Vienna, May 07: UN atomic watchdog chief Yukiya Amano is asking IAEA member states for ideas on how to persuade Israel to sign up to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), according to a document.
In a letter, dated April 7 and circulated to the foreign ministers of members states of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Amano asked ministers to “inform me of any views that your government might have” on the issue.
At the IAEA’s last general conference in September 2009, member countries passed a resolution entitled “Israeli nuclear capabilities” which called on Tel Aviv “to accede to the NPT and place all its nuclear facilities under comprehensive IAEA safeguards.”
Israel is widely considered to be the Middle East’s sole if undeclared nuclear power and is not a signatory to the NPT.
The symbolic, non-binding resolution was passed with a total of 49 countries in favour, 45 against and 16 abstentions.
It urged the IAEA’s director general “to work with the concerned states towards achieving that end”.
And it requested the director general “to report on the implementation of this resolution” to the agency’s board of governors and the upcoming general conference in September.
“As part of his work in responding to last year’s general conference resolution, director general Yukiya Amano wrote to IAEA Member States soliciting their views with respect to meeting the objectives of the resolution,” said agency spokesman Ayhan Evrensel.
“As requested by the general conference, the director general will report to the board of governors and the general conference of the IAEA later this year on the implementation of the resolution,” Evrensel said.
Just this week, in a speech to the NPT Review Conference in New York, Amano noted “that the IAEA General Conference has adopted resolutions in recent years on the establishment of a nuclear-weapons-free zone in the Middle East.
“Last year’s General Conference also adopted a resolution on Israel’s nuclear capabilities. I am following up on these resolutions as requested by the General Conference,” Amano said.
—Agencies