Annan Welcomes Seven-Nation Nuclear-Non-Proliferation Initiative
New York, Jul 26 2005 7:00PM
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan today welcomed an "encouraging" seven-nation initiative which he said could
lead to General Assembly consensus on strengthening adherence to nuclear non-proliferation and disarmament agreements.
The political declaration was announced today by the foreign ministers of Australia, Chile, Indonesia, Norway, Romania,
South Africa and the United Kingdom.
According to a statement issued by a UN spokesman in New York, Mr. Annan had been deeply troubled by the failure of the
Review Conference of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), held at UN Headquarters in May, to achieve substantive
agreement to strengthen collective security against the many nuclear threats to which all States and peoples are
vulnerable.
He is therefore "deeply encouraged" by the agreement announced today by the ministers, who represent a diverse group of
States, the statement said, adding that Mr. Annan thanked Norway's Foreign Minister, Jan Petersen, for spearheading the
initiative.
"The political declaration they have adopted and the input for the 2005 World Summit they have submitted to the
President of the General Assembly provide the basis, the Secretary-General expects, for a wide-ranging consensus," the
statement said, referring to the Assembly's upcoming September summit, where world leaders are expected to renew their
commitment to the implementation of agreed development targets and take decisions on UN reform.
"The Secretary-General hopes that leaders will use the opportunity offered by the World Summit, and the added impetus
which these seven foreign ministers have provided, to make bold commitments and address the pressing challenges to the
nuclear non-proliferation regime," Mr. Annan said.
ENDS