INTRODUCTORY
STATEMENT BY H.E. MR. TOSHIO SANO
AMBASSADOR
EXTRAORDINARY AND PLENIPOTENTIARY
PERMANENT
REPRESENTATIVE OF JAPAN
TO
THE CONFERENCE ON DISARMAMENT
The
1325th Plenary Meeting of the Conference on Disarmament
Geneva,
19 August 2014
Thank you Mr. President,
Since this is the first time for me to take the floor
in the plenary under your Presidency, Ambassador Muhammad, I would like to
congratulate you on your assumption of this important role. As a member of the
P6, I assure you of my delegation’s full support to you and your team
throughout your tenure.
Mr. President and Excellencies,
The month of August is special for the Japanese
people. Each year, memorial ceremonies are held on the 6th and
9th of August in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, respectively. We not
only commemorate, but also pray for peace and renew our determination towards a
safer world free of nuclear weapons.
This morning, I am delighted to introduce to you all,
Ms. Masaki Koyanagi, now sitting next to me, who
has joined the Japanese Delegation for the day. She is actually a high school
student from Nagasaki and a third generation of “Hibaku-sha”,
the direct survivors from the atomic bombings. She will shortly take the floor
in the capacity of a “Youth Communicator for a World without Nuclear Weapons”
commissioned by the Japanese Foreign Minister, Mr. Fumio Kishida.
This “Youth Communicator” program is one of the
pillars of the Japanese Government’s policy in disarmament and
non-proliferation education, and is at the heart of the humanitarian aspect of
disarmament efforts by the Government. After 69 years since the end of the war,
the Hibaku-sha are getting old, actually
nearly eighty year old on average, and there is a risk of their memories and
stories fading away. To avoid such a circumstance, the younger generation, like Ms. Koyanagi, as well
as her school mates, sitting above at the balcony of this Chamber have
volunteered to become Youth Communicators. Their mission is to relay the
testimonies of Hibaku-sha to the next
generation and to spread and deepen the understanding of humanitarian
consequences of the use of nuclear weapons. In addition, they act as
"Hiroshima Nagasaki Peace Messengers”, running a campaign to collect
signatures from all over the globe for the sake of a world without nuclear
weapons
Now, Mr. President, please allow me to pass the floor
to Ms. Koyanagi.
Thank you.