International telecommunications treaty

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Basic data
Short title: International telecommunications treaty
Full title: International Telecommunications
Treaty NAIROBI, (1982)
Type: international treaty
Legal matter: international law
Scope: international
Abbreviation : IFV
Contracting States: 190
Announcement day: November 6, 1982
Current version: Germany:
BGBl. 1985 II pp. 425, 426

The International Telecommunication Convention (IFV, English International Telecommunication Convention ) is a treaty under international law that has been signed and ratified by almost all countries in the world . It was closed on November 6, 1982 in Nairobi . The previous agreement was the International Telecommunications Treaty (Malaga-Torremolinos 1973) . Both treaties are the basis of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU).

Another successor agreement is the Constitution and Convention of the International Telecommunication Union of December 22, 1992. Today, the two IFVs, Malaga-Torremolinos (1973) and Nairobi (1982), are only relevant in relation to the states, those of the Constitution and Convention of the International Telecommunication Union have not acceded.

The preamble to the contract reads in the German translation (in the Swiss Systematic Collection of Federal Law ):

In full recognition of the full right of each country to regulate its telecommunications, and in view of the growing importance of telecommunications for the maintenance of peace and the social and economic development of all countries, the Plenipotentiaries of the Contracting Governments have concluded this Treaty by mutual agreement in order to promote peaceful relations and to facilitate cooperation between peoples through a well-functioning telecommunications service; this treaty is the fundamental instrument of the International Telecommunication Union.

An appendix to the International Telecommunications Treaty was the Regulations for the Radio Service .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. International Telecommunications Treaty; Final Protocol, Additional Protocol, Optional Additional Protocol, Resolutions, Recommendations and Requests; NAIROBI, 1982 (Bundesdruckerei 424650 9.84 / 321; 1984 German translation)
  2. Green Paper - Frequency range allocation plan for the Federal Republic of Germany and international allocation of the frequency ranges 9 kHz - 400 GHz; 1994; issued by the BMPT; BAPT order no. 5010311 001-1; Page 8, No. 2.