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UNITED NATIONS, May 27 (Xinhuanet) -- The 2005 Review
Conference of the Parties to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)
concluded on Friday without reaching any consensus recommendation to ease the
mounting nuclear tension in the world.
"I regret that the conference has not been able to
reach consensus and unable to record any recommendations," conference president
Sergio Duarte of Brazil told a plenary session in the final day.
More than 180 nations participated in the month-long
conference,which opened on May 2 at UN headquarters in New York. However, they
failed to reach agreement in three committees that cover the so-called three
pillars of the treaty, namely disarmament, nuclearnon-proliferation and peaceful
use of atomic energy.
Actually, the UN sponsored conference was surrounded
with pessimistic atmosphere from the very beginning in wrangling over the agenda
and allocation of work among committees. It is after almost two weeks of quarrel
the conference adopted an agenda on May 11, which enabled them to go on with
their work.
The core bargain of the NPT is that nuclear-armed
states, such as the United States and Russia, agrees to eventually eliminate
their nuclear arsenals while states without nuclear weapons pledgenot to pursue
them.
Many nonweapon states required at this conference a
proper balance in the implementation of its three pillars, as well as equality
in the fulfillment of obligations and rights of the treaty.
Nevertheless, the past weeks witnessed severely
divisive debateover issues ranging from US nuclear policy, Iran's uranium
centrifuges, to Israel's nuclear capabilities.
The United States resisted being bound by a 13-step
disarmamentprogram outlined in 2000, while Iran objected to proposed
languagesingling it out as a proliferation, and Egypt insisted on sanctioning
Israel for not declaring its alleged atomic weapons and not joining the NPT.
In fact, the three committees were caught in a
crossfire of interests, and failed to reach consensus on action programs to send
to the conference.
"It would be very difficult for me in the face of so
many divergencies, wide differences," Duarte told reporters at a press
conference.
The United States was accused of reneging on those
commitments it and other weapons states made at the 1995 and 2000 conference,
and undermining the balance of nonproliferation and disarmament obligations in
the treaty.
Malaysian ambassador Rastam Mohd Isa, speaking on
behalf of nonaligned nations, pointed out that "it is now clear that divergent
views among states parties on fundamental questions could not be bridged."
The NPT is a landmark international treaty whose
objective is to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and weapons technology, to
promote cooperation in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy and to further the
goal of achieving nuclear disarmament and general and complete disarmament.
Opened for signature in 1968, the Treaty entered into
force in 1970. Since its entry into force, the NPT has been the cornerstoneof
global nuclear non-proliferation regime.
Adherence to the Treaty by 187 states of the 191 UN
member states, including the five nuclear-weapon states, renders the Treaty the
most widely adhered to multilateral disarmament agreement. India, Israel and
Pakistan have chosen not to join the Treaty. The Democratic People's Republic of
Korea announced its withdrawal from the Treaty in January, 2003. Enditem
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