SGI President Calls for Accelerated Action Toward Nuclear Abolition

By Soka Gakkai International, PRNE
Monday, January 25, 2010

TOKYO, January 26 - In a proposal released on Jan. 26, "Toward a New Era of Value Creation,"
Soka Gakkai International (SGI) President Daisaku Ikeda calls for accelerated
moves toward the realization of a world without nuclear weapons. He also
urges concrete steps toward generating meaningful employment opportunities in
the current economic downturn, and making investment in education for girls a
priority development objective.

Noting that the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) Review Conference
to be held in May provides a vital opportunity for progress, Ikeda outlines
three imperatives:

1) To establish nuclear weapon non-use zones, particularly in Northeast
Asia
, South Asia and the Middle East, as a step toward complete
denuclearization.

2) To revise the statutes of the International Criminal Court to classify
the use of nuclear weapons as a war crime.

3) To create a multilateral system by which the United Nations General
Assembly and the Security Council work together toward the complete
elimination of nuclear weapons, as provided for by Article 26 of the UN
Charter which gives the Security Council responsibility to formulate plans
for the regulation of armaments.

Ikeda urges intensive efforts over the next five years to achieve these
goals, culminating in a nuclear abolition summit to be held in Hiroshima and
Nagasaki in 2015, which would symbolically mark the end of the era of nuclear
weapons within the lifetimes of survivors of the nuclear bombings of those
cities.

He notes that in the case of chemical and biological weapons,
prohibitions against their use preceded treaties comprehensively banning
their production and stockpiling. He urges that the same strategy be used to
strengthen and expand constraints against the use of nuclear weapons as a
concrete step toward their abolition.

By creating "expanding circles of physical and psychological security,"
such efforts could draw in countries whose nuclear intentions are unclear or
which stand outside of existing nonproliferation regimes.

Ikeda cites nihilism as an underlying factor in the crises facing the
world today. He notes that both nuclear weapons and the current economic
crisis are the products of technological competence propelled by the deepest,
most primitive forms of human desire decoupled from a sense of constructive
purpose. Religion has traditionally provided the frameworks moderating human
desire and has a particular responsibility to generate positive values which
can contribute to counteracting these trends.

In response to the deepening inequalities of the global economic system,
the SGI President calls for a renewed focus on ensuring opportunities for
what the International Labour Organization has called "decent work" - work
that enables people to meet their needs with dignity. He proposes the
creation of a G20 taskforce dedicated to this goal.

Noting that 2010 is the tenth anniversary of UN Security Council
Resolution 1325, which focuses on women as active agents in creating peace,
Ikeda urges a renewal of efforts to ensure gender equality in education and
calls for women's concerns and perspectives to be put at the center of human
development initiatives. He also calls for schools to function as centers for
fostering among young people a vibrant culture of peace.

This is the 28th annual peace proposal issued by Daisaku Ikeda to
commemorate the founding of the Soka Gakkai International Buddhist
association on January 26, 1975. SGI has 12 million members around the world,
and its activities to promote peace, education and culture are based on the
longstanding traditions of socially-engaged Buddhism.

    Contact:
    Joan Anderson
    Office of Public Information
    Soka Gakkai International
    Tel: +81-3-5360-9482
    Fax: +81-3-5360-9885
    URL: www.sgi.org
    E-mail: janderson[at]sgi.gr.jp

Joan Anderson, Office of Public Information, Soka Gakkai International, +81-3-5360-9482, Fax: +81-3-5360-9885, janderson[at]sgi.gr.jp

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