Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing on Wednesday joined world leaders
in signing an international treaty under which it has been defined
as a crime to possess radioactive material with the intention of
committing a terrorist act.
The Convention for the Suppression of Acts of Nuclear Terrorism
was the 13th anti-terrorism international treaty and the first
completed since the September 11 terrorist attacks on the US.
The accord, adopted by the UN General Assembly in April, will
enter into force after 22 states ratify it.
Under the treaty, it is illegal to possess radioactive material
or a nuclear device for the purpose of causing death or substantial
damage to property or environment. It is also punishable to
threaten to use radioactive material or attempt to obtain such
lethal material.
After Li signed the treaty at a desk in a makeshift hall on the
sidelines of the UN summit, Chinese UN Ambassador Wang Guangya told
reporters that China's signing of the treaty indicates the
country's determination to combat terrorism and its support for the
UN's leading role in the global fight against terrorism.
Other leaders who signed the document Wednesday included Russian
President Vladimir Putin, US President George W. Bush, French Prime
Minister Dominique de Villepin and Canadian Prime Minister Paul
Martin.
(Xinhua News Agency September 15, 2005)