Protocol on Explosive Remnants of War (Protocol V to the 1980 Convention), 28 November 2003
State Parties SignatureRatification / Accession 1)Reservation / Declaration 2)
Albania 12.05.2006  
Australia 04.01.2007  
Austria 01.10.2007  
Belarus 29.09.2008  
Bosnia-Herzegovina 28.11.2007  
Bulgaria 08.12.2005  
Canada 19.05.2009  
Chile 18.08.2009  
Costa Rica 27.04.2009  
Croatia 07.02.2005  
Czech Republic 06.06.2006  
Denmark 28.06.2005  
Ecuador 10.03.2009  
El Salvador 23.03.2006  
Estonia 18.12.2006  
Finland 23.03.2005  
Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia 19.03.2007  
France 31.10.2006  
Georgia 22.12.2008  
Germany 03.03.2005  
Guatemala 28.02.2008  
Guinea-Bissau 06.08.2008  
Holy See 13.12.2005 13.12.2005 (text)
Hungary 13.11.2006  
Iceland 22.08.2008  
India 18.05.2005  
Ireland 08.11.2006  
Jamaica 25.09.2008  
Korea (Republic of) 23.01.2008  
Latvia 16.09.2009  
Liberia 16.09.2005  
Liechtenstein 12.05.2006  
Lithuania 29.09.2004  
Luxembourg 13.06.2005  
Madagascar 14.03.2008  
Mali 24.04.2009  
Malta 22.09.2006  
Moldova (Republic of) 21.04.2008  
Netherlands 18.07.2005  
New Zealand 02.10.2007  
Nicaragua 15.09.2005  
Norway 08.12.2005  
Pakistan 03.02.2009  
Paraguay 03.12.2008  
Peru 29.05.2009  
Portugal 22.02.2008  
Romania 29.01.2008  
Russian Federation 21.07.2008  
Senegal 06.11.2008  
Sierra Leone 30.09.2004  
Slovakia 23.03.2006  
Slovenia 22.02.2007  
Spain 09.02.2007  
Sweden 02.06.2004  
Switzerland 12.05.2006  
Tajikistan 18.05.2006  
Tunisia 07.03.2008  
Ukraine 17.05.2005  
United Arab Emirates 26.02.2009  
United States of America 21.01.2009 21.01.2009 (text)
Uruguay 07.08.2007  

1) Ratification : a treaty is generally open for signature for a certain time following the conference which has adopted it. However, a signature is not binding on a State unless it has been endorsed by ratification. The time limits having elapsed, the Conventions and the Protocols are no longer open for signature. The States which have not signed them may at any time accede or, in the appropriate circumstances, succeed to them.
Accession : instead of signing and then ratifying a treaty, a State may become party to it by the single act called accession.
2) Reservation / Declaration : unilateral statement, however phrased or named, made by a State when ratifying, acceding or succeeding to a treaty, whereby it purports to exclude or to modify the legal effect of certain provisions of the treaty in their application to that State (provided that such reservations are not incompatible with the object and purpose of the treaty).