The tiny Marshall Islands will Monday seek to convince the UN's highest court to take up a lawsuit against India, Pakistan and Britain which they accuse of failing to halt the nuclear arms race.
Lawyers representing the small Pacific island nation will launch the opening salvos in a David-versus-Goliath battle in which the International Court of Justice is to examine whether it is competent to hear lawsuits against India and Pakistan.
A third hearing against Britain, scheduled for Wednesday, will be devoted to "preliminary objections" raised by London.
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They included China, Britain, France, India, Israel, North Korea, Pakistan, Russia, and the United States.
The Marshall Islands maintained that by not stopping the nuclear arms race, the nine countries continued to breach their obligations under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) - even if the treaty has not been by signed by countries such as India and Pakistan.
But the court only admitted three cases brought against Britain, India and Pakistan because they already recognised the ICJ's authority.
The Marshall Islands decided to sue the world's nuclear heavyweights as "it has a particular awareness of the dire consequences of nuclear weapons," it said.
Between 1946 and 1958 the US conducted 67 nuclear tests in the Marshall Islands, Majuro's representatives said in papers filed in court.
While also focusing on the threat of global warming causing the world's oceans to rise, the Marshall Islands "have come to realise that it cannot ignore the other major threat to its survival: the ongoing threat posed by the existence of large arsenals of nuclear weapons."
In March 2014, the Marshall Islands marked 60 years since the devastating hydrogen bomb test at Bikini Atoll, that vapourised an island and exposed thousands in the surrounding area to radioactive fallout.
"The Marshall Islands wants a moral and judicial pronouncement that can strengthen their political campaign against nuclear weapons," said Lyal S Sunga, who heads The Hague Institute for Global Justice think-tank's Rule of Law program.
"It's very interesting because international law, as part of a range of diplomatic and political tools, can be used to lend weight to the argument that nuclear testing is very dangerous and harmful not only for the Marshall Islands, but for the whole world," he said.