| Comments Of U.S. Senator Patrick Leahy
On The Nairobi Summit On A Mine-Free World
Monday, Nov. 29, 2004
Following are the comments of U.S. Sen. Patrick
Leahy (D-Vt.) on the landmine treaty conference that convened this
week in Nairobi, the first review of the implementation and status
of the 1997 treaty that bans the production and use of anti-personnel
landmines. Leahy has long been the leading U.S. officeholder
working to ban anti-personnel landmines. The treaty has been ratified
by 144 nations, including most European countries and every nation
in the Americas except Cuba, Haiti and the United States. The
Bush Administration declined to send U.S. representatives to the
Nairobi summit.
“This is a milestone that few would have
thought possible five years ago. The 144 nations that have joined
the treaty and the International Campaign to Ban Landmines together
have shown that the goal of a worldwide landmine ban is within reach.
But it will remain beyond the world’s grasp as long
as the United States, Russia and China refuse to join this effort.
“Our country has made many contributions
to the effort to de-mine areas of the world where landmines pose
the greatest danger to innocent civilians, but our refusal to join
the treaty gives nations that are the worst offenders an excuse
to do the same.
“The Bush Administration’s decision
to shun this conference was aloof and ill-considered. We need
to engage with the rest of the world on this and on other problems
that we cannot solve on our own. The world looks to the United
States for leadership on human rights, and U.S. detachment hinders
progress. U.S. participation in Nairobi could have given a
real boost to this unprecedented humanitarian effort.
“It is regrettable that the Bush Administration
not only has stayed away from this conference, but it has also walked
away from the commitment the Clinton Administration made to find
alternatives to these indiscriminate weapons. I hope the Administration
will reconsider its approach to the treaty and to the landmine problem
and will begin looking for constructive ways to lead the world toward
the goal of ending their use once and for all.”
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