Examples of South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone in a sentence
Except where otherwise specified, this Treaty and its Protocols shall apply to territory within the South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone.
South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone (Treaty of Rarotonga)Thirteen nations of the South Pacific have established a NWFZ for their region which prohibits the possession of nuclear weapons by its members and bans the manufacture or permanent emplacement of nuclear weapons within the zone by signatories outside of the Pacific region.
Such agreements include the London Convention as amended; the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, including in particular Articles 31, 210 and 236 thereof; the South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone Treaty, 1985, including in particular Article 7 thereof; and the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships, 1973.
Western Samoa is a party to both the Apia and SPREP conventions and to the South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone Treaty.
Toshiki Mogami, “The South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone: A Fettered Leap Forward”, Journal of Peace Research, Vol.
Leaders noted the Secretary General’s report on the status and implementation of the South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone Treaty and called upon the United States to ratify the Protocols to the Treaty as a means of enhancing global and regional peace and security, including global nuclear non-proliferation.
Article 14 paragraph 14.4 of the basic law is reformulated with the following text: 14.4. If the Business Registration Agency confirms that a delivered registration document does not fulfill one or more criteria of this law and because of this can not be registered, it should within three (3) working days from the day of receiving this document, inform the commercial company or its official representative through email, official mail address, conform the basic law.
Australia played a leading role in the negotiation of the South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone Treaty (or Treaty of Rarotonga) which came into force in 1986, and was a key contributor to the negotiation of the Chemical Weapons Convention which was concluded in 1992.
The most complete definition is given in the 1985 South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone Treaty (Treaty of Raro- tonga) and the 1996 African Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone Treaty (Treaty of Pelindaba): ‘“nuclear explosive device” means any nuclear weapon or other explosive device capable of releasing nuclear energy, irrespective of the pur- pose for which it could be used.
New Zealand has worked with Pacific countries to put in place the South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone Treaty, which bans nuclear testing.