Kate
Hudson, Chair of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, said
"It is excellent that the Prize Committee have recognised the central importance
of work aimed at reducing the nuclear threat we all face. Now President Obama
must live up to the
ideals of the Nobel Prize and follow through with concrete disarmament steps.
There are many hopeful signs that the US and Russia will agree significant
cut-backs, but as we approach the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
Review
Conference in May it
is vital that all nuclear-armed states are brought into the
process and that a timetable
for abolition is agreed.
"Obama
needs to decide whether he really will be a peace-maker when it comes to
Afghanistan and Iran.
The unwinnable war in Afghanistan is spreading hatred and
instability throughout the region, with a terrible blood price being paid not
only by Western forces, but primarily by Afghan civilians. Now is the time to
bring it to an end - certainly not to increase troop levels. On Iran,
Obama must be a real friend of peace - clearly outlining that any solution will
be diplomatic and not military."
All these issues will
be discussed
tomorrow at CND's international conference "Making nuclear
disarmament happen: Ideas and action in a changing world". The event, including
top speakers from the US, Russia, India, Pakistan, Israel, France, Germany,
Japan and New Zealand, will analyse the current global situation and the
prospects for disarmament. Media access is possible for all sessions from 10:00 -
5:30. Full details at
http://www.cnduk.org/conference
CND is also preparing
for the
'Troops Home from Afghanistan' demonstration on Saturday October 24th,
co-organised with the Stop the War Coalition and the British Muslim Initiative,
which will voice the majority opinion of the public - that Britain should
immediately withdraw from the unnecessary and unwinnable conflict in
Afghanistan.