Nuclear Remembrance Day and World Future Day

Event Date: 28th February 2022
Location: Internet 3pm GMT



An event in commemoration of 
 

Nuclear Remembrance Day and World Future Day


We cordially remind you of Nuclear weapons and human rights, an online event to commemorate Nuclear Remembrance DayWorld Future Day and the final day of WeTheWorld 40 Days of Peace inspired by Martin Luther King Jr’s ‘We have a Dream’. (Event flyer).

This event brings young activists, including from areas impacted by nuclear tests, together with seasoned campaigners and legal experts, to discuss and advance the human right to a nuclear-weapon-free future.

The event will include a focus on opportunities to challenge the nuclear armed and allied states in UN human rights bodies following the adoption by the Human Rights Committee (HRC) in October 2018 of General Comment 36 on the Right to Life. In this General Comment, the HRC affirmed that the threat or use of nuclear weapons violate the Right to Life, and that there are obligations under international human rights law to eliminate nuclear weapons and provide adequate reparation to the victims of nuclear testing and use. Register for the event

Speakers




Nuclear Remembrance Day


Nuclear Remembrance Day is the anniversary of the Bravo nuclear weapons test that took place at Bikini Atoll on March 1, 1954 (Feb 28 in the USA/Europe). This was possibly the most destructive of the 67 nuclear explosive tests undertaken by the United States in the Marshall Islands between 1946 and 1958.

The explosion was about 1000 times more powerful than the nuclear bombs dropped on Hiroshima amd Nagasaki. It spread massive amounts of radiation across the Marshall Islands, throughout the Pacific and globally. This has had catastrophic, trans-generational impacts on the environment and the health of Marshallese people, which has not been adequately addressed by the United States government. Actions to secure appropriate reparations are continuing.

The experience of the Marshall Islands, and other areas where nuclear testing has been undertaken (e.g. Kazakhstan), demonstrate clearly that any testing or use of nuclear weapons violate human rights, and that there is a responsibility under international human rights law to eliminate the weapons. 

Event co-sponsors

Find out more – call Caroline on 01722 321865 or email us.