STATEMENT BY MR. HIROYUKI YAMAMOTO
MINISTER, DEPUTY PERMANENT REPRESENTATIVE OF
JAPAN
TO THE CONFERENCE ON DISARMAMENT
THE 1288TH PLENARY MEETING OF THE CONFERENCE ON DISARMAMENT
gProgramme of Workh
GENEVA, 4 JUNE 2013
Thank
you, Mr. President,
I would like to begin by
congratulating you, Ambassador Mohsen Naziri
Asl, on your assumption to the Presidency of the Conference on Disarmament (CD).
I can assure you of my Delegationfs utmost cooperation throughout your
Presidency.
Mr.
President,
We have a collective
responsibility to meet the expectations addressed to this body by the
international community and I commend your effort, in this regard, to try to dissuade
the CD from its long-standing stalemate. After carefully studying last weekfs
discussion on a Programme of Work, I would like to briefly state Japanfs stance.
When I
listen to discussions in this chamber or elsewhere, such as the Open-ended
Working Group to develop proposals to take
forward multilateral nuclear disarmament negotiations, I sense that the goal of
a peaceful and secure world free of nuclear weapons is widely shared by the
international community. There is a difference, however, on the approach to
reach that ultimate end. In this matter, Japan believes that continuing steady
accumulation of practical nuclear disarmament and confidence building measures is
the way we should push forward. If we are to seriously consider the inhumane
nature of the use of nuclear weapons, we need to be pragmatic and realistic in
tackling these issues to achieve our common goal.
Among many
conceivable measures to be implemented, Japan particularly attaches importance
to a treaty banning the production of fissile material for nuclear weapons or
other nuclear explosive devices for which negotiations should commence immediately.
With help of CD/1299, this conference provides a suitable environment for such
negotiations and the wide support for realizing such a legally binding treaty
is apparent from many voices reflected in numerous statements, documents and
resolutions within the CD, the United Nations General Assembly, and the Treaty
on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. I also would like to reiterate
that this Conference once agreed upon a Programme of Work, the CD/1864,
enabling such negotiations. Although the core issues are all significant, the priority
that Japan has been attaching to an FMCT has never changed since then. We hope
that this will be regarded in a future Programme of Work.
I
thank you, Mr. President.