Japan and Australia will jointly call on the UN to adopt a resolution urging all atomic states to cut their nuclear arms at a quick pace, a newspaper reported here yesterday.
The Japanese and Australian governments will submit the resolution to the UN when its General Assembly convenes late next month, the Nikkei Shimbun said, quoting government sources.
The two countries will soon begin negotiations on the specific wording of the resolution, expecting the proposal to be approved as early as December, the newspaper said.
The resolution is largely aimed at urging China to take disarmament measures as the other four nuclear powers — the US, Britain, France and Russia — have already taken voluntary disarmament steps in some form, it said.
Japan also hopes to use the proposal to ratchet up pressure on North Korea and Iran to abolish their nuclear weapons programs, the Nikkei said.
The UN General Assembly is expected to adopt the resolution by majority vote as other G8 countries are likely to endorse it, the daily said.
It will be the first time for Japan, the only victim of nuclear attacks, to specify “all nuclear weapons states” in Tokyo-led nuclear disarmament resolutions.
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