Please endorse Joint Appeal for Sept 26 International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons

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John Hallam

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Sep 8, 2025, 12:16:29 AM (12 days ago) Sep 8
to Abolition Caucus, Abolition 2000 Global Council (google), Nuclearnews Group, NucNews
Dear All: 


You are urged to sign the below joint appeal from a wide group of nongovernmental organisations, urging that greater prominence be given to the Sept 26 International day for the total elimination of Nuclear Weapons.

You can sign at the url below


Or at the links in the document itself.

Below is a press release from the organisations responsible for the appeal.

The appeal itself is below at the end.

Endorsements include the 

Parliamentary assembly of the OSCE
IPPNW
International Network of Museums for peace
Mayors for Peace
Basel Peace Office
Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
Human Survival Project
Indian Institute for Peace, Disarmament and Environmental Protection 
Gareth Evans, former Australian Foreign Minister

Join them at:

Or at the urls on the text of the appeal below.


Stop Nuclear Weapons: Peace is in our Hands

New initiative launched for Nuclear Abolition Day 2025

Yesterday (August 29) at the United Nations in Geneva, a group of civil society organizations launched NuclearAbolitionDay.org, a platform for civil society actions and events to commemorate the International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons (‘Nuclear Abolition Day’).

Nuclear Abolition Day has been observed annually on September 26 since 2013, when it was established by the United Nations General Assembly to enhance public awareness and education about the threat posed to humanity and the planet by nuclear weapons and the necessity for their total elimination. The day serves to mobilize international efforts towards achieving the common goal of a nuclear-weapon-free world.

September 26 is also the anniversary of an incident in 1983 when nuclear war “by accident” was narrowly avoided. “Colonel Stanislav Petrov, Duty Officer at a Russian nuclear early warning facility, broke protocol by not affirming to senior command an apparent incoming ballistic missile attack from the United States, which was later confirmed as a false alarm” reports Marc Finaud, Vice-President of Initiatives pour le désarmement nucléaire, one of the organizations jointly launching the new initiative. “Today, like in 1983, there are high tensions and armed conflicts involving nuclear armed States, most of whom have nuclear forces on high levels of readiness to be used. It is imperative for them to stand down their nuclear forces and adopt policies never to initiate a nuclear war.”

“The objective of the UN in establishing the day is laudable,” says Chris Guillot, co-founder of AwareNearth, another of the organizations jointly launching the new initiative. “However, the lack of engagement and good faith actions by UN Member States on nuclear disarmament is not just disappointing – it’s a dangerous failure. We must shift our mindset on nuclear risk now, for the sake of future generations.” 

The NuclearAbolitionDay.org initiative, which is open for any anyone to join, encourages individuals and organizations around the world to join an action or event on the day, and calls on governments to announce concrete plans at the UN High Level Meeting on September 26 to prevent any use of nuclear weapons, and to achieve the global elimination of nuclear weapons no later than 2045.

“Nuclear Weapon States are urged to meet their obligations under international law to pursue negotiations in good faith on nuclear disarmament. The latter was significantly strengthened by the unanimous disposition of the 1996 International Court of Justice Advisory Opinion, which held that there exists an obligation to pursue in good faith and bring to a conclusion, negotiations leading to nuclear disarmament in all its aspects under strict and effective international control,” notes Dr. Deepshikha Kumari Vijh, Executive Director of the Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy.

“Nuclear armed and allied States can’t avoid the nuclear disarmament obligation on the excuse that they need nuclear weapons for security,” says Alyn Ware, International Representative of Aotearoa Lawyers for Peace and Director of the Basel Peace Office. “In order to fulfill this obligation, they are required to meet their security needs in other ways, including in accordance with the UN Charter which prohibits the threat or use of force.”

“There are a number of pathways to reaching the peace and security of a world without nuclear weapons,” says Jackie Cabasso, Executive Director of Western States Legal Foundation. “But the nuclear-armed States and their allies must commit to ending reliance on the ever-more-dangerous doctrine of nuclear deterrence – the threatened use of nuclear weapons – as the basis for their national security. They could do this by negotiating a comprehensive and inclusive nuclear-weapons-convention similar to the Chemical Weapons Convention. Or they could start with a framework agreement on nuclear disarmament and fill in the details of the implementation mechanisms later. Or they could negotiate protocols that would enable them to join the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. Under any of these pathways, the elimination of nuclear weapons no later than 2045 is imperative and is feasible. We urge individuals and organizations to endorse our Joint Appeal to governments to make this happen.”

The initiative also launches a joint social media action Stop Nuclear Weapons: Peace is in our Hands to promote the day and the call to governments. Between now and September 26, and especially on Nuclear Abolition Day itself, individuals and organizations are encouraged to use their hands in symbolic and/or cooperative ways to promote nuclear disarmament – or use the NuclearAbolitionDay.org graphic depicting the classic nuclear disarmament logo inside the palm of a hand.  Photos or videos of these will be uploaded for social media promotion.

Natia Ninoshvili, Program Officer, Parliamentarians for Nuclear Nonproliferation and Disarmament (PNND), elaborates that “through simple and symbolic actions, we can amplify a collective message: civic engagement and youth participation are essential to achieve a nuclear weapons-free world. Our social media initiative invites people from around the world to take part and send a clear message to take steps forward for nuclear disarmament.”

The action is taken in cooperation with the Not One Nuclear Explosion initiative organised by Youth4Disarmament, a project of the United Nations Office of Disarmament Affairs (UNODA). “Nuclear weapons have returned to the centre of national security strategies and are being brandished as tools of coercion,” Ms Izumi Nakamitsu, Head of UNODA, told the 11th General Conference of Mayors for Peace in Nagasaki on August 9. “Peace and security cannot be achieved through an arms race,” but must be built on “dialogue, diplomacy, confidence building, transparency, and arms control and reduction.”

In New York on September 26 there will be special commemoration events building public awareness through a multimedia interactive action that bridges art and advocacy. Rebecca Shoot, PNND’s Senior Advisor and the Co-Convener of the ImPact Coalition on Strengthening International Judicial Institutions, explains: “There is a stark dissonance between the rapid ticking of the Doomsday Clock closer than ever to midnight and the number of nuclear armed and allied States engaged in armed conflict with a retreat in the collective conscience and consciousness of the existential threat posed by nuclear weapons. Our joint actions in New York aim to close this gap – especially for younger generations for whom the specter of nuclear war may not be felt as acutely.”      

The NuclearAbolitionDay.org initiative was launched today at a special event at the United Nations commemorating the International Day Against Nuclear Tests.

“Global nuclear testing has enabled the manufacture of weapons systems involving the planned death of hundreds of millions of human beings,” reflects General Bernard Norlain, Former Air Defense Commander and Air Combat Commander of the French Air Force and a speaker at the launch event. “It has also directly caused the deaths of nearly 2.5 million people living near test sites and led to radioactive fallout on a global scale…. We must strongly denounce the nuclear arms race in which nuclear-armed countries and their allies are engaged.”

“I believe we can plant the seeds of a future – where might is not measured in missiles, but in the strength of institutions that deliver justice, freedom, and opportunity… In democracies free of corruption… societies free of want…and the next generation, free of fear,” said Michael Douglas, UN Messenger for Peace and a supporter of the NuclearAbolitionDay initiative, addressing the Speakers of the World’s Parliaments at the UN in Geneva. “Let us tell our story, expand our movement, and hope that together, we can create that future. There isn’t a moment to lose.”

Ends

Contacts:

Additional quotes from representatives of organizations participating in the NuclearAbolitionDay.org initiative

“If a situation were to arise either in the Russian nuclear command and control system or in the US one, its doubtful, in the current geopolitical context of explicit nuclear threats, that a latter-day equivalent to Colonel Petrov would be there. The consequences for everyone and everything would then be catastrophic.”
John Hallam, Nuclear Disarmament Campaigner for People for Nuclear Disarmament and NoFirstUse Global Coordinating Committee Member

“Nuclear weapons themselves are more of a problem than any problem they seek to solve. The more they are improved, the more usable they become, and the less security the world receives. When the public knows the extent of the hazard the demand for nuclear weapons elimination will lead to a safer world.”
Jonathan Granoff. President, Global Security Institute




Joint Appeal for the 
International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons
September 26, 2025


The United Nations, which was established 80 years ago, affirmed nuclear disarmament as a top priority in its very first resolution, A/Res/1(1). In 2013, frustrated at the lack of progress, the UNGA declared September 26 as the International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons (A/Res/68/32). This international day serves to enhance public awareness and education about the threat posed to humanity by nuclear weapons and the necessity for their total elimination.  Annually on September 26, the UN also holds a high-level meeting of world leaders to discuss “urgent and effective measures” to achieve global nuclear disarmament. 


The designation of this date is not arbitrary: one of many times humanity has come perilously close to nuclear war was September 26, 1983, at the height of the Cold War. A nuclear war was narrowly averted when Colonel Stanislav Petrov, Duty Officer at a Russian nuclear early warning facility, broke protocol by not affirming to senior command an apparent incoming ballistic missile attack from the United States (later confirmed as a false alarm). Two years later, the countries at the brink jointly declared that “a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought.” This commitment has been reaffirmed in intervening years, including in a statement by the P-5 states in 2022 and in the Pact for the Future adopted by consensus at the UN Summit of the Future (September 2024).


However, today the risk of nuclear war by accident, miscalculation, crisis escalation, or malicious intent, is higher than ever with the Doomsday Clock ticking closer to midnight than in 1983. The use of nuclear weapons by any of the nine nuclear-armed States or their nuclear allies would have catastrophic human, economic, and environmental consequences. The use of just a small fraction of the 12,500 nuclear weapons in the world’s stockpiles could end life as we know it. In addition, the $100 billion USD spent annually on nuclear weapons is sorely needed to support peacemaking, environmental protection, and other urgent needs of humanity and the planet, as expressed through the Sustainable Development Goals.


The world’s highest court, the International Court of Justice, affirmed that the threat and use of nuclear weapons is generally illegal and that there is a universal obligation for states to negotiate in good faith to achieve comprehensive nuclear disarmament. States currently relying on nuclear weapons for their security have an obligation to replace these policies with approaches based on international law and common security, as outlined in the UN Charter. 


The Pact for the Future includes commitments to prevent nuclear war and achieve the global elimination of nuclear weapons. UN Member States should use the opportunity of the International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons and UN High Level Plenary Meeting on September 26 to announce concrete plans to achieve these goals.


We, the undersigned, there-fore call on leaders, legislators, and officials at all levels of governance (local/municipal, states, countries, and regional bodies) to:

  1. Affirm that the threat or use of nuclear weapons is inadmissible;

  2. Advance tangible measures by nuclear-armed and allied States to implement this obligation, including standing down nuclear forces and adopting policies never to initiate a nuclear war; 

  3. Pledge to achieve the global elimination of nuclear weapons no later than the UN’s centennial anniversary in 2045, and immediately undertake actions, including through multilateral negotiations, to implement this pledge; 

  4. Cut nuclear weapons budgets, and end public and private investments in the nuclear weapons industry; and

  5. Redirect these funds to strengthen the United Nations, advance peacekeeping and conflict resolution, accelerate steps to protect the climate, and meet human and economic needs as required under Article 26 of the UN Charter.

 

No time is better than 2025 - the 80th anniversary of the nuclear bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the establishment of the United Nations – to undertake these actions to achieve a nuclear-weapon-free world to protect current and future generations. 
 






John Hallam
Australian Coordinator PNND
People for Nuclear Disarmament UN Nuclear Weapons Campaigner
Human Survival Project
Co-Convenor Abolition 2000 Nuclear Risk reduction Working Group
61-411-854-612





John Hallam
Australian Coordinator PNND
People for Nuclear Disarmament UN Nuclear Weapons Campaigner
Human Survival Project
Co-Convenor Abolition 2000 Nuclear Risk reduction Working Group
61-411-854-612
Joint Appeal for Sep 26 International Day for nuclear weapons elimination final with graphic (2).pdf

John Hallam

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Sep 10, 2025, 1:36:19 AM (10 days ago) Sep 10
to Abolition Caucus, Abolition 2000 Global Council (google), Nuclearnews Group, NucNews, AAAC IWG
Joint Appeal for Sep 26 International Day for nuclear weapons elimination final with graphic (2).pdf
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