The ATOM Project and Project Honorary Ambassador Karipbek Kuyukov will
participate in the Dec. 9-13 events in Oslo, Norway related to the
awarding of partner organisation ICAN’s receipt of the Nobel Peace Prize
for its anti-nuclear weapons efforts.
“Having recently collaborated with ICAN, I want to congratulate ICAN on
its Nobel Prize and thank the organisation for its work with The ATOM
Project and other non-proliferation partners to achieve a
nuclear-weapons-free world,” said Kuyukov in October. “This
award truly brings to the fore the issue of nuclear non-proliferation
and the hard work of ICAN members around the world and others who are
striving to remove the threat of nuclear weapons.”
ICAN is a Geneva-based global civil society coalition made up of 468
partner organisations, including The ATOM Project, in 101 countries. It
was formed in 2007 and is working to achieve full adherence to the
Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.
The ATOM Project is one of the organisations ICAN represents in that
effort. The ATOM Project is an international campaign launched in 2012
to raise awareness of the human and environmental devastation caused by
nuclear weapons testing and to engage millions
of global citizens to permanently stop nuclear weapons testing and
achieve a nuclear-weapons-free world.
The ATOM Project was started by Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev,
who shut down in 1991 the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site in the eastern
Kazakhstan where the Soviets conducted more than 450 nuclear weapons
tests over 40 years. More than 1.5 million Kazakh
citizens have been impacted by the tests, including many who, to this
day, in the first and the second generations, suffer early death,
lifelong debilitating illness and birth defects.
Kazakhstan knows the horrors of nuclear testing and, through The ATOM
Project, has become a world leader in the non-proliferation effort.
In addition to The ATOM Project, other partner organisations include the
Institute for Disarmament Policy, Article 36, International Physicians
for the Prevention of Nuclear War, Norwegian Peoples Aid, PAX, Peace
Boat, the Latin America Human Security Network
(SEHLAC), Swedish Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War and the
Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom.
Among the events in which Kuyukov will participate with ICAN include the
Dec. 10 Nobel prize award ceremony and a torchlight procession later
that evening. He will also be available during events before the
ceremony, including a Dec. 9 campaigners’ gathering
and a separate social event.
The award ceremony will be held in the Oslo city hall and include a
limited number of guests. The event however, will be live streamed to an
overflow event next to the City Hall.
The torchlight procession honoring the Nobel prize winner will begin at
5:30 pm and proceed from the Oslo Central Station to Grand Hotel. The
event is expected to be the largest torchlight procession in Nobel
history.
For more information about the procession go to,
https://www.facebook.com/
And for more information about the ATOM project or to join the more than 300,000 people worldwide who have signed the atom project online petition, visit www.theatomproject.org. |
Đăng nhận xét