Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

More Countries Ratify Global Treaty Banning Nuclear Test Explosions

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • More Countries Ratify Global Treaty Banning Nuclear Test Explosions

    MORE COUNTRIES RATIFY GLOBAL TREATY BANNING NUCLEAR TEST EXPLOSIONS

    AP Worldstream
    Jun 27, 2006

    Seven countries have ratified the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban
    Treaty since November, the Vienna-based organization that administers
    the accord said Tuesday, bringing to 132 the number of nations that
    have endorsed the pact.

    The countries were Antigua and Barbuda, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Haiti,
    Suriname, Vietnam and Zambia, said Volodimir Yelchenko, chairman of
    the organization's preparatory commission established to prepare for
    the treaty's entry into force.

    However the treaty, which bans all nuclear explosions, will not enter
    until it has been ratified by 44 states _ listed in an annex _ who
    participated in a 1996 disarmament conference and who possess nuclear
    power or research reactors

    Only 34 of those have so far done so, Yelchenko said. The holdouts
    include the United States, China, India, Pakistan, Israel and North
    Korea.

    According to the organization's Web site, Haiti ratified the treaty
    _ adopted by the United Nations General Assembly and opened for
    signature in New York in September 1996 _ in December 2005 and the
    rest this year.

    Yelchenko said Vietnam's ratification was "very crucial" because the
    country was listed on the annex.

    "All of us think that ratification by Vietnam will also give a very
    powerful signal to some other countries of the region, for example
    Indonesia, who are quite close to the completion of the ratification
    process," Yelchenko said.

    Ethiopia and Armenia also have ratified the treaty but have yet to
    deposit official legal papers at United Nations headquarters, said
    Tibor Toth, the preparatory commission's executive secretary.
Working...
X