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NUKEWARS
Indonesia brings global nuclear test ban one step closer
by Staff Writers
Vienna (AFP) Dec 6, 2011


The nuclear test ban treaty CTBT is one step closer to being implemented, following its ratification by key signatory Indonesia, the commission overseeing the treaty announced Tuesday.

"I welcome today's outcome of the vote in the Indonesian Parliament to ratify the treaty," Tibor Toth, head of the CTBT's preparatory commission, said in a statement, describing it as a "historic decision."

Jakarta's move brings the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty "a significant step closer to becoming global law," he added.

So far, the CTBT, which aims to outlaw all nuclear explosions, has been signed by 182 states but 44 key states -- all with nuclear technology -- need to ratify it before it can come into force.

With Indonesia's vote, 36 of these countries have now ratified the treaty.

But among those still missing are North Korea, Iran, Israel, Pakistan, India, China and the United States -- all states known to have or suspected of developing nuclear weapons.

Indonesia is already one of the 10 states making up Southeast Asia's nuclear-weapon free zone (NWFZ).

In August, UN chief Ban Ki-moon urged progress on the CTBT, noting that current moratoriums on nuclear tests were "no substitute for a global ban," as the CTBT celebrates 15 years since its adoption by the UN General Assembly.

Although the future organisation (CTBTO) is not officially in place yet, monitoring stations have already been set up around the world to detect nuclear explosions and have also been used to track seismic data and nuclear fallout such as during Japan's Fukushima disaster in March.

Related Links
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NUKEWARS
US put 'low priority' on first India nuclear test
Washington (AFP) Dec 5, 2011
US intelligence agencies put a low priority on predicting India's first nuclear test as it concluded that the step would have minimal strategic impact, declassified documents said Monday. US papers retrieved by George Washington University's National Security Archive found other Western countries also doubted India would carry out a nuclear test but that a Japanese diplomat accurately foreca ... read more


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