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Pacific Islands Treaty Series |
INTERNATIONAL AIR SERVICES TRANSIT AGREEMENT
(Chicago, 7 December 1944)
ENTRY INTO FORCE:
Depositary: Government of the United States
THE
STATES WHICH SIGN AND ACCEPT THIS INTERNATIONAL AIR SERVICES TRANSIT
AGREEMENT,
BEING
members of the
International Civil Aviation Organization
DECLARE
AS FOLLOWS:
Section 1
Each
contracting State grants to the other contracting States the following freedoms
of the air in respect of scheduled international
air services:
(1) The privilege to fly across its territory without landing;
(2) The privilege to land for non-traffic purposes.
The
privileges of this section shall not be applicable with respect to airports
utilized for military purposes to the exclusion of
any scheduled international
air services. In areas of active hostilities or of military occupation, and in
time of war along the
supply routes leading to such areas, the exercise of such
privileges shall be subject to the approval of the competent military
authorities.
Section 2
The
exercise of the foregoing privileges shall be in accordance with the provisions
of the Interim Agreement on International Civil
Aviation and, when it comes into
force, with the provisions of the Convention on International Civil Aviation,
both drawn up at Chicago
on December 7, 1944.
Section 3
A
contracting State granting to the airlines of another contracting State the
privilege to stop for non-traffic purposes may require
such airlines to offer
reasonable commercial service at the points at which such stops are
made.
Such
requirement shall not involve any discrimination between airlines operating on
the same route, shall take into account the capacity
of the aircraft, and shall
be exercised in such a manner as not to prejudice the normal operations of the
international air services
concerned or the rights and obligations of a
contracting State.
Section 4
Each
contracting State may, subject to the provisions of this
Agreement,
(1) Designate the route to be followed within its territory by any international air service and the airports which any such service may use;
(2) Impose or permit to be imposed on any such service just and reasonable charges for the use of such airports and other facilities; these charges shall not be higher than would be paid for the use of such airports and facilities by its national aircraft engaged in similar international services: provided that, upon representation by an interested contracting State, the charges imposed for the use of airports and other facilities shall be subject to review by the Council of the International Civil Aviation Organization established under the above-mentioned Convention, which shall report and make recommendations thereon for the consideration of the State or States concerned.
Section 5
Each
contracting State reserves the right to withhold or revoke a certificate or
permit to an air transport enterprise of another
State in any case where it is
not satisfied that substantial ownership and effective control are vested in
nationals of a contracting
State, or in case of failure of such air transport
enterprise to comply with the laws of the State over which it operates, or to
perform its obligations under this Agreement.
Section 1
A
contracting State which deems that action by another contracting State under
this Agreement is causing injustice or hardship to
it, may request the Council
to examine the situation. The Council shall thereupon inquire into the matter,
and shall call the States
concerned into consultation. Should such consultation
fail to resolve the difficulty, the Council may make appropriate findings and
recommendations to the contracting States concerned. If thereafter a contracting
State concerned shall in the opinion of the Council
unreasonably fail to take
suitable corrective action, the Council may recommend to the Assembly of the
above-mentioned Organization
that such contracting State be suspended from its
rights and privileges under this Agreement until such action has been taken. The
Assembly by a two-thirds vote may so suspend such contracting State for such
period of time as it may deem proper or until the Council
shall find that
corrective action has been taken by such State.
Section 2
If any
disagreement between two or more contracting States relating to the
interpretation or application of this Agreement cannot
be settled by
negotiation, the provisions of Chapter XVIII of the above-mentioned Convention
shall be applicable in the same manner
as provided therein with reference to any
disagreement relating to the interpretation or application of the
above-mentioned Convention.
This
Agreement shall remain in force as long as the above-mentioned Convention;
provided, however, that any contracting State, a party
to the present Agreement,
may denounce it on one year's notice given by it to the Government of the United
States of America, which
shall at once inform all other contracting States of
such notice and withdrawal.
Pending
the coming into force of the above-mentioned Convention, all references to it
herein, other than those contained in Article
II, Section 2, and Article V,
shall be deemed to be references to the Interim Agreement on International Civil
Aviation drawn up
at Chicago on December 7, 1944; and references to the
International Civil Aviation Organization, the Assembly, and the Council shall
be deemed to be references to the Provisional International Civil Aviation
Organization, the Interim Assembly, and Interim Council
respectively.
For
the purposes of this Agreement, "territory" shall be defined as in Article 2 of
the above-mentioned Convention.
Signatures and Acceptances of Agreement
The
undersigned delegates to the International Civil Aviation Conference, convened
in Chicago on November 1, 1944, have affixed their
signatures to this Agreement
with the understanding that the Government of the United States of America shall
be informed at the
earliest possible date by each of the governments on whose
behalf the Agreement has been signed whether signature on its behalf shall
constitute an acceptance of the Agreement by that government and an obligation
binding upon
it.
Any State
a member of the International Civil Aviation Organization may accept the present
Agreement as an obligation binding upon
it by notification of its acceptance to
the Government of the United States, and such acceptance shall become effective
upon the
date of the receipt of such notification by that
Government.
This
Agreement shall come into force as between contracting States upon its
acceptance by each of them. Thereafter it shall become
binding as to each other
State indicating its acceptance to the Government of the United States on the
date of the receipt of the
acceptance by that Government. The Government of the
United States shall inform all signatory and accepting States of the date of
all
acceptances of the Agreement, and of the date on which it comes into force for
each accepting
State.
IN
WITNESS WHEREOF, the
undersigned, having been duly authorized, sign this Agreement on behalf of their
respective governments on the dates appearing
opposite their respective
signatures.
DONE
at Chicago the seventh day of December, 1944, in the English language. A text
drawn up in the English, French, and Spanish languages,
each of which shall be
of equal authenticity, shall be opened for signature at Washington, D.C. Both
texts shall be deposited in
the archives of the Government of the United States
of America, and certified copies shall be transmitted by that Government to the
governments of all the States which may sign or accept this
Agreement.
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URL: http://www.paclii.org/pits/en/treaty_database/1944/2.html