AFRICAN NUCLEAR-WEAPON-FREE ZONE
Treaty of Pelindaba
On November 24, 1961, as a consequence of the first French nuclear
test in the dessert of Western Sahara, in the territory of today’s Algeria, the General Assembly appealed the United
Nations Member States to stop these tests carried out in the densely populated territories of North Africa. Three
years after, the African Heads of State and Government gathered at the Summit Conference of the African Unity (OAU)
solemnly declared by means of an international treaty that they were ready to achieve a treaty prohibiting the
production and the absolute control over nuclear weapons in their region. Of course this proposal had not made
any progress till the Cold War was over. Indeed it was since 1991 that South Africa, the African continent’s only
country that had developed technological capacity for making nuclear weapons, became an integrant of the NPT, when
real prospects for establishing a nuclear weapon free zone in Africa opened. The African Treaty bears the name
of Pelindaba in honor of the South African nuclear plant that developed an important number of nuclear warheads
and were dismantled. The fact that South Africa took such a decision of political character allowed the Pelindaba
Treaty to have an end that had been expected for so many decades. The Treaty was opened for signature on April
12, 1996, in the city of Cairo. With the Pelindaba Treaty there are 54 independent states of international community
that may be members of this nuclear weapon free zone. Like its precedents the Pelindaba Treaty has its text supplemented
by three additional protocols. The first one is intended for the five nuclear powers; the second one prohibits
nuclear tests in the application zone and the third one involves the states which de jure or de facto have territories
under their jurisdiction in the Treaty application area.