Conference Names Coordinator to Seek Ban on Land Mines
- Share via
GENEVA — The West won a victory Thursday when the Conference on Disarmament decided to appoint a special coordinator to try to launch negotiations for a global ban on land mines, which are blamed for killing 25,000 people a year.
In agreeing to the Western-backed move, nonaligned states cleared the way for the humanitarian question of land mines to be tackled separately from deadlocked nuclear issues, diplomats said.
India, a threshold nuclear power, and its Third World allies had not wanted to talk about nonproliferation or land mines until the recognized nuclear states agreed to set themselves a timetable for total nuclear disarmament.
The conference quickly named Australian Ambassador John Campbell to the coordinator’s post, an encouraging choice for those campaigning for a quick, total ban.
The decision was made possible when Syria’s delegate left the conference room, thereby avoiding registering a veto and tacitly permitting a consensus the day before the 61-member body ends its second session of 1997. The final seven-week round starts July 28.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.