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CTBT's Central Features
Basic obligations. The CTBT will ban any nuclear weapon
test explosion or any other nuclear explosion, consistent with President
Clinton's August 11, 1995 decision to negotiate a true zero yield
CTBT.
Organization. The Treaty establishes an organization to
ensure the implementation of its provisions, including those for
international verification measures. The organization includes a
Conference of States Parties, an Executive Council and a Technical
Secretariat, which shall include the International Data Center.
Structure. The Treaty includes a Protocol in three parts: Part
I details the International Monitoring System (IMS); Part II on
On-Site Inspections (OSI); and Part III on Confidence Building Measures.
There are two Annexes: Annex 1 details the location of treaty monitoring
assets associated with the IMS; and Annex 2 details the parameters
for screening events.
Verification and inspections. The Treaty's verification
regime includes an international monitoring system composed of seismological,
radionuclide, hydroacoustic and infrasound monitoring; consultation
and clarification; on-site inspections; and confidence building
measures. The use of national technical means, vital for the Treaty's
verification regime, is explicitly provided for. Requests for on-site
inspections must be approved by at least 30 affirmative votes of
members of the Treaty's 51-member Executive Council. The Executive
Council must act within 96 hours of receiving a request for an inspection.
Treaty compliance and sanctions. The Treaty provides for
measures to redress a situation and to ensure compliance, including
sanctions, and for settlement of disputes. If the Conference or
Executive Council determines that a case is of particular gravity,
it can bring the issue to the attention of the United Nations.
Amendments. Any state party to the Treaty may propose an
amendment to the Treaty, the Protocol, or the Annexes to the Protocol.
Amendments shall be considered by an Amendment Conference and shall
be adopted by a positive vote of a majority of the States parties
with no State party casting a negative vote.
Protocol. Amendments shall be considered by an Amendment
Conference and shall be adopted by a positive vote of a majority
of the States parties with no State party casting a negative vote.
Entry into force. The Treaty will enter into force 180
days after the date of deposit of the instruments of ratification
by all States listed in Annex 2 to this Treaty, but in no case earlier
than two years after its opening for signature. Annex 2 includes
44 States members of the Conference on Disarmament (CD) with nuclear
power and/or research reactors. If the Treaty has not entered into
force three years after the date of the anniversary of its opening
for signature, a conference of the States that have already deposited
their instruments of ratification may convene annually to consider
and decide by consensus what measures consistent with international
law may be undertaken to accelerate the ratification process in
order to facilitate the early entry into force of this Treaty.
Review. Ten years after entry into force, a Conference
of the States Parties will be held to review the operation and effectiveness
of this Treaty.
Duration. The Treaty is of unlimited duration. Each State
Party has the right to withdraw from the CTBT if it decides that
extraordinary events related to its subject matter have jeopardized
its supreme national interests.
Depository. The Secretary General of the United Nations
shall be the Depository of this Treaty and shall receive signatures,
instruments of ratification and instruments of accession.
Source: http://dosfan.lib.uic.edu/acda/ctbtpage/ctbfs.htm
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