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MANLEY CONGRATULATES GREECE AND TURKEY ON CONCURRENT PLAN TO JOIN THE OTTAWA CONVENTION

April 13, 2001 (9:30 a.m. EDT) No. 47

MANLEY CONGRATULATES GREECE AND TURKEY ON CONCURRENT PLAN TO JOIN THE OTTAWA CONVENTION

John Manley, Minister of Foreign Affairs, today congratulated Greece and Turkey on the announcement of their decision to concurrently become parties to the Ottawa Convention banning anti-personnel mines.

"This is a bold step that will make a major contribution to confidence building and stability in the region," said Minister Manley. "It confirms that mine action is an effective measure and an aid to global security."

Greek Foreign Affairs Minister Yeoryios Papandreou and Turkish Foreign Affairs Minister Ismail Cem announced on April 6 that Greece, which signed the Convention on December 4, 1997, will begin the process of ratification and that Turkey will begin the process of acceding to the Convention. Greece's instrument of ratification and Turkey's instrument of accession will be simultaneously deposited with the Secretary-General of the United Nations.

Ministers Papandreou and Cem stated that their countries "recognize that a total ban on these mines is an important confidence-building measure that would contribute to security and stability in the region."

The Ottawa Convention, officially known as the Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on their Destruction, was opened for signature in Ottawa in December 1997 and entered into force on March 1, 1999, making it the most rapidly ratified multilateral disarmament treaty in history.

The Convention has established a new international norm by calling for a complete ban on the production, use and transfer of anti-personnel mines, and for the destruction of stockpiled mines within four years of its entry into force. Since December 1997, 139 states have signed or acceded to the Convention, and a total of 111 have formally accepted its obligations.

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Last Updated:
2005-04-15
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