Examples of Additional Protocols in a sentence
Furthermore, the Contractor warrants that it and its affiliates are NOT involved in the sale and/or production of weapons which feed into violations of International Humanitarian Law covered by the Geneva Conventions I-IV and Additional Protocols; and the UN Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons (1980).
The instruments of ratification shall be deposited with the Swiss Federal Council, depositary of the Geneva Conventions and the 1977 Additional Protocols.
Additional Protocols to IAEA comprehensive safeguards agreements increase the agency’s ability to investigate undeclared nuclear facilities and activities by increasing the IAEA’s authority to inspect certain nuclear-related facilities and demand information from member states.
Furthermore, the Seller warrants that it and its affiliates are NOT involved in the sale and/or production of weapons, which feed into violations of International Humanitarian Law covered by the Geneva Conventions I-IV and Additional Protocols; and the UN Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons (1980).
Italy has transposed the acquis on migration and asylum, notably the CEAS and its recast instruments, into national legislation.441 Furthermore, Italy is party to seven of the nine core international human rights treaties and their protocols.442 At the regional level, it is a party to the ECHR and has ratified its Additional Protocols.
The most important instruments of international humanitarian law are the four Geneva Conventions of 1949 and their Additional Protocols of 1977.
G-3, the provisions of the Geneva Conventions of 1949 and the Additional Protocols of 1977 are implemented into Canadian law.
Consensus will be recorded and finalized either in Additional Protocols to be attached to the EEA Agreement, or in appropriate decisions by the EEA Joint Committee after the entry into force of the Agreement.
This Treaty shall be of a permanent nature and shall remain in force indefinitely, but any Party may denounce it by notifying the General Secretary of the Agency if, in the opinion of the denouncing State, there have arisen or may arise circumstances connected with the content of this Treaty or of the annexed Additional Protocols I and II which affect its supreme interests or the peace and security of one or more Contracting Parties.
Arguably, even more of note is the fact that the definition included the possibility for the extension of IHL to situations of “protracted armed violence” between two NSAGs, a situation not imagined by the drafters of the Geneva Conventions or the Additional Protocols.