Nuclear Abolition Day

Nuclear Abolition Day

When: Saturday, June 5, 2010, 2:00 pm to 3:30 pm
Where: Park Street Station • Park and Tremont Streets • Boston

Nuclear Abolition Day June 5, 2010

Women's International Leage for Peace and Freedom, Raging Grannies and Code Pink will rally to publicize Nuclear Aboliton Day. We encourage everyone to join us. We are hoping for a sizeable turnout and have developed a great handout.  Please join us!

Why June 5

On June 5, 2010, thousands of people across the world will take part in coordinated local events to mark Nuclear Abolition Day. Our message is simple: it’s time for governments to begin negotiating a Nuclear Weapons Convention to ban all nuclear weapons.

In some countries, protests will take place outside government buildings or at nuclear facilities. The purpose of the actions, whether they’re large or small, is to demonstrate in a visible way that there’s overwhelming popular support for a Nuclear Weapons Convention.

June 5 is strategically the best time for us to act. It is the Saturday one week after the end of the important Non-Proliferation Treaty review conference. It will be our opportunity to respond to the conference outcome all around the world.

If the conference fails, as it did in 2005, then our events will be an urgent plea for countries to begin working for a Nuclear Weapons Convention. If it succeeds, it will be an opportunity for us to build on the enthusiasm for abolition generated at the conference and encourage prompt action.

Either way, our events will be well timed to effect change. June 5 is also the annual World Environment Day. Nuclear weapons, like climate change, threaten the very future of the planet. We must tackle both with great passion.

There are currently nine countries with nuclear weapons: the United States, Russia, France, the United Kingdom, China, Israel, India, Pakistan and North Korea. Of the 23,300 nuclear weapons in the world today, more than 2000 are kept on hair-trigger alert, capable of being used within minutes of a command. Abolition is the only way to ensure that they are never used again.

Nuclear weapons: at a glance

Activities for school students

Non-Proliferation Treaty review conference

For more information contact WILPF.  Organize an event in your own community and let us know!

 

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