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NUKEWARS
UN chief makes new call for nuclear test ban implementation
by Staff Writers
Vienna (AFP) Feb 17, 2012


United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon made a new call Friday for the last countries that have not yet ratified the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) to let it enter into force.

"Any country opposed to signing or ratifying it is simply failing to meet its responsibilities as a member of the international community," he said.

"It is irresponsible to see this treaty still waiting to come into effect 15 years after it was opened for signature."

"I urge all governments that have not yet signed or ratified this treaty to immediately do so," Ban added. "I especially call for action by the countries whose ratification is essential for the treaty to enter into force."

The treaty bans nuclear explosions for either military or civilian purposes, and has so far been signed by 182 countries and ratified by 157 of them.

But it will not come into effect until it is ratified by the 44 key countries possessing nuclear technology. Thirty-six have done so but holdouts include the United States, China, Egypt, Iran and Israel.

India, Pakistan and North Korea have yet to sign the pact.

Since Ban made a similar appeal at UN headquarters in September, one key country, Indonesia, has ratified the agreement.

"The family of CTBT member states has grown to 182, 157 of which have ratified. The network has grown, station by station," the head of the Vienna-based CTBT Organisation, Tibor Toth, said Friday.

Ban added, "Now we have only eight countries and I am ready to meet all these leaders and if necessary travel with Ambassador Tibor Toth to those eight countries who are still reluctant or may have doubts about the ratification of this treaty."

The CTBT is seen by arms control advocates as a key measure for preventing the spread of nuclear weapons.

The unwillingness of the United States to ratify the treaty has been a key obstacle, with many analysts saying that US ratification would encourage other holdout countries to follow suit.

The CTBT also calls for a global system for monitoring nuclear explosions, which has been partially set up.

Related Links
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Latvia angered by Russian air manoeuvre
Riga (AFP) Feb 17, 2012 - Latvia on Friday said it wanted answers from the Kremlin after two Russian jets flew close to the Baltic states on the eve of a referendum that touches on Moscow's regional influence.

Two German military jets -- part of a NATO force policing Baltic airspace -- were scrambled earlier in the day to escort the two Russian TU-22M bombers that were flying over the Baltic Sea.

Latvian Defence Minister Artis Pabriks demanded an explanation from Moscow.

"It's not just about a scramble and intercept, it's about strategic and tactical manoeuvres going on in the territory between the Baltic states and Poland," Pabriks told AFP. "These are quite large manoeuvres."

Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania won independence from the Soviet Union in 1991 after five decades of communist rule and joined NATO in 2004.

The trio lack enough aircraft to police their own skies, so other NATO members take turns patrolling them from a base in Lithuania.

On Saturday Latvia will hold a referendum on whether to make Russian its second official language.

Proponents say this would end discrimination against ethnic Russians, mostly Soviet-era settlers and their descendants, who make up around a third of Latvia's population of two million.

Opponents, who looked to be in the lead, recall how Russian was imposed in public life under the Soviet system.

Asked if the timing of Russia's military exercise was tied to the referendum, Pabriks said: "I don't want to speculate. But in order to avoid speculation, I need to get more information from the Russian side.

"For the relationship between NATO and Russia it's important that Russia gives us more information about these manoeuvres."



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NUKEWARS
Nuclear bomb cannot bring superiority: Iran
Islamabad (AFP) Feb 17, 2012
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Friday that nuclear-armed nations were not superior to others, a day after his sanctions-hit government told world powers it was ready to resume stalled atomic talks. "(The) nuclear bomb is not going to bring about superiority," he told a joint news conference with his Afghan and Pakistani counterparts in Islamabad, addressing the predominantly Engl ... read more


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