On 29 August 1949, the Soviet Union detonated their first nuclear weapon, code-named First Lightning, a nuclear chain reaction that caused radioactive contamination over a large area of Kazakhstan. Over the next 40 years, the Soviet Union detonated another 455 nuclear weapons in Kazakhstan, 115 above ground and 340 underground.
The damage to the people and environment of Kazakhstan has been extreme – with the health of nearly 2 million people severely affected by the initial radioactive fallout, as well as by long-term radioactive toxicity and by the transgenerational impact of radiation on human genes.
Now, a chain reaction of a different sort has emerged from Kazakhstan.
Earlier this year, Tolegen Mukhamejanov, one of the leaders of the civil society movement that closed down the Soviet nuclear test site in Kazakhstan in 1991, proposed a chain reaction of civil society actions around the world. The actions would highlight the inhumanity and insecurity of nuclear weapons, oppose the institutions and policies perpetuating the nuclear arms race, and support initiatives by governments and the United Nations to achieve a nuclear-weapon-free world.
Mukhamejanov made the proposal to UNFOLD ZERO, which has now launched Chain Reaction 2016 with the support of a number of other international civil society organisations.
Chain Reaction 2016 kicked off on July 8, the 20th anniversary of the historic International Court of Justice case on the illegality of the threat or use of nuclear weapons, with over 200 events around the world.
The chain reaction will continue until October 2, the International Day of Nonviolence (Gandhi’s birthday), with events on other key days in-between including on August 6 and 9 (anniversaries of the nuclear bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki), September 21 (International Day for Peace) and September 26 (International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons).
One of the key events for Chain Reaction 2016 is a special international conference to be held in Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan, on August 29, the International Day Against Nuclear Tests. This is also the 25th anniversary of the closure of the nuclear test-site in Kazakhstan and the 67th anniversary of the first Soviet nuclear test.
The conference, which will be opened by Kazakhstan President Nursultan Nazarbayev, will bring religious leaders, parliamentarians, mayors, government officials, representatives of international organisations and civil society leaders together to amplify the chain reaction for a nuclear-weapon-free world.
The conference will build on the cooperation already happening between these constituencies such as ‘A Nuclear-Weapon-Free World: Our Common Good,’ a joint statement of religious leaders, mayors and parliamentarians. The joint statement was released in Hiroshima on August 6, 2015 the 70th anniversary of the nuclear bombing of Hiroshima, and has already been presented to leaders of governments and to the United Nations.
The conference hopes to generate momentum that will impact on the nuclear-armed States, the new Secretary-General of the United Nations (to be elected in October), and on other world leaders as they gather for the United Nations General Assembly in September. Indeed, U.S. President Obama is expected to announce a new policy this year to strengthen the norm of non-use of nuclear weapons, and the UN General Assembly is likely to launch multilateral nuclear disarmament negotiations. The Astana conference could build support for these, and other nuclear disarmament measures.
Kazakhstan has taken a number of other initiatives for nuclear disarmament including repatriating all the 1500 nuclear weapons on their territory to Russia to become nuclear-free, negotiating a Central Asian Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone, launching the ATOM project to educate the world about nuclear tests, moving the United Nations to establish August 29 as the International Day Against Nuclear Tests, proposing a Universal Declaration for a Nuclear-Weapon-Free World which was adopted by the United Nations in 2015, and advancing a Manifesto for Peace 21st Century to end the scourge of war.
Kazakhstan has also reached out to religious and inter-faith communities. Conflicts between religions have been one of the sources of national strife and international conflicts. Kazakhstan has played a key role in bringing religions together by hosting a number of World Spiritual Forums which have been chaired by Tolegen Mukhamejanov, and which have included a focus on inter-faith support for the peace and security of a nuclear-weapon-free world.’Petals’ in the Bayterek Tower signed by leaders of 17 different religions
Kazakhstan promotion of inter-faith support for peace is also seen in the Bayterek monument, which the government has erected in the centre of Astana. The monument represents the Kazakh ‘Tree of Life’. You can enter at the bottom and travel by elevator up to the ‘branches’ of the tree, where you enter a large golden egg of the Samuruk bird. Inside the egg you can see the palm print of the President of Kazakhstan and ‘petals’ signed by leaders of 17 different religions, affirming the peaceful cooperation of political and religious leaders.