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Fiji Legislation |
LAWS OF FIJI
Ed. 1978]
CHAPTER 10
SPECIAL MISSIONS PRIVILEGES AND IMMUNITIES
Act
No. 16 of 1972
TO GIVE
EFFECT TO THE CONVENTION ON SPECIAL MISSIONS
[8th December, 1972]
Short title
1.
This Act may be cited as the Special Missions Privileges and Immunities
Act.
Interpretation
2.-(1)
In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires-
"Convention" means the Convention on Special Missions signed in 1969, a copy of the English text of which is set out in the Schedule;
"State" means a foreign state or any Commonwealth country.
(2)
All expressions used in this Act and defined in Article 1 of the Convention have
the same meanings as those given to them in the
Convention.
Privileges and immunities
3.-(1)
Subject to the provisions of subsection (6), the provisions of Articles 1, 24,
25, 26, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 37, 38,
41 and 43 of the Convention
shall have the force of law in
Fiji.
(2) Without prejudice to the
provisions of subsection (1), the Minister, with the concurrence of the Minister
responsible for finance,
may from time to time determine, either generally or in
any case or class of case, fiscal privileges which shall be accorded to any
special mission or persons connected with any special mission, notwithstanding
that the determination may extend treatment more favourable
than that required
by the provisions of the Convention, and may in like manner determine the terms
and conditions on which the privileges
may be
enjoyed.
(3) For the purpose of
giving effect to any custom or agreement by which Fiji and any other State
extend to each other treatment more
favourable than is required by the
provisions of the Convention, the Minister may from time to time, by order,
declare that special
mission of that State and persons connected with that
special mission shall be accorded such immunity from jurisdiction and
inviolability
as are specified in the
order:
Provided that nothing in
this subsection shall apply with respect to persons to whom section 4
applies.
(4) In subsections (2)
and (3), the expression "treatment more favourable" includes the according of
privileges or immunities, as
the case may be, to persons who under the
Convention may enjoy privileges and immunities only to the extent admitted by
the receiving
State.
(5) Where, by
or under this Act, immunity from jurisdiction is accorded to persons who are not
diplomatic agents or persons enjoying
immunity under Article 39 of the
Convention, the immunity accorded to those first-mentioned persons may be waived
in the manner and
subject to the conditions specified in Article 41 of the
Convention and the waiver shall have the same consequences as a waiver under
that Article.
(6) For the purposes
of the provisions of the Articles referred to in subsection-
(a) a reference in those provisions to the receiving State shall be construed as a reference to Fiji;
(b) a reference in those provisions to a national of the receiving State shall be construed as a reference to a Fiji citizen;
(c) the reference in paragraph 1 of Article 25 to agents of the receiving State shall be construed as including a reference to any police officer or any person exercising a power of entry to premises;
(d) the reference in Article 41 to waiver by the sending State shall be construed as including a waiver by the head of the special mission of the sending State or by a person for the time being performing the functions of the head of special mission;
(e) Articles 34, 35 and 42 shall be construed as granting the privileges or immunities that those Articles require to be granted;
(f) the reference in paragraph 1 of Article 35 to such laws and regulations as the receiving State may adopt shall be construed as including a reference to any law in force in Fiji relating to the quarantine, or the prohibition or restriction of the importation into or the exportation from Fiji of animals, plants or goods:
Provided that any immunity from jurisdiction that a person may possess or enjoy by virtue of subsection (1) shall not be prejudiced;
(g) the reference in paragraph 4 of Article 39 to the extent to which privileges and immunities are admitted by the receiving State, and the reference in paragraph 1 of Article 40 to any additional privileges and immunities that may be granted by the receiving State, shall, so far as they relate to privileges, be construed as references to such determinations as may be made by the Minister pursuant to subsection (2), and, so far as they relate to immunities, be construed as references to such immunities as may be conferred by an order under subsection (3);
(h) the reference in paragraph 2 of Article 40 to the extent to which privileges and immunities are admitted by the receiving State shall, so far as it relates to privileges, be construed as reference to such determinations as may be made by the Minister pursuant to subsection (2), and, so far as it relates to immunities, be construed, in relation to persons to whom section 4 applied, as a reference to immunities conferred by that section, and, in relation to other persons to whom that paragraph applies, as a reference to such immunities as may be conferred by an order under subsection (3).
Fiji residents and citizens
4.
The members of the administrative and technical staff, and members of the
service staff, of a special mission who are Fiji citizens
or are permanently
resident in Fiji shall be accorded immunity from jurisdiction, and
inviolability, only in respect of official
acts performed in the exercise of
their functions.
Withdrawal of diplomatic privileges and immunities
5.
Where the Minister is satisfied that the privileges and immunities accorded in
relation to a special mission of Fiji in any State,
or to any person connected
with that special mission, are less than those conferred by or under this Act in
relation to the special
mission of that State, or to persons connected with that
special mission, he may, by order, withdraw, modify, or restrict in relation
to
that special mission or to persons connected with that special mission, such of
the privileges and immunities so conferred to
such extent as appears to him to
be proper.
Reciprocal treatment
6.
Nothing in this Act shall be construed as precluding the Minister from declining
to accord privileges or immunities to, or from withdrawing,
modifying, or
restricting privileges or immunities in relation to, nationals or
representatives of any State, or the Government thereof,
on the ground that that
State, or the Government thereof, is failing to accord corresponding privileges
or immunities to Fiji.
Refunds of payments
7.-(1)
The Minister responsible for finance may direct that such refunds or payments be
made from any public fund or account or from
the money of any local authority,
public body, or person as may in the opinion of that Minister be necessary to
give effect to any
fiscal privilege accorded pursuant to section 3 or to any
exemption granted by or under this
Act.
(2) Where any loss is
suffered by any local authority, public body, or person by reason of the
conferring of any such privilege or
the granting of any such exemption or by the
making of any refund or payment directed under this section, the Minister
responsible
for finance may direct that such payments be made from the
Consolidated Fund to that local authority, public body, or person as may
be
necessary in the opinion of the Minister to reimburse that loss.
Certificate of Minister
8.
If in any proceedings any question arises whether or not any person is or was at
any time or in respect of any period accorded any
privilege or immunity under or
by virtue of this Act, a certificate issued by the Minister stating any fact
relevant to that question
shall be conclusive evidence of that
fact.
Saving
9.
This Act shall not affect any legal proceedings begun before the commencement of
this Act.
Regulations
10.
The Minister may make regulations for such matters as are contemplated by or
necessary for giving full effect to this Act and for
the due administration
thereof.
SCHEDULE
CONVENTION
ON SPECIAL
MISSIONS
THE STATES
PARTIES TO THE PRESENT CONVENTION
RECALLING that special
treatment has always been accorded to special
missions.
HAVING IN MIND the
purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations concerning the
sovereign equality of States, the maintenance
of international peace and
security and the development of friendly relations and co-operation among
States.
RECALLING that the
importance of the question of special missions was recognized during the United
Nations Conference on Diplomatic
Intercourse and Immunities and in resolution I
adopted by the Conference on 10 April,
1961.
CONSIDERING that the United
Nations Conference on Diplomatic Intercourse and Immunities adopted the Vienna
Convention on Diplomatic
Relations, which was opened for signature on 18 April,
1961.
CONSIDERING that the United
Nations Conference on Consular Relations adopted the Vienna Convention on
consular relations, which was
opened for signature on 24 April,
1963.
BELIEVING that an
international convention on special missions would complement those two
Conventions and would contribute to the
development of friendly relations among
nations, whatever their constitutional and social
systems.
REALIZING that the
purpose of privileges and immunities relating to special missions is not to
benefit individuals but to ensure the
efficient performance of the functions of
special missions as missions representing the
State.
AFFIRMING that the rules of
customary international law continue to govern questions not regulated by the
provisions of the present
Convention.
HAVE AGREED as
follows:-
ARTICLE
1
Use of terms
For the purposes of the
present Convention-
(a) a "special mission" is a temporary mission, representing the State, which is sent by one State to another State with the consent of the latter for the purpose of dealing with it on specific questions or of performing in relation to it a specific task;
(b) a "permanent diplomatic mission" is a diplomatic mission within the meaning of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations;
(c) a "consular post" is any consulate-general, consulate, vice-consulate or consular agency;
(d) the "head of a special mission" is the person charged by the sending State with the duty of acting in that capacity;
(e) a "representative of the sending State in the special mission" is any person on whom the sending State has conferred that capacity;
(f) the "members of a special mission" are the head of the special mission, the representatives of the sending State in the special mission and the members of the staff of the special mission;
(g) the "members of the staff of the special mission" are the members of the diplomatic staff, the administrative and technical staff and the service staff of the special mission;
(h) the "members of the diplomatic staff" are the members of the staff of the special mission who have diplomatic status for the purposes of the special mission;
(i) the "members of the administrative and technical staff" are the members of the staff of the special mission employed in the administrative and technical service of the special mission;
(j) the "members of the service staff" are the members of the staff of the special mission employed by it as household workers or for similar tasks;
(k) the "private staff" are persons employed exclusively in the private service of the members of the special mission.
ARTICLE
2
Sending of a special
mission
A State may send a special
mission to another State with the consent of the latter, previously obtained
through the diplomatic or
another agreed or mutually acceptable
channel.
ARTICLE
3
Functions of a special
mission
The functions of a special
mission shall be determined by the mutual consent of the sending and the
receiving State.
ARTICLE
4
Sending of the same special mission
to two or more States
A State which wishes to
send the same special mission to two or more States shall so inform each
receiving State when seeking the
consent of that State.
ARTICLE
5
Sending of a joint special mission
by two or more States
Two or more States which
wish to send a joint special mission to another State shall so inform the
receiving State when seeking the
consent of that State.
ARTICLE
6
Sending of special missions by two
or more States in order to deal with a question of common interest
Two or more States may
each send a special mission at the same time to another State, with the consent
of that State obtained in accordance
with Article 2, in order to deal together,
with the agreement of all of these States, with a question of common interest to
all of
them.
ARTICLE
7
Non-existence of diplomatic or
consular relations
The existence of
diplomatic or consular relations is not necessary for the sending or reception
of a special mission.
ARTICLE
8
Appointment of the members of the
special mission
Subject to the provisions
of Articles 10, 11 and 12, the sending State may freely appoint the members of
the special mission after
having given to the receiving State all necessary
information concerning the size and composition of the special mission, and in
particular the names and designations of the persons it intends to appoint. The
receiving State may decline to accept a special mission
of a size that is not
considered by it to be reasonable, having regard to circumstances and conditions
in the receiving State and
to the needs of the particular mission. It may also,
without giving reasons, decline to accept any person as a member of the special
mission.
ARTICLE
9
Composition of the special
mission
1. A special mission shall
consist of one or more representatives of the sending State from among whom the
sending State may appoint
a head. It may also include diplomatic staff,
administrative and technical staff and service
staff.
2. When members of a
permanent diplomatic mission or of a consular post in the receiving State are
included in a special mission,
they shall retain their privileges and immunities
as members of their permanent diplomatic mission or consular post in addition to
the privileges and immunities accorded by the present Convention.
ARTICLE
10
Nationality of the members of the
special mission
1. The representatives of
the sending State in the special mission and the members of its diplomatic staff
should in principle be
of the nationality of the sending
State.
2. Nationals of the
receiving State may not be appointed to a special mission except with the
consent of that State, which may be
withdrawn at any
time.
3. The receiving State may
reserve the right provided for in paragraph 2 of this article with regard to
nationals of a third State
who are not also nationals of the sending
State.
ARTICLE
11
Notifications
1. The Ministry of Foreign
Affairs of the receiving State, or such other organ of that State as may be
agreed, shall be notified of-
(a) the composition of the special mission and any subsequent changes therein;
(b) the arrival and final departure of members of the mission and the termination of their functions with the mission;
(c) the arrival and final departure of any person accompanying a member of the mission;
(d) the engagement and discharge of persons resident in the receiving State as members of the mission or as private staff;
(e) the appointment of the head of the special mission or, if there is none, of the representative referred to in paragraph 1 of Article 14, and of any substitute for them;
(f) the location of the premises occupied by the special mission and of the private accommodation enjoying inviolability under Articles 30, 36 and 39, as well as any other information that may be necessary to identify such premises and accommodation.
2.
Unless it is impossible, notification of arrival and final departure must be
given in advance.
ARTICLE
12
Persons declared non grata or not
acceptable
1. The receiving State
may, at any time and without having to explain its decision, notify the sending
State that any representative
of the sending State in the special mission or any
member of its diplomatic staff is persona non grata or that any other member of
the staff of the mission is not acceptable. In any such case, the sending State
shall, as appropriate, either recall the person concerned
or terminate his
functions with the mission. A person may be declared non grata or not acceptable
before arriving in the territory
of the receiving
State.
2. If the sending State
refuses, or fails within a reasonable period, to carry out its obligations under
paragraph 1 of this Article,
the receiving State may refuse to recognize the
person concerned as a member of the special mission.
ARTICLE
13
Commencement of the functions of a
special mission
1. The functions of a
special mission shall commence as soon as the mission enters into official
contact with the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs or with such other organ of the
receiving State as may be
agreed.
2. The commencement of the
functions of a special mission shall not depend upon presentation of the mission
by the permanent diplomatic
mission of the sending State or upon the submission
of letters of credence or full powers.
ARTICLE
14
Authority to act on behalf of the
special mission
1. The head of the special
mission or, if the sending State has not appointed a head, one of the
representatives of the sending State
designated by the latter is authorized to
act on behalf of the special mission and to address communications to the
receiving State.
The receiving State shall address communications to concerning
the special mission to the head of the mission, or, if there is none,
to the
representative referred to above, either direct or through the permanent
diplomatic mission.
2. However, a
member of the special mission may be authorized by the sending State, by the
head of the special mission or, if there
is none, by the representative referred
to in paragraph 1 of this Article, either to substitute for the head of the
special mission
or for the aforesaid representative or to perform particular
acts on behalf of the mission.
ARTICLE
15
Organ of the receiving State with
which official business is conducted
All official business with
the receiving State entrusted to the special mission by the sending State shall
be conducted with or through
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs or with such other
organ of the receiving State as may be agreed.
ARTICLE
16
Rules concerning
precedence
1. Where two or more
special missions meet in the territory of the receiving State or of a third
State, precedence among the missions
shall be determined, in the absence of a
special agreement, according to the alphabetical order of the names of the
States used by
the protocol of the State in whose territory the missions are
meeting.
2. Precedence among two
or more special missions which meet on a ceremonial or formal occasion shall be
governed by the protocol in
force in the receiving
State.
3. Precedence among the
members of the same special mission shall be that which is notified to the
receiving State or to the third
State in whose territory two or more special
missions are meeting.
ARTICLE
17
Seat of the special
mission
1. A special mission shall
have its seat in the locality agreed by the States
concerned.
2. In the absence of
agreement, the special mission shall have its seat in the locality where the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the
receiving State is
situated.
3. If the special
mission performs its functions in different localities, the States concerned may
agree that it shall have more than
one seat from among which they may choose one
as the principal seat.
ARTICLE
18
Meeting of special missions in the
territory of a third State
1. Special missions from
two or more States may meet in the territory of a third State only after
obtaining the express consent of
that State, which retains the right to withdraw
it.
2. In giving its consent, the
third State may lay down conditions which shall be observed by the sending
States.
3. The third State shall
assume in respect of the sending States the rights and obligations of a
receiving State to the extent that
it indicates in giving its
consent.
ARTICLE
19
Right of the special mission to use
the flag and emblem of the sending State
1. A special mission shall
have the right to use the flag and emblem of the sending State on the premises
occupied by the mission,
and on its means of transport when used on official
business.
2. In the exercise of
the right accorded by this Article, regard shall be had to the laws, regulations
and usages of the receiving
State.
ARTICLE
20
End of the functions of a special
mission
1. The functions of a
special mission shall come to an end, inter alia, upon-
(a) the agreement of the States concerned;
(b) the completion of the task of the special mission;
(c) the expiry of the duration assigned for the special mission, unless it is expressly extended;
(d) notification by the sending State that it is terminating or recalling the special mission;
(e) notification by the receiving State that it considers the special mission terminated.
2.
The severance of diplomatic or consular relations between the sending State and
the receiving State shall not of itself have the
effect of terminating special
missions existing at the time of such severance.
ARTICLE
21
Status of the Head of State and
persons of high rank
1. The Head of the sending
State, when he leads a special mission, shall enjoy in the receiving State or in
a third State the facilities,
privileges and immunities accorded by
international law to Heads of State on an official
visit.
2. The Head of the
Government, the Minister for Foreign Affairs and other persons of high rank,
when they take part in a special mission
of the sending State, shall enjoy in
the receiving State or in a third State, in addition to what is granted by the
present Convention,
the facilities, privileges and immunities accorded by
international law.
ARTICLE
22
General facilities
The receiving State shall
accord to the special mission the facilities required for the performance of its
functions, having regard
to the nature and task of the special
mission.
ARTICLE
23
Premises and
accommodation
The receiving State shall
assist the special mission, if it so requests, in procuring the necessary
premises and obtaining suitable
accommodation for its members.
ARTICLE
24
Exemption of the premises of the
special mission from taxation
1. To the extent
compatible with the nature and duration of the functions performed by the
special mission, the sending State and
the members of the special mission acting
on behalf of the mission shall be exempt from all national, regional or
municipal dues
and taxes in respect of the premises occupied by the special
mission, other than such as represent payment for specific services
rendered.
2. The exemption from
taxation referred to in this Article shall not apply to such dues and taxes
payable under the law of the receiving
State by persons contracting with the
sending State or with a member of the special mission.
ARTICLE
25
Inviolability of the
premises
1. The premises where the
special mission is established in accordance with the present Convention shall
be inviolable. The agents
of the receiving State may not enter the said
premises, except with the consent of the head of the special mission or, if
appropriate,
of the head of the permanent diplomatic mission of the sending
State accredited to the receiving State. Such consent may be assumed
in case of
fire or other disaster that seriously endangers public safety, and only in the
event that it has not been possible to
obtain the express consent of the head of
the special mission or, where appropriate, of the head of the permanent
mission.
2. The receiving State is
under a special duty to take all appropriate steps to protect the premises of
the special mission against
any intrusion or damage and to prevent any
disturbance of the peace of the mission or impairment of its
dignity.
3. The premises of the
special mission, their furnishings, other property used in the operation of the
special mission and its means
of transport shall be immune from search,
requisition, attachment or execution.
ARTICLE
26
Inviolability of archives and
documents
The archives and documents
of the special mission shall be inviolable at all times and wherever they may
be. They should, when necessary,
bear visible external marks of
identification.
ARTICLE
27
Freedom of movement
Subject to its laws and
regulations concerning zones entry into which is prohibited or regulated for
reasons of national security,
the receiving State shall ensure to all members of
the special mission such freedom of movement and travel in its territory as is
necessary for the performance of the functions of the special
mission.
ARTICLE
28
Freedom of communication
1. The receiving State
shall permit and protect free communication on the part of the special mission
for all official purposes. In
communicating with the Government of the sending
State, its diplomatic missions, its consular posts and its other special
missions
or with sections of the same mission, wherever situated, the special
mission may employ all appropriate means, including couriers
and messages in
code or cipher. However, the special mission may install and use a wireless
transmitter only with the consent of
the receiving
State.
2. The official
correspondence of the special mission shall be inviolable. Official
correspondence means all correspondence relating
to the special mission and its
functions.
3. Where practicable,
the special mission shall use the means of communication, including the bag and
the courier, of the permanent
diplomatic mission of the sending
State.
4. The bag of the special
mission shall not be opened or
detained.
5. The packages
constituting the bag of the special mission must bear visible external marks of
their character and may contain only
documents or articles intended for the
official use of the special
mission.
6. The courier of the
special mission, who shall be provided with an official document indicating his
status and the number of packages
constituting the bag, shall be protected by
the receiving State in the performance of his functions. He shall enjoy personal
inviolability
and shall not be liable to any form of arrest or
detention.
7. The sending State or
the special mission may designate couriers ad hoc of the special mission. In
such cases the provisions of
paragraph 6 of this Article shall also apply,
except that the immunities therein mentioned shall cease to apply when the
courier
ad hoc has delivered to the consignee the special mission's bag in his
charge.
8. The bag of the special
mission may be entrusted to the captain of a ship or of a commercial aircraft
scheduled to land at an authorized
port of entry. The captain shall be provided
with an official document indicating the number of packages constituting the
bag, but
he shall not be considered to be a courier of the special mission. By
arrangement with the appropriate authorities, the special mission
may send one
of its members to take possession of the bag directly and freely from the
captain of the ship or of the aircraft.
ARTICLE
29
Personal inviolability
The persons of the
representatives of the sending State in the special mission and of the members
of its diplomatic staff shall be
inviolable. They shall not be liable to any
form of arrest or detention. The receiving State shall treat them with due
respect and
shall take all appropriate steps to prevent any attack on their
persons, freedom or dignity.
ARTICLE
30
Inviolability of the private
accommodation
1. The private
accommodation of the representatives of the sending State in the special mission
and of the members of its diplomatic
staff shall enjoy the same inviolability
and protection as the premises of the special
mission.
2. Their papers, their
correspondence and, except as provided in paragraph 4 of Article 31, their
property shall likewise enjoy inviolability.
ARTICLE
31
Immunity from
jurisdiction
1. The representatives of
the sending State in the special mission and the members of its diplomatic staff
shall enjoy immunity from
the criminal jurisdiction of the receiving
State.
2. They shall also enjoy
immunity from the civil and administrative jurisdiction of the receiving State,
except in the case of-
(a) a real action relating to private immovable property situated in the territory of the receiving State, unless the person concerned holds it on behalf of the sending State for the purposes of the mission;
(b) an action relating to succession in which the person concerned is involved as executor, administrator, heir or legatee as a private person and not on behalf of the sending State;
(c) an action relating to any professional or commercial activity exercised by the person concerned in the receiving State outside his official functions;
(d) an action for damages arising out of an accident caused by a vehicle used outside the official functions of the person concerned.
3.
The representatives of the sending State in the special mission and the members
of its diplomatic staff are not obliged to give
evidence as
witnesses.
4. No measures of
execution may be taken in respect of a representative of the sending State in
the special mission or a member of
its diplomatic staff except in the cases
coming under sub-paragraphs (a), (b), (c) and (d) of paragraph 2 of this Article
and provided
that the measures concerned can be taken without infringing the
inviolability of his person or his
accommodation.
5. The immunity
from jurisdiction of the representatives of the sending State in the special
mission and of the members of its diplomatic
staff does not exempt them from the
jurisdiction of the sending State.
ARTICLE
32
Exemption from social security
legislation
1. Subject to the
provisions of paragraph 3 of this Article, representatives of the sending State
in the special mission and members
of its diplomatic staff shall, in respect of
services rendered for the sending State, be exempt from social security
provisions which
may be in force in the receiving
State.
2. The exemption provided
for in paragraph 1 of this Article shall also apply to persons who are in the
sole private employ of a representative
of the sending State in the special
mission or of a member of its diplomatic staff, on condition-
(a) that such employed persons are not nationals of or permanently resident in the receiving State; and
(b) that they are covered by the social security provisions which may be in force in the sending State or a third State.
3.
Representatives of the sending State in the special mission and members of its
diplomatic staff who employ persons to whom the
exemption provided for in
paragraph 2 of this Article does not apply shall observe the obligations which
the social security provisions
of the receiving State impose upon
employers.
4. The exemption
provided for in paragraphs 1 and 2 of this Article shall not preclude voluntary
participation in the social security
system of the receiving State where such
participation is permitted by that
State.
5. The provisions of this
Article shall not affect bilateral or multilateral agreements concerning social
security concluded previously
and shall not prevent the conclusion of such
agreements in the future.
ARTICLE
33
Exemption from dues and
taxes
The representatives of the
sending State in the special mission and the members of its diplomatic staff
shall be exempt from all dues
and taxes, personal or real, national, regional or
municipal, except-
(a) indirect taxes of a kind which are normally incorporated in the price of goods or services;
(b) dues and taxes on private immovable property situated in the territory of the receiving State, unless the person concerned holds it on behalf of the sending State for the purposes of the mission;
(c) estate, succession or inheritance duties levied by the receiving State, subject to the provisions of Article 44;
(d) dues and taxes on private income having its source in the receiving State and capital taxes on investments made in commercial undertakings in the receiving State;
(e) charges levied for specific services rendered;
(f) registration, court or record fees, mortgage dues and stamp duty, subject to the provisions of Article 24.
ARTICLE
34
Exemption from personal
services
The receiving State shall
exempt the representatives of the sending State in the special mission and the
members of its diplomatic
staff from all personal services, from all public
service of any kind whatsoever, and from military obligations such as those
connected
with requisitioning, military contributions and
billeting.
ARTICLE
35
Exemption from customs duties and
inspection
1. Within the limits of
such laws and regulations as it may adopt, the receiving State shall permit
entry of, and grant exemption
from all customs duties, taxes, and related
charges other than charges for storage, cartage and similar services,
on-
(a) articles for the official use of the special mission;
(b) articles for the personal use of the representatives of the sending State in the special mission and the members of its diplomatic staff.
2.
The personal baggage of the representatives of the sending State in the special
mission and of the members of its diplomatic staff
shall be exempt from
inspection, unless there are serious grounds for presuming that it contains
articles not covered by the exemptions
mentioned in paragraph 1 of this Article,
or Articles the import or export of which is prohibited by the law or controlled
by the
quarantine regulations of the receiving State. In such cases, inspection
shall be conducted only in the presence of the person concerned
or of his
authorized representative.
ARTICLE
36
Administrative and technical
staff
Members of the
administrative and technical staff of the special mission shall enjoy the
privileges and immunities specified in Articles
29 to 34, except that the
immunity from civil and administrative jurisdiction of the receiving State
specified in paragraph 2 of
Article 31 shall not extend to acts performed
outside the course of their duties. They shall also enjoy the privileges
mentioned
in paragraph 1 of Article 35 in respect of articles imported at the
time of their first entry into the territory of the receiving
State.
ARTICLE
37
Service staff
Members of the service
staff of the special mission shall enjoy immunity from the jurisdiction of the
receiving State in respect of
acts performed in the course of their duties,
exemption from dues and taxes on the emoluments they receive by reason of their
employment,
and exemption from social security legislation as provided in
Article 32.
ARTICLE
38
Private staff
Private staff of the
members of the special mission shall be exempt from dues and taxes on the
emoluments they receive by reason of
their employment. In all other respects,
they may enjoy privileges and immunities only to the extent permitted by the
receiving State.
However, the receiving State must exercise its jurisdiction
over those persons in such a manner as not to interfere unduly with the
performance of the functions of the special mission.
ARTICLE
39
Members of the family
1. Members of the families
of representatives of the sending State in the special mission and of members of
its diplomatic staff shall,
if they accompany such members of the special
mission, enjoy the privileges and immunities specified in Articles 29 to 35
provided
that they are not nationals of or permanently resident in the receiving
State.
2. Members of the families
of members of the administrative and technical staff of the special mission
shall, if they accompany such
members of the special mission, enjoy the
privileges and immunities specified in Article 36 provided that they are not
nationals
of or permanently resident in the receiving State.
ARTICLE
40
Nationals of the receiving State
and persons permanently resident in the receiving State
1. Except in so far as
additional privileges and immunities may be granted by the receiving State, the
representatives of the sending
State in the special mission and the members of
its diplomatic staff who are nationals of or permanently resident in the
receiving
State shall enjoy only immunity from jurisdiction and inviolability in
respect of official acts performed in the exercise of their
functions.
2. Other members of the
special mission and private staff who are nationals of or permanently resident
in the receiving State shall
enjoy privileges and immunities only to the extent
granted to them by that State. However, the receiving State must exercise its
jurisdiction over those persons in such a manner as not to interfere unduly with
the performance of the functions of the special
mission.
ARTICLE
41
Waiver of immunity
1. The sending State may
waive the immunity from jurisdiction of its representatives in the special
mission, of the members of its
diplomatic staff, and of other persons enjoying
immunity under Articles 36 to
40.
2. Waiver must always be
express.
3. The initiation of
proceedings by any of the persons referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article
shall preclude him from invoking
immunity from jurisdiction in respect of any
counter-claim directly connected with the principal
claim.
4. Waiver of immunity from
jurisdiction in respect of civil or administrative proceedings shall not be held
to imply waiver of immunity
in respect of the execution of the judgment, for
which a separate waiver shall be necessary.
ARTICLE
42
Transit through the territory of a
third State
1. If a representative of
the sending State in the special mission or a member of its diplomatic staff
passes through or is in the
territory of a third State while proceeding to take
up his functions or returning to the sending State, the third State shall accord
him inviolability and such other immunities as may be required to ensure his
transit or return. The same shall apply in the case
of any members of his family
enjoying privileges or immunities who are accompanying the person referred to in
this paragraph, whether
travelling with him or travelling separately to join him
or to return to their country.
2.
In circumstances similar to those specified in paragraph 1 of this Article,
third States shall not hinder the transit of members
of the administrative and
technical or service staff of the special mission, or of members of their
families, through their
territories.
3. Third States shall
accord to official correspondence and other official communications in transit,
including messages in code or
cipher, the same freedom and protection as the
receiving State is bound to accord under the present Convention. Subject to the
provisions
of paragraph 4 of this Article, they shall accord to the couriers and
bags of the special mission in transit the same inviolability
and protection as
the receiving State is bound to accord under the present
Convention.
4. The third State
shall be bound to comply with its obligations in respect of the persons
mentioned in paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of this
Article only if it has been informed
in advance, either in the visa application or by notification, of the transit of
those persons
as members of the special mission, members of their families or
couriers, and has raised no objection to
it.
5. The obligations of third
States under paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of this Article shall also apply to the
persons mentioned respectively
in those paragraphs, and to the official
communications and the bags of the special mission, when the use of the
territory of the
third State is due to force majeure.
ARTICLE
43
Duration of privileges and
immunities
1. Every member of the
special mission shall enjoy the privileges and immunities to which he is
entitled from the moment he enters
the territory of the receiving State for the
purpose of performing his functions in the special mission or, if he is already
in its
territory, from the moment when his appointment is notified to the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs or such other organ of the receiving
State as may be
agreed.
2. When the functions of a
member of the special mission have come to an end, his privileges and immunities
shall normally cease at
the moment when he leaves the territory of the receiving
State, or on the expiry of a reasonable period in which to do so, but shall
subsist until that time, even in case of armed conflict. However, in respect of
acts performed by such a member in the exercise of
his functions, immunity shall
continue to subsist.
3. In the
event of the death of a member of the special mission, the members of his family
shall continue to enjoy the privileges
and immunities to which they are entitled
until the expiry of a reasonable period in which to leave the territory of the
receiving
State.
ARTICLE
44
Property of a member of the special
mission or of a member of his family in the event of death
1. In the event of the
death of a member of the special mission or of a member of his family
accompanying him, if the deceased was
not a national of or permanently resident
in the receiving State, the receiving State shall permit the withdrawal of the
movable
property of the deceased, with the exception of any property acquired in
the country the export of which was prohibited at the time
of his
death.
2. Estate, succession and
inheritance duties shall not be levied on movable property which is in the
receiving State solely because
of the presence there of the deceased as a member
of the special mission or of the family of a member of the
mission.
ARTICLE
45
Facilities to leave the territory
of the receiving State and to remove the Archives of the special
mission
1. The receiving State
must, even in case of armed conflict, grant facilities to enable persons
enjoying privileges and immunities,
other than nationals of the receiving State,
and members of the families of such persons, irrespective of their nationality,
to leave
at the earliest possible moment. In particular it must, in case of
need, place at their disposal the necessary means of transport
for themselves
and their property.
2. The
receiving State must grant the sending State facilities for removing the
archives of the special mission from the territory
of the receiving
State.
ARTICLE
46
Consequences of the cessation of
the functions of the special mission
1. When the functions of a
special mission come to an end, the receiving State must respect and protect the
premises of the special
mission so long as they are assigned to it, as well as
the property and archives of the special mission. The sending State must
withdraw
the property and archives within a reasonable period of
time.
2. In case of the absence or
severance of diplomatic or consular relations between the sending State and the
receiving State and if
the functions of the special mission have come to an end,
the sending State may, even if there is an armed conflict, entrust the
custody
of the property and archives of the special mission to a third State acceptable
to the receiving State.
ARTICLE
47
Respect for the laws and
regulations of the receiving State and use of the premises of the special
mission
1. Without prejudice to
their privileges and immunities, it is the duty of all persons enjoying those
privileges and immunities under
the present Convention to respect the laws and
regulations of the receiving State. They also have a duty not to interfere in
the
internal affairs of that
State.
2. The premises of the
special mission must not be used in any manner incompatible with the functions
of the special mission as envisaged
in the present Convention, in other rules of
general international law or in any special agreements in force between the
sending
and the receiving State.
ARTICLE
48
Professional or commercial
activity
The representatives of the
sending State in the special mission and the members of its diplomatic staff
shall not practise for personal
profit any professional or commercial activity
in the receiving State.
ARTICLE
49
Non-discrimination
1. In the application of
the provisions of the present Convention, no discrimination shall be made as
between States.
2. However,
discrimination shall not be regarded as taking place-
(a) where the receiving State applies any of the provisions of the present Convention restrictively because of a restrictive application of that provision to its special mission in the sending State;
(b) where States modify among themselves, by custom or agreement, the extent of facilities, privileges and immunities for their special missions, although such a modification has not been agreed with other States, provided that it is not incompatible with the object and purpose of the present Convention and does not affect the enjoyment of the rights or the performance of the obligations of third States.
ARTICLE
50
Signature
The present Convention
shall be open for signature by all States Members of the United Nations or of
any of the specialized agencies
or of the International Atomic Energy Agency or
Parties to the Statute of the International Court of Justice, and by any other
State
invited by the General Assembly of the United Nations to become a Party to
the Convention, until 31st December, 1970 at United Nations
Headquarters in New
York.
ARTICLE
51
Ratification
The present Convention is
subject to ratification. The instruments of ratification shall be deposited with
the Secretary-General of
the United Nations.
ARTICLE
52
Accession
The present Convention
shall remain open for accession by any State belonging to any of the categories
mentioned in Article 50. The
instruments of accession shall be deposited with
the Secretary-General of the United Nations.
ARTICLE
53
Entry into force
1. The present Convention
shall enter into force on the thirtieth day following the date of deposit of the
twenty-second instrument
of ratification or accession with the Secretary-General
of the United Nations.
2. For each
State ratifying or acceding to the Convention after the deposit of the
twenty-second instrument of ratification or accession,
the Convention shall
enter into force on the thirtieth day after deposit by such State of its
instrument of ratification or accession.
ARTICLE
54
Notifications by the
depositary
The Secretary-General of
the United Nations shall inform all States belonging to any of the categories
mentioned in Article 50-
(a) of signatures to the present Convention and of the deposit of instruments of ratification or accession in accordance with Articles 50, 51 and 52;
(b) of the date on which the present Convention will enter into force in accordance with Article 53.
ARTICLE
55
Authentic texts
The original of the
present Convention, of which the Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish
texts are equally authentic, shall
be deposited with the Secretary-General of
the United Nations, who shall send certified copies thereof to all States
belonging to
any of the categories mentioned in Article
50.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF the
undersigned, being duly authorized thereto by their respective Governments, have
signed the present Convention,
opened for signature at New York on 16th
December, 1969.
(Signatures not
reproduced)
Controlled by Office of the Prime Minister
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