
Possibly some States hope that those are others that take the initiative and
ratify the first Treaty, before committing they themselves with their
postulates. We hoped that these States reconsider that attitude and that its
ratification of the Treaty becomes an example to follow.
However, it is clear that the greater responsibility for the take effect of
the Treaty falls to the States possessors of nuclear weapons. Certain that the
take effect concerns all the States the same, in individual those that are
listed in Annexed the II of the same one. But the ratification of the Treaty on
the part of the nuclear powers that have not even made it an act serious whose
dimensions and positive impact we cannot avoid.
In that context, Mexico laments the announcement of one of the nuclear
powers in the sense of not impelling its process of ratification. We are
convinced that the world would be but safe if takes effect the complete
prohibition of nuclear tests and for that reason we make a call urgent
reconsider that position.
We do not let warn, the responsibility that falls on all those listed States
to the Annexed I! that they have not signed the Treaty, or that being it
signed, they have not even ratified it. To all of them, the same, we make a
call to accelerate its processes of company/signature or ratification.
Sir President,
While the Treaty takes effect, a moratorium of nuclear tests must stay. To
the light of the lengths and constants efforts of the community to count on a
Treaty of Complete Prohibition of Nuclear Tests, he is unquestionable that the
accomplishment of tests would be a threat for La Paz.
Sir President,
The commitment of Mexico with the Treaty, the not-proliferation and the
nuclear disarmament will stay, independently of the difficult situations that
appear to us in the future. This Conference constitutes a forum to authenticate
our support to the cessation of nuclear tests and to fortify the joint work to
reach the take effect of the Treaty. We do not let pass this opportunity
historical.