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Pacific Islands Treaty Series |
AGREEMENT
BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENT OF NEW ZEALAND AND THE GOVERNMENT OF SOLOMON ISLANDS
CONCERNING AIR
SERVICES
(Honiara, 30 May
1990)
ENTRY
INTO FORCE: 30 MAY 1990
PREAMBLE
The
Government of New Zealand and the Government of Solomon Islands (hereinafter
referred to as the ''Contracting
Parties'')
BEING
parties to the Convention on
International Civil Aviation opened for signature at Chicago on 7 December
1944
DESIRING
to conclude an Agreement supplementary to the said Convention for the purpose of
establishing air services between their respective
territories
HAVE
AGREED AS FOLLOWS:
Article 1
Definitions
For the purpose of this
Agreement, unless the context otherwise requires:
(a) The term ''Convention'' means the Convention on International Civil Aviation opened for signature at Chicago on the seventh day of December 1944, and includes any Annex adopted under Article 90 of that Convention and any amendment of the Annex or Convention under Articles 90 and 94 thereof insofar as these have become effective for both Contracting Parties;
(b) The term ''aeronautical authorities'' means, in the case of Solomon Islands, the Minister responsible for Civil Aviation or his authorised representative and in the case of New Zealand, the Minister responsible for Civil Aviation or his authorised representative;
(c) The term ''Agreement'' means the present Agreement, the Annex attached hereto, and any amendments to the Annex or Agreement;
(d) The term ''designated airline'' means an airline or airlines designated and authorised in accordance with Article 4 of this Agreement;
(e) The term ''agreed services'' means scheduled air services on the routes specified in the Annex to this Agreement for the transport of passengers, cargo and mail, separately or in combination;
(f) The terms ''territory'', ''air service'', ''international air service'', "airline'' and ''stop for non-traffic purposes'' have the meanings respectively assigned to them in Articles 2 and 96 of the Convention provided that, in the case of New Zealand, the term ''territory'' shall exclude the Cook Islands, Niue and Tokelau;
(g) The term ''tariffs'' means the prices to be paid for the carriage of passengers and cargo and the conditions under which those prices apply, including prices, commissions and conditions for the carriage of mail.
Article
2
Applicability of Chicago
Convention
The provisions of this
Agreement shall be subject to the provisions of the Convention insofar as those
provisions are applicable to
international air services.
Article
3
Grant of
Rights
1. Each Contracting Party
grants to the other Contracting Party the rights specified in this Agreement for
the purpose of operating
air services on the routes specified in the Schedules
of the Annex to this Agreement (hereinafter called ''the agreed services''
and
''the specified routes'').
2.
Subject to the provisions of this Agreement, an airline designated by each
Contracting Party shall enjoy the following privileges:
(a) to fly without landing across the territory of the other Contracting Party;
(b) to make stops in the said territory for non-traffic purposes; and
(c) while operating an agreed service on a specified route, to make stops in the said territory at the point or points specified for that route in the Schedule of the Annex to this Agreement for the purpose of putting down and taking on international traffic in passengers, cargo and mail.
3.
Nothing in paragraph 2 of this Article shall be deemed to confer on the
designated airline of one Contracting Party the privilege
of taking up, in the
territory of the other Contracting Party, passengers, cargo or mail carried for
remuneration or hire and destined
for another point in the territory of that
other Contracting Party.
Article
4
Designation of
Airlines
1. Each Contracting Party
shall have the right to designate in writing to the other Contracting Party one
or more airlines for the
purpose of operating the agreed services on the
specified routes, and to withdraw or alter such
designations.
2. On receipt of
such designation, the aeronautical authorities of the other Contracting Party
shall without delay, subject to the
provisions of paragraphs 3 and 4 of this
Article, grant to the airline or airlines designated in accordance with
paragraph 1 of this
Article, the appropriate operating
authorisation.
3. The
aeronautical authorities of one Contracting Party may require an airline
designated by the other Contracting Party to satisfy
them that it is qualified
to fulfil the conditions prescribed under the laws and the regulations normally
applied to the operation
of international air services by such authorities in
conformity with the provisions of the
Convention.
4. Each Contracting
Party shall have the right to refuse the designation referred to in paragraph 2
of this Article, or to impose
such conditions as it may deem necessary on the
exercise by the designated airline of the rights specified in Article 3 of this
Agreement,
in any case where the said Contracting Party is not satisfied that
substantial ownership and effective control of that airline are
vested in the
Contracting Party designating the airline or in its
nationals.
5. When an airline
has been so designated and authorised, it may begin to operate the agreed
services for which it is designated in
accordance with the provisions of Article
12 of this Agreement.
Article
5
Charter or
Lease
In operating any agreed
service on any specified route the designated airline of each Contracting Party
shall give the other Contracting
Party sixty (60) days' notice in writing of any
intention to lease, charter, hire or otherwise use or operate on a continuing
basis
any aircraft not owned by it or the designated airlines of the Contracting
Parties.
Article 6
Revocation
or Suspension of Operating Authorisations
1. Each Contracting Party
shall have the right to revoke an operating authorisation or to suspend the
exercise of the rights specified
in Article 3 of this Agreement by an airline or
airlines designated by the other Contracting Party, or to impose such conditions
as it may deem necessary on the exercise of these rights:
(a) in any case where it is not satisfied that substantial ownership and effective control of that airline are vested in the Contracting Party designating the airline or in its nationals; or
(b) in the case of failure by that airline to comply with the laws or the regulations in force in the territory of the Contracting Party granting these rights; or
(c) in case of that airline otherwise failing to operate in accordance with the conditions prescribed under this Agreement.
2.
Unless immediate revocation, suspension or imposition of the conditions
mentioned in paragraph 1 of this Article is essential to
prevent further
infringements of the laws or regulations of a Contracting Party or the
provisions of this Agreement, such right shall
be exercised only after
consultation between the Contracting Parties.
Article 7
Conformity
with Laws, Regulations and Procedures
1. The laws, regulations
and procedures of a Contracting Party relating to the admission to or departure
from its territory of aircraft
engaged in international air navigation or
relating to the operation and navigation of such aircraft shall apply to
aircraft of the
designated airline of the other Contracting Party and shall be
complied with by such aircraft upon entering into or departing from
or while
within the territory of that Contracting
Party.
2. The laws and
regulations of one Contracting Party relating to entry, clearance, transit,
immigration, customs and quarantine shall
be applicable to passengers, crews,
cargo and mail of the aircraft of the designated airline of the other
Contracting Party while
in the territory of the first Contracting
Party.
3. The duties and taxes
imposed in the territory of either Contracting Party for the use of airports and
other aviation facilities
by the aircraft of a designated airline of the other
Contracting Party shall not be higher than those imposed on aircraft engaged
in
similar international air
services.
4. Neither of the
Contracting Parties shall give preference to its own or any other airline over
an airline or airlines designated
by the other Contracting Party in the
application of its regulations dealing with customs, immigration, quarantine and
other similar
services or in the use of airways, air traffic services and
associated facilities under its control.
Article 8
Recognition
of Certificates and Licences
1. Certificates of
airworthiness, certificates of competency and licences issued or validated by
one of the Contracting Parties, and
not expired, shall be recognised as valid by
the other Contracting Party for the operation of air services as specified in
the attached
Annex.
2. Either
Contracting Party however reserves the right not to recognise as valid, for
flights either overflying or landing within
its own territory, certificates of
competency and licences granted to its own nationals by another
state.
Article
9
Principles Governing the
Operation of Agreed Services
1. There shall be fair and
equal opportunity for the designated airlines of both Contracting Parties to
operate the agreed services
on the routes specified in the
Annex.
2. In the operation of
the agreed services, the designated airlines of both Contracting Parties shall
consider the interests of the
designated airline of the other Contracting Party
so as not to affect unduly the agreed services of the latter on the whole or
part
of the same route.
3. The
agreed services provided by the designated airlines of the Contracting Parties
shall bear a close relationship to the requirements
of the public for
transportation on the specified routes. They shall have as their primary
objective the provision at a reasonable
load factor of capacity adequate for the
current and reasonably anticipated requirements of passengers, cargo and mail
originating
from or destined for the territory of the Contracting Party which
has designated the airline or
airlines.
4. Provision for the
carriage of passengers, cargo and mail both taken up and discharged at points on
the specified routes in the
territories of third countries shall be made in
accordance with the general principles that capacity shall be related
to:
(a) traffic requirements to and from the territory of the Contracting Party which has designated the airline;
(b) traffic requirements of the areas through which the airline passes, local and regional air services being taken into account; and
(c) the requirements of through airline operations.
5.
Additional capacity may from time to time be provided by the designated airline
of a Contracting Party, in addition to that provided
under paragraph 4 of this
Article, whenever the traffic requirements between the countries serviced by the
airlines on the specified
routes so justify, subject to the approval of the
aeronautical authorities of the other Contracting
Party.
6. The aeronautical
authorities of the Contracting Parties shall from time to time jointly determine
the practical application of
the principles contained in the foregoing
paragraphs of this Article for the operation of the agreed services by the
designated airlines.
Article
10
Provision of
Statistics
The aeronautical
authorities of both Contracting Parties shall exchange, on request and in a
manner agreed upon by them, statistical
summaries including all the information
required to determine the volume of traffic on the routes specified in the Annex
and the
origins and destinations of such traffic.
Article 11
Exemption
from Charges on Equipment, Fuel, Lubricants, Stores etc
1. Aircraft operated on
international air services by the designated airline of either Contracting
Party, as well as their regular
equipment, supplies of fuel and lubricants,
consumable technical supplies and aircraft stores (including foods, beverages
and tobacco)
on board such aircraft shall be exempt from all custom duties,
inspection fees and other similar charges on arriving in the territory
of the
other Contracting Party, provided such equipment and supplies remain on board
the aircraft up to such time as they are re-exported
or are used on the part of
the journey performed over that
territory.
2. There shall also
be exempt from the same duties, fees and charges, with the exception of charges
corresponding to the service performed:
(a) aircraft stores taken on board in the territory of a Contracting Party, within limits fixed by the Customs authorities of the said territory for use on board outbound aircraft engaged on an international air service of the other Contracting Party;
(b) spare parts, including engines, introduced into the territory of either Contracting Party for the maintenance or repair of aircraft used on international air services by the designated airline of the other Contracting Party; and
(c) fuels, lubricants and consumable technical supplies supplied to an aircraft of the designated airline of a Contracting Party engaged on an international air service in the territory of the other Contracting Party and used on an inward flight until that flight is completed, or on a through-transiting flight, notwithstanding that on all such flights, aircraft may make intermediate landings in that territory.
3.
Materials referred to in paragraph 2 above may be required to be kept under
Customs supervision or
control.
4. The regular
airborne equipment as well as the materials and supplies normally retained on
board the aircraft of the designated
airline of either Contracting Party, may be
unloaded in the territory of the other Contracting Party only with the approval
of Customs
authorities of that territory. In such cases they may be placed under
the supervision of the said authorities up to such time as
they are re-exported
or otherwise disposed of in accordance with Customs
regulations.
5. The reliefs
provided by this Article shall also be available in situations where the
designated airline of one Contracting Party
has entered into arrangements with
another airline or airlines for the loan or transfer in the territory of the
other Contracting
Party of the items specified in paragraphs 1 and 2 of this
Article, provided such other airline or airlines similarly enjoy such
reliefs
from such other Contracting Party.
Article
12
Tariffs
1. The tariffs for carriage
on agreed services to and from the territory of the other Contracting Party
shall be established at reasonable
levels, due regard being paid to all relevant
factors including cost of operation, the interests of users, reasonable profit,
characteristics
of service (such as standards of speed and accommodation) and,
when it is deemed suitable, the tariffs of other airlines for any
part of the
specified route.
2. The tariffs
referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article shall be agreed upon, if possible,
between the designated airlines of the
Contracting Parties; such agreement shall
be reached, whenever possible, through the international tariff co-ordination
mechanism
of the International Air Transport Association. However, a designated
airline shall not be precluded from filing any proposed tariff
unilaterally.
Unless otherwise determined in the application of paragraph 5 of this Article,
or where a proposed tariff has been
unilaterally filed, each designated airline
shall be responsible only to its aeronautical authorities for the justification
of the
tariffs so proposed.
3.
Any tariffs for an agreed service shall be filed with the aeronautical
authorities of both Contracting Parties at least thirty
(30) days prior to the
proposed effective date unless the aeronautical authorities of both Contracting
Parties permit the filing
to be made on shorter notice. Any proposed tariff
shall be filed by a designated airline with the aeronautical authorities of both
Contracting Parties in such form as the aeronautical authorities of each
Contracting Party may
require.
4. If the aeronautical
authorities of one Contracting Party, on receipt of any filing referred to in
paragraph 3 of this Article,
are dissatisfied with the tariff proposed, they
shall so notify the aeronautical authorities of the other Contracting Party
within
twenty-one (21) days from the date of receipt of such tariff, but in no
event less than fifteen (15) days prior to the proposed effective
date of such
tariff. If notification of dissatisfaction is not given as provided in this
paragraph, the tariff shall be deemed to
be approved by the aeronautical
authorities of the Contracting Party receiving the filing and shall become
effective on the proposed
date.
5. If a tariff cannot be
established in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 2 of this Article or
if during the period applicable
in accordance with paragraph 4 of this Article a
notice of dissatisfaction has been given, the aeronautical authorities of the
Contracting
Parties shall endeavour to determine the tariff by agreement between
themselves. Consultations between the aeronautical authorities
will be held in
accordance with Article 16 of this
Agreement.
6. If the
aeronautical authorities cannot agree on any tariff submitted to them under
paragraph 3 of this Article or on the determination
of any tariff under
paragraph 5 of this Article the dispute shall be settled in accordance with the
provisions of Article 18 of this
Agreement.
7. When tariffs have
been established in accordance with the provisions of this Article, those
tariffs shall remain in force until
new tariffs have been established in
accordance with the provisions of this
Article.
8. If the aeronautical
authorities of one of the Contracting Parties become dissatisfied with an
established tariff, they shall so
notify the aeronautical authorities of the
other Contracting Party and the designated airlines shall attempt, where
required, to
reach an agreement. If within the period of ninety (90) days from
the day of receipt of such notification, a new tariff cannot be
established in
accordance with the provisions of paragraphs 2 and 3 of this Article, the
procedures as set out in paragraphs 5 and
6 of this Article shall apply. In no
circumstances however, shall a Contracting Party require a different tariff from
the tariff
of its own designated airline for comparable services between the
same points.
9. The tariffs
charged by the designated airline of one Contracting Party for carriage between
the territory of the other Contracting
Party and the territory of a third State
involving also points other than on agreed services shall be subject to the
approval of
the aeronautical authorities of the other Contracting Party and such
third State. However, the aeronautical authorities of a Contracting
Party shall
not require a different tariff from the tariff of its own designated airline for
comparable services between the same
points. The designated airline of each
Contracting Party shall file such tariffs with the aeronautical authorities of
the other Contracting
Party in accordance with their requirements. Approval of
such tariffs may be withdrawn on not less than fifteen (15) days
notice.
Article 13
Sale
of Air Transportation and Transfer of Earnings
1. The designated airline
of each Contracting Party shall have the right to engage in the sale of air
transportation in the territory
of the other Contracting Party directly or
through its agents.
2. Each
Contracting Party on a reciprocal basis, grants to the designated airline of the
other Contracting Party the right of free
transfer of the excess of receipts
over expenditure earned by that designated airline in the territory of the other
Contracting Party
by reason of the transport of passengers, baggage, cargo and
mail, as well as from any other commercial activities related to air
transport
which may be permitted under national
regulations.
3. Such transfers
shall be effected on the basis of the official exchange rate for current
payments, or, where there are no official
exchange rates, at the prevailing
foreign exchange market rate for current
payments.
4. In so far as
methods of payment between the Contracting Parties may be regulated by a special
agreement, such an agreement shall
be applicable.
Article
14
Airline
Representation
1. Each Contracting Party
shall grant on a basis of reciprocity to the designated airline of the other
Contracting Party the right
to maintain in its own territory the technical,
administrative and commercial services indispensable for its
operations.
2. For the
operation of its services, the designated airline of each Contracting Party
shall have the right to employ technical, administrative
and commercial
personnel of its own nationality according to the laws and regulations in force
in the country in which the personnel
are to be employed.
Article 15
Security
1. Consistent with their
rights and obligations under international !aw, the Contracting Parties reaffirm
that their obligation to
each other to protect the security of civil aviation
against acts of unlawful interference forms an integral part of this Agreement.
Without limiting the generality of their rights and obligations under
international law, the Contracting Parties shall in particular
act in conformity
with the provisions of the Convention on Offences and Certain Other Acts
Committed on Board Aircraft, signed at
Tokyo on 14 September 1963, ' the
Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Seizure of Aircraft, signed at The
Hague on 16 December
1970 z and the Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful
Acts against the Safety of Civil Aviation, signed at Montreal on 23 September
1971, 3 and any other conventions relating to the security of civil aviation to
which both Contracting Parties are
party.
2. The Contracting
Parties shall provide upon request all necessary assistance to each other to
prevent acts of unlawful seizure of
civil aircraft and other unlawful acts
against the safety of such aircraft, their passengers and crews, airports and
air navigation
facilities, and any other threat to the security of civil
aviation.
3. The Contracting
Parties shall, in their mutual relations, act in conformity with the aviation
security provisions established by
the International Civil Aviation Organization
and designated as Annexes to the Convention on International Civil Aviation to
the
extent that such security provisions are applicable to the Parties; they
shall require that operators of aircraft of their registry
or operators of
aircraft who have their principal place of business or permanent residence in
their territory and the operators of
airports in their territory act in
conformity with such aviation security provisions. Accordingly each Contracting
Party shall advise
the other Contracting Party of any difference between its
national regulations and practices and the aforementioned aviation security
provisions. Either Contracting Party may request immediate consultations with
the other Contracting Party at any time to discuss
any such
differences.
4. Each
Contracting Party shall observe the aviation security provisions referred to in
paragraph 3 above required by the other Contracting
Party for entry into,
departure from, or while within, the territory of that other Contracting Party.
Each Contracting Party shall
ensure that adequate measures are effectively
applied within its territory to protect the aircraft and to inspect passengers,
crew,
carry-on items, baggage, cargo and aircraft stores prior to and during
boarding or loading. Each Contracting Party shall also give
sympathetic
consideration to any request from the other Contracting Party for reasonable
special security measures to meet a particular
threat.
5. When an incident or
threat of an incident of unlawful seizure of civil aircraft or other unlawful
acts against the safety of such
aircraft, their passengers and crew, airports or
air navigation facilities occurs, the Contracting Parties shall assist each
other
by facilitating communications and other appropriate measures intended to
terminate rapidly and safely such incident or threat thereof.
Article
16
Consultation
Either Contracting Party
may at any time request consultations on the implementation, interpretation,
application or amendment of
this Agreement or compliance with this agreement.
Such consultations, which may be between aeronautical authorities, shall begin
within a period of sixty (60) days from the date the other Contracting Party
receives a written request, unless otherwise agreed
by the Contracting
Parties.
Article
17
Amendment
Any amendments of this
Agreement agreed by the Contracting Parties shall come into effect when
confirmed by an Exchange of Notes.
Article
18
Settlement of
Disputes
1. If any dispute arises
between the Contracting Parties relating to the interpretation or application of
this Agreement, the Contracting
Parties shall in the first place endeavour to
settle it by negotiation.
2. If
the Contracting Parties fail to reach a settlement by negotiation, they may
agree to refer the dispute for decision to some
person or body; if they do not
so agree, the dispute shall, at the request of either Contracting Party, be
submitted for decision
to a tribunal of three arbitrators, one to be nominated
by each Contracting Party and the third to be appointed by the two so
nominated.
3. Each Contracting
Party shall nominate an arbitrator within a period of sixty (60) days from the
date of receipt by diplomatic or
appropriate channels of a request for
arbitration of the dispute by such a tribunal and the third arbitrator shall be
appointed within
a further period of sixty (60) days. If either of the
Contracting Parties fails to nominate an arbitrator within the period specified,
or if the third arbitrator is not appointed within the specified period, the
President of the Council of the International Civil
Aviation Organization may be
requested by either Contracting Party to appoint an arbitrator or arbitrators as
the case requires.
In such case, the third arbitrator shall be a national of a
third state and shall act as President of the arbitral
tribunal.
4. The Contracting
Parties shall comply with any decision given under paragraph 2 of this
Article.
5. If and for so long
as either Contracting Party fails to comply with a decision given under
paragraph 2 of this Article, the other
Contracting Party may limit, suspend or
revoke any rights or privileges which it has granted by virtue of this Agreement
to the Contracting
Party in default.
Article
19
Termination
Either Contracting Party
may at any time give notice in writing through diplomatic channels to the other
Contracting Party of its
decision to terminate this Agreement. A copy of the
notice shall be sent simultaneously to the International Civil Aviation
Organization
by the Contracting Party giving notice. In such case this Agreement
shall terminate twelve (12) months after the date when the notice
has been
received by the other Contracting Party unless the said notice of termination is
withdrawn by mutual agreement before the
expiry of this period. If the other
Contracting Party fails to acknowledge receipt of the notice, the notice shall
be deemed to have
been received fourteen (14) days after the International Civil
Aviation Organization has received its copy.
Article 20
Conformity
with Multilateral Conventions
The present Agreement shall
be amended so as to be compatible with any multilateral convention which may
become binding on both Contracting
Parties.
Article 21
Registration of Agreement with I.C.A.0.
The present Agreement and
any amendment thereto shall be registered with the International Civil Aviation
Organization by the Government
of New Zealand.
Article
22
Entry Into
Force
This Agreement shall enter
into force on the date of
signature.
IN
WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned,
being duly authorised by their respective Governments, have signed this
Agreement,
DONE,
in duplicate, at Honiara this 30th day of May 1990.
|
BERNARD
HILLIER
For the Government of New Zealand |
VICTOR
NGELE
For the Government of Solomon Islands |
ANNEX
ROUTE
SCHEDULE
SECTION
I
Route to be served by the
designated airline of Solomon Islands in both directions:
|
Points
of Departure
|
Intermediate
Points
|
Points
of Destination
|
Points
Beyond
|
|
Points in the Solomon
Islands
|
Port
Vila
Nadi |
Auckland
|
Niue
|
SECTION II
Route to be served by
the designated airline of New Zealand in both directions:
|
Points
of Departure
|
Intermediate
Points
|
Points
of Destination
|
Points
Beyond
|
|
Points in New
Zealand
|
Port Vila
|
Honiara
|
1 point outside the South
Pacific to be nominated
|
Note:
The
designated airline of either Contracting Party may, on any or all flights, omit
calling at any of the above points, provided that
the agreed services on this
route begin in the territory of that Contracting Party.
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