Anti-Nuclear Coalition Accepts Nobel Peace
Prize
Atomic fashion from 1957. |
The Pope spoke out about
"the strong link between human rights and nuclear disarmament,"
arguing that any group concerned with disadvantaged populations must be
"also working with determination to build a world without nuclear
arms."
The pontiff has made
clear his strong views on eliminating nuclear
arsenals from world governments, speaking several times on the issue this year.
Last month, he hosted
a symposium at the Vatican entitled
"Prospects for a World Free from Nuclear Weapons," which was attended
by United Nations representatives, Nobel Peace laureates, and officials from
nuclear powers including the United States, Russia, and South Korea.
As he spoke in Vatican
City, the Nobel Committee was holding its annual Nobel Prize awards ceremony,
at which the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) was
awarded the year's Nobel Peace Prize.
Accepting the award,
Beatrice Fihn, the head of the global coalition, made her own urgent call for
nuclear disarmament.
"The only
rational course of action is to cease living under the conditions where our
mutual destruction is only one impulsive tantrum away," Fihn said, appearing to allude to recent
heightened tensions between the U.S. and North Korea.
Since February, North
Korea has tested 23 missiles, claiming to have
gained the ability to fire a nuclear weapon that could reach the U.S. mainland.
President Donald Trump
and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un have exchanged increasingly aggressive
insults as Americans have reported low levels of confidence in Trump's
ability to safely manage the situation.
“Will it be the end of
nuclear weapons, or will it be the end of us?" said Fihn in her acceptance
speech.
In its efforts to rid
the world of the nuclear threat, ICAN worked to advance of a U.N. treaty
banning such weapons. The treaty has been signed by 122 countries—but none of
the world's nine nuclear powers have supported it.
Despite the obstacles
that still exist for ICAN and other groups that are working to eliminate
nuclear arsenals, Fihn noted in her speech that the treaty's support by more
than 100 countries signifies that "at long last, we have an unequivocal
norm against nuclear weapons."