["The only way to guarantee that nuclear weapons will never be used
again is through their total elimination," Kurz told the 191 parties
to the treaty, the world's benchmark arms controlaccord. "All states
share the responsibility to prevent the use of nuclear weapons."
...
The initiative has virtually no support among NPT nuclear weapons
states and veto-wielding Security Council members - the United States,
Britain, France, Russia and China - or the countries of NATO, an
alliance that provides a kind of "nuclear umbrella" security guarantee
for its members
But most of the 193 U.N. members back it.
...
Four other states presumed to have nuclear weapons - Israel, Pakistan,
India and North Korea - are not listed as supporters of the
initiative.]

http://uk.reuters.com/article/2015/04/28/uk-nuclear-un-austria-idUKKBN0NJ2IE20150428

World | Tue Apr 28, 2015 9:31pm BST

Austria, backed by 159 nations, calls for ban on nuclear weapons
UNITED NATIONS | By Louis Charbonneau

Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs Stephen Smith addresses the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference, at United Nations
Headquarters, in New York, in a file photo.
Reuters/Chip East

(Reuters) - Austria on Tuesday called for banning nuclear weapons
because of their catastrophic humanitarian effects, an initiative it
said now has the backing of 159 countries.

Austrian Foreign Minister Sebastian Kurz was speaking at the five-year
review conference of the 1970 nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

***"The only way to guarantee that nuclear weapons will never be used
again is through their total elimination," Kurz told the 191 parties
to the treaty, the world's benchmark arms controlaccord. "All states
share the responsibility to prevent the use of nuclear weapons."***
[Emphasis added.]

Diplomats from the 159 countries supporting the ban, presented ahead
of the 70th anniversary of the U.S. atom bombs dropped on Japan, said
the initiative was modelled on successful campaigns to ban land mines
and other weapons and could take years to move forward.

***The initiative has virtually no support among NPT nuclear weapons
states and veto-wielding Security Council members - the United States,
Britain, France, Russia and China - or the countries of NATO, an
alliance that provides a kind of "nuclear umbrella" security guarantee
for its members.*** [Emphasis added.]

But most of the 193 U.N. members back it.

The five permanent Security Council members signed the NPT as nuclear
weapons states, although the pact calls on them to negotiate the
reduction and eventual elimination of their arms caches. Non-nuclear
states complain that there have been too few steps toward nuclear
disarmament.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif on Monday demanded
countries possessing nuclear weapons scrap any plans to modernize
their arsenals.

***Four other states presumed to have nuclear weapons - Israel,
Pakistan, India and North Korea - are not listed as supporters of the
initiative.*** [Emphasis added.]

Iran, accused by Western powers of developing a nuclear weapons
capability under cover of a civilian programme, says its programme is
peaceful. It is in talks with six world powers to curb sensitive
nuclear work in exchange for sanctions relief. Tehran supports the
Austrian initiative.

Without any explanation, Zarif, who on Monday spoke on behalf of the
Non-Aligned Movement, cancelled a planned speech in his national
capacity on Tuesday morning as news broke of Iran's seizure of a cargo
ship in the Gulf.

"Zarif decided that he did not have much to add to the NAM statement
he gave on Monday. Hence it was decided not to give a national
statement," a diplomat at the conference told Reuters on condition of
anonymity.

(Reporting by Louis Charbonneau; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)

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