2017 Nobel Peace Prize: What is
ICAN?
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Beatrice Fihn of the International Campaign to
Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) at the award
ceremony [Audun Braastad/EPA]
The Geneva-based International
Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons
(ICAN ) has received the 2017 Nobel
Peace Prize in Oslo on Sunday.
ICAN has been at the forefront of
pushing for an end to the use of
nuclear weapons through the United
Nations Treaty on the Prohibition of
Nuclear Weapons, which has 50
signatories including Brazil, South
Africa and Vietnam to date.
The Nobel committee cited ICAN's
efforts "for its work to draw attention
to the catastrophic humanitarian
consequences of any use of nuclear
weapons, and for its groundbreaking
efforts to achieve a treaty-based
prohibition on such weapons", in an
announcement in Oslo, Nowary on
October 6.
ICAN Executive Director Beatrice Fihn
told reporters that given the current
political atmosphere around the world,
the call to ban nuclear weapons is more
imperative
"The treaty is meant to make it harder
to justify nuclear weapons, to make it
uncomfortable for states to continue
the status quo, to put more pressure on
them," she said.
Here are some things to know about the
winner of this year's Nobel Peace
Prize:
Banning nukes
In a landmark resolution, 123 countries
voted to start talks on a "legally binding
instrument to prohibit nuclear
weapons" in the First Committee of the
UN General Assembly in October 2016.
In July, a UN conference adopted the
Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear
Weapons.
It is the "first multilateral legally-
binding instrument for nuclear
disarmament to have been negotiated
in 20 years", the UN said in a
statement.
The treaty opened for signature during
the annual UN General Assembly last
month.
As of September 20, 50 states
had signed the treaty , which bans the
use, development, testing or storing of
nuclear weapons under any
circumstances.
However, some of the top nuclear
powers have yet to sign on to the pact,
including the United States, Russia and
China.
Significantly, Iran, which has been
accused by the US President Donald
Trump of pursuing a nuclear
programme, has signed the treaty.
Strength in numbers
Before the Nobel
committee's
announcement,
ICAN was a
little-known
organisation
based in Geneva,
Switzerland.
Originally founded in Australia in 2007,
ICAN has now become a global coalition
of 468 non-government organisations
spread over 100 countries.
International partners include peace
organisations to humanitarian and
environmental groups.
Among its coalition partners are The
Ceasefire Campaign in South Africa and
the Africa Peace Forum in Kenya.
Physicians for Social Responsibility in
Bangladesh is also a partner, as well as
the Arab Network for Research on
Landmines and Explosive Remnants of
War.
Nobel Committee: ICAN has in the past
year given the efforts to achieve a world
without nuclear weapons a new direction
and new vigour.
10:01 AM - Oct 6, 2017 · Stockholm,
Sweden
6 226 316
The Nobel Prize
@NobelPrize
Public figures who have voiced support
for ICAN include Nobel Prize winners
the Dalai Lama and Desmond Tutu, as
well as artist and activist Ai Weiwei,
and internationally-known artists
Herbie Hancock and Yoko Ono.
"Let's act up! Ban nuclear weapons
completely and unconditionally," Ai
Weiwei was quoted as saying as he
declared his support for the nuclear
weapons ban treaty.
Its roots
In 2006, the International Physicians for
the Prevention of Nuclear War, which
won the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize,
adopted ICAN as a major priority at its
world congress in Helsinki Finland. A
year later, ICAN was formed in
Australia, and its international
campaign is officially launched in
Vienna, Austria.
Beatrice Fihn said ICAN founders were
also inspired to establish the group
following the success of the
International Campaign to Ban
Landmines, which won the Nobel Prize
in 1997.
As part of its work to push for the
nuclear prohibition treaty, ICAN
launched in 2012 the campaign "Don't
Bank on the Bomb", pushing for
divestment from hundreds of banks,
pension funds and insurance companies
with investments in companies
producing nuclear arms.
Call for global responsibility
Online, many celebrated the news that
ICAN was awarded this year's prize.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres
congratulated the campaign, saying
"now more than ever we need a world
without nuclear weapons".
Congratulations to ICAN on their Nobel
Peace Prize. Now more than ever we need
a world without nuclear weapons.
#NobelPrize
12:41 PM - Oct 6, 2017
209 3,010 5,878
António Guterres
@antonioguterres
Others called the Nobel committee's
decision a "resounding call to global
responsibility".
#NobelPeacePrize to ICAN (@nuclearban )
is a resounding call to global
responsibility and stronger diplomacy for
#peace
10:43 AM - Oct 6, 2017
10 208 396
Irina Bokova
@IrinaBokova
Challenges
While ICAN's Beatrice Fihn said that
the prize is a "huge" boost for her
organisation and other groups working
on the nuclear weapons issue, the
world faces significant hurdles related
to the nuclear weapons and threats of
war.
Just before the Nobel committee made
the announcement in Oslo, US President
Donald Trump had threatened not to re-
certify the nuclear deal agreed between
world powers and Iran.
"We must not allow Iran ... to obtain
nuclear weapons," Trump said.
"The Iranian regime supports terrorism
and exports violence, bloodshed and
chaos across the Middle East. That is
why we must put an end to Iran's
continued aggression and nuclear
ambitions. They have not lived up to
the spirit of their agreement," he said.
Iran has denied it is pursuing a nuclear
weapons programme and said it would
continue to abide by the deal. The UN
nuclear monitor also said that Iran is in
compliance with the deal.
Trump has also threatened "to destroy
North Korea" if necessary after its
leader Kim Jong-un said that nothing
could stop his country from acquiring
ballistic missiles with the capability of
carrying nuclear warheads.
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