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by The Regional Book Keeper of India Dispatch Office. . 189 reads.

Treaty of Gondwana | India - Africa


Treaty of Gondwana
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Created and signed by the executives of the regions of Africa and India, to continue, further, and expand the relations between the two. This treaty hereby formalises what naturally and informally exists between the two, as recognised by the regions with their ongoing and historical support for each other.

Treaty of Gondwana
Signed by Mombombu, for Africa and Hindu Ram Rajya for India.


Article I: Preamble
(a) The regions of India and Africa, though informally recognising the value to each other, lack formal mechanisms to bind a collective regional response to the activities, cultural, defensive, or political, of the other.

(b) This lack of formal mechanisms represents a weakness in the efforts between the two regions; in the ability to celebrate either region’s culture, the ability to defend either region – or their sister and satellite regions, and the ability to exert influence in the Nationstates’ community.

(c) Necessitates a formal treaty to eliminate these deficiencies in Indian-African relations, in a manner that is sustainable, concise, and functional.

Article II: Regional Culture

(a) The regional public culture; through events, celebrations, contests, or other expressions, shall be jointly hosted in both regions.

(b) A ‘hosted event’ is defined as a public culture, native to a particular region; that is officially and actively celebrated by that region's government.

(c) Regional public culture may not be hosted outside of its native region, if requested formally and publicly, by the regional executive of that region.

(d) A hosted event from one region may be rejected from celebration outside its native region, if it is deemed incompatible with another region’s positions; politically, culturally, or religiously. This rejection must be made through a formal public declaration containing a relevant explanation.

(e) Each region, in eliminating confusion for the other, must provide clear notice; upwards of 4 days, in what public culture it seeks to have celebrated outside of its region. This time stipulation is waived for sudden and unexpected events, arising from unknown circumstances outside of a region’s scheduled events, whereby such events must be made known to the other regions immediately.

Article III: Defensive Agreement

(a) The regions of India and Africa agree to defend both each other, as well as each other's sister and satellite regions; agreeing to support one another in defensive actions or positioning taken inside or outside of the aforementioned regions.

(b) Defensive actions are defined as:
(i) Any Nationstates military action within the regions of India, Africa, and their sister and satellite regions.

(ii) Any Nationstates military actions in other regions which represent a threat to India, Africa, or their sister and satellite regions. With the latter intended to mitigate threats to the previously mentioned regions.

(c) Intelligence, through whatever source(s), concerning a potential, or acting, threat known to either India, or Africa, must be shared with the government of the other, immediately and in a confidential manner.

(d) A sister region is defined as the mutual agreement, by the relevant executive authority in the agreeing regions, between the regions of India or Africa towards another independent region, whereby both regions encompass a similar theme, history, geography, culture, religion, or origin.

(e) A satellite region is defined as a region founded by the governments of India or Africa, or through the direct control of other regions by the governments of India or Africa.

(f) To establish the defensive scope of this treaty, both the region’s of India, and Africa, must submit lists of their sister and satellite regions to the others government executive. Additional regions must be declared to the other government to be covered under Article III (f), a region may be declared at any time if that region is in accordance with Article III (d & e).

(g) That any natives of either region, including sister and satellite regions of India or Africa, by suffering a raid of significant scale and damage which necessitates those native populations to leave and find refuge, must be guaranteed refuge in both India, and Africa, unless one or both regions are the affected.

Article IV: World Assembly

(a) That a proposal to the Nationstates’ World Assembly, submitted by a citizen of either region, will, when deemed legal to proceed to vote by the World Assembly General Secretaries, be supported by the World Assembly Delegate of both regions.

(b) The content of a proposal, if deemed in violation of either region’s constitution, or by receiving public backlash in their region, allows the World Assembly delegate of the offended region to forgo their support as outlined in Article IV (a).

(c) At the public voting stage of the proposal, outlined in Article IV (a), delegates for both regions will vote in favour of the proposal, and encourage publicly that World Assembly nations in their region to vote in favour of the proposal.

(d) If a proposal by either region succeeds to become law in the World Assembly; General or Security, and comes under the threat of repeal, the delegates for either region will support a none-repeal vote, and encourage publicly that World Assembly nations in their region to vote against the repeal.

(e) That nations from India and Africa can co-author proposals for review by the World Assembly.


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