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American Treaty on Pacific Settlement

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American Treaty on Pacific Settlement

The American Treaty on Pacific Settlement (also known as the Pact of Bogotá) was signed by the independent republics of America gathered at the Ninth International Conference of American States in Bogotá, Colombia, on 30 April 1948.

Contents

The purpose of the treaty was to impose a general obligation on the signatories to settle their disputes through peaceful means. It also required them to exhaust regional dispute-settlement mechanisms before placing matters before the United Nations Security Council. It is one of the treaties that confer jurisdiction on the International Court of Justice.

Signed and ratified without reservations

  •  Brazil
  •  Costa Rica
  •  Dominican Republic
  •  Haiti
  •  Honduras
  •  Mexico
  •  Panama
  •  Uruguay
  • Signed and ratified with reservations

  •  Bolivia
  •  Chile
  •  Ecuador
  •  Nicaragua
  •  Paraguay
  •  Peru
  • Signed but not ratified

  •  Argentina1
  •  Cuba
  •  Guatemala
  •  United States1
  •  Venezuela
  • 1 Signed with reservations.

    Denounced

  •  El Salvador (on 24 November 1973)
  •  Colombia – On 28 November 2012, Colombia announced it would withdraw from the treaty following an adverse ruling by the International Court of Justice.
  • References

    American Treaty on Pacific Settlement Wikipedia