GABON
Short
speech
of
Mr. Alfred Moungara-Moussotsi
First Counsellor
Permanent Mission of Gabon to the United Nations
in
front of
the 2nd Conference in order to facilitate
the entry into force
of the Treaty of Complete Prohibition of the
Nuclear Tests
New
York, November 13 2001
(Only the marked speech is taken)
Mr. President,
Mister the Secretary-general,
Excellence Foreign Ministers,
Excellence Permanent Representatives,
Distinguished delegated,
Mesdames and Messrs,
1. Exactly five years ago, general Sécrétaire of the United Nations solemnly
opened with the signature the Treaty of complete prohibition of the nuclear
tests (TICE), September 24, 1996, in this same room of the Trusteeship Council.
2. Since this date, 161 States, whose Gabon, signed this significant Traité
and thus confirm the universal aspiration of the international community for
the complete stop of the nuclear explosions of any nature.
3. In order to mark its attachment with the aims in view by the Treaty,
including those of the nonproliferations and disarmament nuclear, Gabon, in the
respect of the national procedure in the matiére, ratifé the Treaty of complete
prohibition of the nuclear tests on September 20 2000.
4. It is particularly encouraging to note that to date, 84 States on the
whole already ratified the Treaty, in the number of which appears 31 of the 44
States indicated to the Appendix 2 whose ratification is necessary to the entry
into force of the Treaty. In this respect, the ratification of the TICE by
three of the five nuclear powers takes, a very particular significance.
5. Here appears the pressing need for an unambiguous adhesion of all the
States whose signature and ratification are, under Article XIV of the Treaty of
prohibition complete of the nuclear tests, a condition of its existence even
and its full application.
6. The sad events which occurred on the American ground on September 11 2001
plead in favour of a consensual action of the international community against
the dangers of proliferation of all the weapons of massive destruction, and
particularly of the nuclear weapons.
7. I thus call some with the goodwill of all the nuclear States, so that
they are essential moratoriums on the nuclear tests on unspecified duration, to
the input as a vigor of the Treaty of complete prohibition of the nuclear
tests. My delegation invite them également.à to abstain from all actions being
able to call into question the aims in view by the TICE.
8. In other words, so that the TICE can truly be an effective instrument
against the nonproliferation of the nuclear weapons, an equal reserve with
regard to the improvement of this type of weapons by all other means should be
scrupulously observed.
9. In comparison with the obstacles which, here and there, are still drawn
up on the way towards the entry into force of the Treaty, force is to
recognize, which the call launched two years earlier, at the time C the
Conference aiming at facilitating the entry into force of the Treaty of
prohibition, complete of the nuclear tests, which was held â Vienna, from the 6
to October 8, 1999, only partially in was tightened. This appel.mérite thus to
be renewed and reinforced at the end of these bases.
10. With our humble opinion, the preparatory Commission of the Organization
of the Treaty of complete prohibition of the nuclear tests offers a political
framework of dialogue and technical development suitable, likely to allow
implementation a progressive of the Treaty, so that it is with the height of
the requirements of checking that we expect some.
11. For this reason, report/ratio VERTIC, produced by the Commission
independent on the verifiability of the Treaty of complete prohibition of the
nuclear tests is worthy of interest, because it relates to one of the key
elements of this Treaty.
12. What this report/ratio reveals, it is that with-délà legitimate reserves
expressed, once the world mode of checking completed, the TICE will make it
possible to identify fiablement all attempts to violate the fundamental
obligations of them. Nest this not well there originality this Treaty?
13. Gabon, which shelters on its territory a station for the auxiliary
seismological monitoring of the international monitoring System of the TICE, makes
a point of reaffirming its availability to cooperate with the preparatory
Commission and supports its efforts aiming at the establishment of the world
mode of checking of the Treaty.
14. I would also like to seize this occasion to renew our sincere congratulations
with the executive Secretary of the preparatory Commission, Mr Wolfgang
Hoffmann, and with all the members of the Secretariat which it directs for
remarkable work carried out in order to promote the cause of the Treaty and to
encourage the States to join this significant instrument which aims at
reinforcing peace and the regional and international security.
15. I thus invite the Secretariat of the preparatory Commission to continue
his international co-operation and training program, in order to allow a
participation as broad as possible in the world mode of checking in process of
establishment.
16. From this point of view, I am pleased with the behaviour of the
sous-régional Workshop on the international co-operation and the national
procedures of application and ratification of the TICE, for the States of and
central Africa West Africa, envisaged from the 13 to November 15 2001 in Dakar.
17. It is indeed important to support an access right and equitable of all
the States left not only to the stimulant work which calls the application of
the Treaty, but also with the various advantages which could rise from the use
for peaceful purposes of the technologies employed in the installation of the
mode of checking of the TICE.
18. Also, believe we in the need for reinforces the means available to the
preparatory Commission in Vienna, so that it can continue in a more effective
way the participation of the developing countries in its work and activities.
19. By doing this, the universality of the Treaty that we appellons of all
our wishes could be translated in the facts by an access of all to the
technological and scientific repercussions discounted.
20. My delegation remains convinced of the founded good to have maintained
the organization of this conference. The current international context indeed
invites us to redouble, more than ever with paravant, our engagement in favour
of the nonproliferation of all the types of armaments.
21. But to be really effective, our efforts of nonproliferation will have
also to be accompanied by a real will to engage us on the way of disarmament,
thus reducing the dangers which weigh on our humanity.
22. Can this Conference offer a new occasion to us to make a significant
projection in the realization of the commitment entered into by our respective
Leaders, at the time of the Summit of the Millenium, for, and I cite:"...
to work with the elimination of the weapons of massive destruction, in
particular the weapons nuclear, and not to draw aside any possible solution to
arrive at this objective... ", end of quotation.
23. The Treaty of complete prohibition of the nuclear tests forms part of
the instruments précisemment that it will resolutely be necessary for us to
apply, in order to reach one of the major objectits of the international
community which is to arrive to a world free from annes nuclear.
I thank you.