Australian government’s refusal to recognise 2017 Nobel Peace Prize winners a stain on decency

On 22 January, the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons will put nuclear weapons in the same category as other banned inhumane weapons including biologic and chemical weapons, cluster bombs and antipersonnel land mines. This was largely the work of ICAN, the International Campaign Against Nuclear Arms.

Can anyone remember who won the 2017 Nobel peace prize? Here’s a clue: an Australian received it at the Nobel Prize ceremony in Oslo. Still in the dark? Sadly, not many of us know the answer. The 2017 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to ICAN, the International Campaign Against Nuclear Arms and was received by Tilman Ruff, an Australian physician who is co-founder of ICAN and the President of IPPNW, the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons.

The Peace Prize was awarded to ICAN “for its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons”.

We applaud our Australian Nobel Prize recipients, but in this case, there were no congratulations by the Australian Government for a Nobel Peace Prize initiated by an Australian. Australia is not alone in not supporting nuclear disarmament. The nine nuclear powers and the NATO and Pacific allies who believe they have some degree of shelter from the US nuclear deterrence all believe a treaty is impractical.

However, there would have been no political downside to warmly congratulating ICAN for this international recognition for trying to prevent nuclear war.

Although we don’t hear much about the dangers of nuclear weapons, the threat is real. Many atomic scientists and others believe the threat is greater than it has ever been.

The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists has moved the Doomsday Clock forward to just two minutes to midnight, the highest level since 1953 when the US tested its first hydrogen bomb, followed by the Soviet Union nine months later. The risk is higher now because nine countries admit to having nuclear weapons, some of them perhaps less responsible than we would wish.

There are more than 13,000 nuclear weapons worldwide, with almost 2,000 on “launch on warning” alert.

A 2018 analysis in the New England Journal of Medicine pointed out that the risk is greater now because of the growing vulnerability of weapons systems to cyber-attack, making the danger of “accidental nuclear war” a real possibility. That analysis also pointed out that even a limited nuclear conflict, using less than 1% of the world’s nuclear arsenal and perhaps initiated by a rogue state, would result in massive fires releasing millions of tons of smoke and soot into the atmosphere.

This would result in substantial global darkening and cooling that would last for at least 10 years, disrupting food production worldwide and putting more than 25% of the world’s population at risk of death from starvation.

The year 2021 will be a historic year, with the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) coming into force. It follows ICAN’s work to establish a United Nations working group on nuclear disarmament, leading to this treaty, which makes the development, possession and use of nuclear weapons illegal for states parties to the Treaty.

Of course, countries that have nuclear weapons and countries who believe that nuclear weapons held by their allies give them some protection through a nuclear deterrence, have declined to become parties to the Treaty. However, enough nations, including New Zealand, have now signed the Treaty to meet the criteria for it to come into force.  This will happen on 22 January this year. The Treaty puts nuclear weapons in the same category as other inhumane weapons that have been banned such as biologic and chemical weapons, cluster bombs and antipersonnel land mines.

There is a long way to go before we are safe from the threat of nuclear weapons, a subject we would prefer not think about. Because compelling medical, moral and scientific arguments against nuclear weapons have been insufficient, legal prohibition became the next logical step.

ICAN’s gradual three-step approach is stigmatise, prohibit and eliminate. To stigmatise, it is encouraging banks, pension funds and investors to divest from any company involved in nuclear weapons production. The largest pension funds in Norway and the Netherlands have agreed to do so. It is thought that others will follow, similar to the way the World Bank has decided to divest from fossil fuels.

Disarmament treaty drops bomb on super funds investing in nuclear weapons

Prohibition will occur as more countries sign the Treaty. President Biden is known to be interested in reducing nuclear arsenals although he will have his work cut out with so many competing pressures.

The road to elimination will be slow but it may be commencing. The stakes are very high indeed.

Kim Oates is an Emeritus Professor of Paediatrics, a former CEO of the Children’s Hospital at Westmead, a former President of the International Society for Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect and an elected Founding member, International Academy of Quality and Safety.

Comments

6 responses to “Australian government’s refusal to recognise 2017 Nobel Peace Prize winners a stain on decency”

  1. Andy Alcock Avatar
    Andy Alcock

    Thanks for this Kim for this very timely reminder. All Australians – including the members of our very backward government should be very proud of what ICAN has achieved in furthering the world wide awareness of the effects of nuclear war.

    In 2017, my wife and I visited Scandinavia and Germany. While in Oslo we visited the Nobel Peace Centre and the the Oslo Town Hall and we visited the Nobel Centre in Stockholm . We were overjoyed and felt very proud, when later in the year when we were back home, we saw representatives of ICAN being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize on TV. The ceremony occurred in a large room in the Oslo Town Hall that we visited and this made it even more special for us

    The main reason why the Australian governments and opposition has not acknowledged ICAN receiving this prestigious award is because since WW2 Australia has been locked into US foreign policy which is largely determined by the US Military Industrial Complex which seems to see war and regime change good for business.

    Young Australians have been marched off to most of the wars initiated by the US and our leaders endorse moves by the CIA to overthrow democratically governments (eg Indonesia in 1965, Chile in 1973 etc.)

    The leaders of NZ – a much smaller nation than Australia – have had the courage to ban the visits of nuclear submarines and the presence of US military bases on its soil. This has allowed NZ to play a very positive role in international affairs to build peace and human rights.

    And because Trump wanted to do nothing about the Paris Accords on climate change, our leaders followed his irresponsible attitude. Let us hope that now Joe Biden has committed the US to the Accords that our government will follow suit.

    I think it is unlikely that the Biden Administration will sign the UN Nuclear Ban Treaty that ICAN has played a crucial role in achieving,. However, Australians who are responsible citizens of the world want to see our leaders make a much greater contribution to world peace, human rights, social justice, fairness between nations and effective environmental action.

    If NZ can be independent and ban foreign military bases and support a nuclear free world, then why not Australia? We should be urging family members and friends to join actions being planned to e3ncourage our government yo sign the UN Nuclear Ban Treaty too.

  2. Peter Sainsbury Avatar
    Peter Sainsbury

    Failure to congratulate ICAN is simply another demonstration that our current national government, particularly but not only its senior members, are as ignorant, boorish and graceless as Trump. In fact the people I refer to probably regard this comment as a compliment.

    1. Hans Rijsdijk Avatar
      Hans Rijsdijk

      Peter, not only the current government, I am afraid. The Labor Party (I hate their sycophancy to the Americans in the spelling) suffers from the same ignorance.

  3. Richard England Avatar

    2017 seems to have been the Nobel Peace Prize mob’s brief moment of freedom from the clutches of the US propaganda machine. That moment seems to have been quite efficiently suppressed in the Australia media. They will probably need to be more careful in the future, or the Yanks will block their bank account.

  4. Richard Barnes Avatar
    Richard Barnes

    Thanks Kim. As an Australian and as a member of MAPW, the Australian branch of IPPNW (which was also awarded a Nobel Peace Prize), I felt a moment of personal pride in ICAN’s award. I wrote to my local MHR, Josh Frydenberg, asking that the govt simply acknowledge the award. No reply.
    It is indeed a stain on the nation’s decency.

  5. Rod Callaghan Art Services Avatar
    Rod Callaghan Art Services

    You almost got it right Kim, except the whole mantra of this government is a continual assault on decency.