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A/RES/45/48 GA

Implementation of General Assembly resolution 44/104 concerning the signature and ratification of Additional Protocol I of the Treaty for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean (Treaty of Tlatelolco) : resolution / adopted by the General Assembly

45
Session
141
Yes
0
No
3
Abstentions
Draft symbol A/RES/45/48
Adopted symbol A/RES/45/48
Category GEOGRAPHICAL DESCRIPTORS
Voeten Topics
P5 Positions
Russia United States United Kingdom China France ~
UN Document A/RES/45/48 ↗

Vote Recorded VoteA/45/PV.54 Dec. 4, 1990

— Abstain (3)
Absent (15)
✓ Yes (141)
Full text of resolution OCR extract — may contain errors
UNITED A NATIONS _______________________ General Assem bly Distr. GENERAL A/SBS/4S/48 4 January 1991 Forty-fi£th aassion Agenda Item 45 RESOLUTION ADOPTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY [on the report of the First Committee (A/45/767)] 45/48. IgBlementation of General Assembly resolution 44/104 concerning thfl.. aittnature and ratification of Additional Protocol 1 of the Treaty for the. PrQhibitiQn_oL Nuclear Weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean (Treaty of Tlatelolco) The General Aaaemblv. Racalling that in its resolution 2286 (XXII) of 5 December 1967 it welcomed with special satisfaction the Treaty for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America 1/ as an event of historic significance in the efforts to prevent the proliferation of nuclear weapons and to promote international peace and security. Recalling also its various resolutions concerning the signature and ratification of Additional Protocol I of the Treaty for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America (Treaty of Tlatelolco), Taking into account that within the zone of application of the Treaty, to which twenty-three sovereign States are already parties, there are some territories that, in spite of not being sovereign political entities, are nevertheless in a position to receive the benefits deriving from the Treaty through its Additional Protocol I, to which the four States that de jure or de facto are internationally responsible for those territories may become parties. 1/ United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 634, No. 9068. 91-00337 3013Z (E) Caagidfiriflq that it is not fair that the peoples of some of those territories are deprived of such benefits without being given the opportunity to express their opinion in this connection. Recalling further that three of the States to which Additional Protocol I is open - the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Horthern Ireland, the Kingdom of the /Netherlands and the United States of America - became parties to the Protocol in 1969, 1971 and 1981 respectively, 1. Deplores once again that the signature of Additional Protocol I by France, which took place on 2 March 1979, has not yet been followed by the corresponding ratification, notwithstanding the time elapsed and the pressing invitations that the General Assembly has addressed to it; 2. Once more urges France not to delay any further such ratification, which has been requested so many times and which appears all the more advisable, since France is the only one of the four States to which the Protocol is open that is not yet party to it; 3. Decides to include in the provisional agenda of its forty-sixth session an item entitled "Implementation of General Assembly resolution 45/48 concerning the signature and ratification of Additional Protocol X of the Treaty for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean (Treaty of Tlatelolco)". 54th Plenary meeting 4 December 1990 X/RES/45/48 Page 2
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UN Project. “A/RES/45/48.” UN Project, https://un-project.org/votes/resolution/A-RES-45-48/. Accessed .