Statement by
H.E. Mr. Sumio
Tarui
Ambassador, Permanent Representative of Japan
to the Conference on Disarmament
Second
Session of the Preparatory Committee
for the 2010
Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty
on the
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT)
- Disarmament and
Non-Proliferation Education -
Geneva, 30 April 2008
Mr. Chairman,
Distinguished delegates,
At last year’s first session of the Preparatory Committee to the
2010 NPT Review Conference, Japan
submitted its own working paper on disarmament and non-proliferation education,
in addition to delivering a joint-statement in collaboration with eight
countries. In the wake of the first
PrepCom, there has been much debate on how to create
an international environment conducive to the achievement of the total
elimination of nuclear weapons, as well as how to maintain a world free from such
weapons after their total elimination.
Japan
believes that promoting disarmament and non-proliferation education is one
answer to these questions. Based on
this understanding, Japan
intends to continue to focus its efforts in this area.
Japan has
submitted to the current Preparatory Committee a working paper on disarmament
and non-proliferation education. As
we mention in this paper, there are at least two significant points related to
disarmament and non-proliferation education within the context of the NPT. Firstly, the promotion of nuclear
disarmament and non-proliferation education can lead to and should lead to broader
awareness among the public on the significant role the NPT is playing in the
area of nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation, in particular, the difficult
challenges the NPT regime faces, as well as the benefits of the NPT to
international peace and security. Next,
in order to maintain and strengthen the NPT regime, the knowledge and
experience of the immense destructive power of nuclear weapons, as well as the
injury and death they cause, must be passed from generation to generation. Disarmament and non-proliferation
education has an important role to play in this aspect.
Mr. Chairman,
Japan places importance on cooperation with the United Nations for
disarmament and non-proliferation education. For example, as part of the UN
Disarmament Fellowship Programme, the Government of Japan
has been inviting junior diplomats and others, who will be playing significant
roles in disarmament policy in the future, to visit Hiroshima
and Nagasaki. To date, more than 650 people have
participated in these visits.
Japan also sponsors a UN Conference on Disarmament
Issues in a different Japanese city every year. In last year’s Conference, the
Government of Japan organized as a side-event a “Student Forum on Disarmament
and Non-Proliferation Education” with the participation of local university
students. During this student forum,
we introduced a discussion format in which the students participated in active debate.
The student forum was an excellent chance
to engage in a free and lively exchange of opinions from a range of different perspectives,
to cultivate critical thinking amongst the younger generation, as well as to raise
awareness and understanding about disarmament.
Furthermore, Japan
values the role of civil society in promoting disarmament and
non-proliferation. For instance, in
March this year, we held the “6th Public Forum concerning United
Nations Reform”, jointly with NGOs. In this Forum, one of the discussion
groups dealt with the issue of how to best promote disarmament and non-proliferation
education hereafter.
Mr. Chairman,
As the “UN Study on Disarmament and Non-Proliferation Education”
mentions, there are teaching methods which utilize numerous forms of media. In our statement to last year’s First PrepCom, we noted that in promoting disarmament education, Japan places
particular importance on passing down the knowledge of and determination for
disarmament to younger generations.
Considering that employing tools the younger generation and ordinary citizens
can easily adopt is an effective way of promoting understanding on these issues,
Japan
has been working to spread knowledge through its pop-culture by utilizing
animation, “manga”
and other forms of media. For example,
at the First PrepCom, we displayed computer-generated
images of the atomic bombings, as well as distributed copies of manga.
In 2002, the Government of Japan published for the first time a White
Paper entitled “Japan’s
Disarmament Policy”, in order to communicate to its citizens in plain language
the current state of Japan’s
diplomacy in these fields, as well as to raise awareness of the issues and
promote understanding. In April
this year, we published the fourth edition of the White Paper, “Japan’s
Disarmament and Non-Proliferation Policy”.
Furthermore, to catch the attention of a greater number of people, in
addition to publishing our White Paper in English, we also post a copy in both
English and Japanese on the website of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of
Japan.
Mr. Chairman,
For efforts on disarmament and non-proliferation in the NPT context
it is important, in addition to deepening discussions among experts on the security
benefits and challenges to the NPT regime, to reinforce the public’s knowledge
and cultivate their ability to learn how to think. We intend to continue our efforts in
this area, such as our support for holding the UN Conference on Disarmament
Issues in Japan,
hosting the student debate forum and other initiatives.
Additionally, in terms of sharing knowledge on nuclear weapons, the Hibakusha (A-bomb
survivors) have been working hard to pass down to the next generation the
experience of the atomic bombings through their testimonies. The average age, however, of the
surviving Hibakusha
has now reached 74, and the question of how to hand down those experiences is a
major future challenge. At last
year’s First Committee of the UN General Assembly, the Steven Okazaki
documentary “White Light/Black Rain” was screened. Films, such as this one, and other media
may be one of effective ways to address this challenge.
In awareness of this kind of problem, the Government of Japan, in
collaboration with UNIDIR, held a side-event during lunchtime today on the
theme of how to share the experience and knowledge of the effects and
destructive power of nuclear weapons, as well as what are effective means for
utilizing education practically. In
my view, meaningful and useful ideas were exchanged at this event.
Finally, Japan
hopes that these efforts outlined in our statement today may serve as a
reference for other countries and lead to the further promotion of disarmament
and non-proliferation education in the international community.
Thank you Mr. Chairman.