Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / NewStats: 3,205,490 members, 7,992,687 topics. Date: Sunday, 03 November 2024 at 02:09 PM |
Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Does Ipob And Biafran Separatists Know The Requirements For Getting A Country? (402 Views)
Argument Between A Middlebelter And Biafran On Twitter About Lagos / Does IPOB Wants To Be Pampered Like This - PHOTOS / Does ipob Knows Why Abonnema Celebrate Go To Niger? (2) (3) (4)
Does Ipob And Biafran Separatists Know The Requirements For Getting A Country? by oilyngbati(m): 9:28pm On Dec 30, 2021 |
To those Ipob cannibals shouting: “no lefelendum, no erection”, do you know what the requirements are when it comes to getting a new country? Well, here are some (not all) the rules: Adopted by the Seventh International Conference of American States, the convention stipulated that all states were equal sovereign units consisting of a permanent population, defined territorial boundaries, a government, and an ability to enter into agreements with other states. Below is also the montevideo convention of 1933, held in Uruguay: States in international law Although states are not the only entities with international legal standing and are not the exclusive international actors, they are the primary subjects of international law and possess the greatest range of rights and obligations. Unlike states, which possess rights and obligations automatically, international organizations, individuals, and others derive their rights and duties in international law directly from particular instruments. Individuals may, for example, assert their rights under international law under the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, both of which entered into force in 1976. Statehood Creation of states The process of creating new states is a mixture of fact and law, involving the establishment of particular factual conditions and compliance with relevant rules. The accepted criteria of statehood were laid down in the Montevideo Convention (1933), which provided that a state must possess a permanent population, a defined territory, a government, and the capacity to conduct international relations. The need for a permanent population and a defined territory is clear, though boundary disputes—e.g., those concerning Albania after World War I and Israel in 1948—do not preclude statehood. The international community (including the UN) has recognized some states while they were embroiled in a civil war (e.g., the Congo in 1960 and Angola in 1975), thus eroding the effective-government criterion. Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina were also recognized as new states by much of the international community in 1992, though at the time neither was able to exercise any effective control over significant parts of its territory. Although independence is required, it need not be more than formal constitutional independence. States may become extinct through merger (North and South Yemen in 1990), absorption (the accession of the Länder [states] of the German Democratic Republic into the Federal Republic of Germany in 1990), dissolution and reestablishment as new and separate states (the creation of separate Czech and Slovak republics from Czechoslovakia in 1993), limited dismemberment with a territorially smaller state continuing the identity of the larger state coupled with the emergence of new states from part of the territory of the latter (the Soviet Union in 1991), or, historically, annexation (Nazi Germany’s Anschluss of Austria in 1938). Recognition Recognition is a process whereby certain facts are accepted and endowed with a certain legal status, such as statehood, sovereignty over newly acquired territory, or the international effects of the grant of nationality. The process of recognizing as a state a new entity that conforms with the criteria of statehood is a political one, each country deciding for itself whether to extend such acknowledgment. Normal sovereign and diplomatic immunities are generally extended only after a state’s executive authority has formally recognized another state (see diplomatic immunity). International recognition is important evidence that the factual criteria of statehood actually have been fulfilled. A large number of recognitions may buttress a claim to statehood even in circumstances where the conditions for statehood have been fulfilled imperfectly (e.g., Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1992). According to the “declaratory” theory of recognition, which is supported by international practice, the act of recognition signifies no more than the acceptance of an already-existing factual situation—i.e., conformity with the criteria of statehood. The “constitutive” theory, in contrast, contends that the act of recognition itself actually creates the state. Before granting recognition, states may require the fulfillment of additional conditions. The European Community (ultimately succeeded by the EU), for example, issued declarations in 1991 on the new states that were then forming in eastern Europe, the former Soviet Union, and Yugoslavia that required, inter alia, respect for minority rights, the inviolability of frontiers, and commitments to disarmament and nuclear nonproliferation. The timing of any recognition is crucial—particularly when a new state has been formed partly from an existing one. Premature recognition in a case of secession can amount to intervention in a state’s internal affairs, a violation of one of the fundamental principles of international law. Recognition of governments is distinguished from the recognition of a state. The contemporary trend is in fact no longer to recognize governments formally but to focus instead upon the continuation (or discontinuation) of diplomatic relations. By this change, states seek to avoid the political difficulties involved in deciding whether or not to “recognize” new regimes taking power by nonconstitutional means. Although states are not obliged to recognize new claimants to statehood, circumstances sometimes arise that make it a positive duty not to recognize a state. During the 1930s, U.S. Secretary of State Henry Stimson propounded the doctrine of the nonrecognition of situations created as a result of aggression, an approach that has been reinforced since the end of World War II. In the 1960s, the UN Security Council “called upon” all states not to recognize the Rhodesian white-minority regime’s declaration of independence and imposed economic sanctions. Similar international action was taken in the 1970s and ’80s in response to South Africa’s creation of Bantustans, or homelands, which were territories that the white-minority government designated as “independent states” as part of its policy of apartheid. The Security Council also pronounced the purported independence of Turkish-occupied northern Cyprus as “legally invalid” (1983) and declared “null and void” Iraq’s annexation of Kuwait (1990). The UN also has declared that Israel’s purported annexation of the Golan Heights (conquered from Syria in 1967) is invalid and has ruled similarly with regard to Israel’s extension of its jurisdiction to formerly Jordanian-controlled East Jerusalem. 2 Likes |
Re: Does Ipob And Biafran Separatists Know The Requirements For Getting A Country? by oilyngbati(m): 9:37pm On Dec 30, 2021 |
I find 2 of the requirements for attaining a country interesting: — There must be a defined territory — The formation of a government Now, does Ipob cannibals have a defined territory? Usually, they say Benue is biafla,,,,,,Edo is biafla,,,,,Rivers is biafla,,,,,cross river is biafla and so on. So we can see that Ipob and their hunchback leader are even confused as to what their true territorial boundaries are? 2ndly, has Ipob human eaters gotten the capacity to form a government? Have they been able to contest and win any elections in their undefined territories? 4 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Does Ipob And Biafran Separatists Know The Requirements For Getting A Country? by Nobody: 10:15pm On Dec 30, 2021 |
It baffles me how people keep losing sleep over Biafra 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Does Ipob And Biafran Separatists Know The Requirements For Getting A Country? by Tingotoe: 2:04am On Dec 31, 2021 |
We began losing sleep over Biafran matters when you're IPOB terrorists started killing Nigerians. 1 Like |
Re: Does Ipob And Biafran Separatists Know The Requirements For Getting A Country? by Peterobiisathie(f): 4:27am On Dec 31, 2021 |
OP those cannibals barbecuing our policemen will not respond to you positively |
Re: Does Ipob And Biafran Separatists Know The Requirements For Getting A Country? by conductor890: 4:49am On Dec 31, 2021 |
Peterobiisathie:Yeah, the "cannibals" will respond to you and your riffraff friend squatting in his father's hut in Obomoso and throwing tantrums and he will declare Biafra from his 2by2 palour. Shame no dey for una skull. Everyday same yoonity begging. No single Igbo man has become pro-Biafran since all this fruitless yoonity begging propaganda campaign. Even those few sitting on the fence see the way you insult Igbos and do the needful. Continue instulting us and still begging for unity from the people you hate and insult every single day. When you tire, you face the hunger and squalor and terrorism that is at the brink of wiping away your shithole Nigeria.
|
Re: Does Ipob And Biafran Separatists Know The Requirements For Getting A Country? by Peterobiisathie(f): 4:53am On Dec 31, 2021 |
conductor890:who are the people begging you? Me? |
Re: Does Ipob And Biafran Separatists Know The Requirements For Getting A Country? by conductor890: 4:55am On Dec 31, 2021 |
Peterobiisathie:Yoonity beggar, still begging on this thread. No shame. I wonder what will happen to your self confidence when Igbos leave. Hope all of you will not just give up on your lives
|
(1) (Reply)
. / What Has Northern Groups Done About The Killings In The North ( Northerners Only / Meet Jeremiah Ekuma, Lagos Hawker Who Gave Money To Prisoners
(Go Up)
Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 31 |