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Pacific Islands Treaty Series |
AGREEMENT
BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENT OF NEW ZEALAND AND THE GOVERNMENT OF PAPUA NEW GUINEA ON
AIR SERVICES
(Wellington, 15
February
1994)
ENTRY
INTO FORCE: 15 FEBRUARY 1994
THE
GOVERNMENT OF NEW ZEALAND AND THE GOVERNMENT OF PAPUA NEW
GUINEA, hereinafter referred to as
"the Contracting
Parties";
BEING
Parties to the Convention on International Civil Aviation opened for signature
at Chicago, on the
7th
day of December
1944;
DESIRING
to conclude an agreement for the
purpose of establishing air services between and beyond their respective
territories;
DESIRING
to ensure the highest degree of safety and security in international air
transport;
HAVE
AGREED AS FOLLOWS:
Article
1
Definitions
For the purpose of this
Agreement, unless the context otherwise requires:
(a) the term "aeronautical authorities" means the Minister responsible for the subject of Civil Aviation or any other authority or person empowered to perform the functions now exercised by the said authorities;
(b) 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;
(c) the term "Agreement" means this Agreement, its Annex, and any amendments thereto;
(d) 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 Annexes or of the Convention under Articles 90 and 94 thereof so far as those Annexes and amendments have been adopted or ratified by both Contracting Parties;
(e) the term "designated airline" means an airline which has been designated and authorised in accordance with Article 3 of this Agreement;
(f) the term "tariffs" means the prices to be paid for the carriage of passengers, baggage and cargo and the conditions under which those prices apply, including prices and conditions for agency and other ancillary services, but excluding remuneration and conditions for the carriage of mail;
(g) the term "air services", "international air service", "airline" and "stop for non-traffic purposes" have the meanings respectively assigned to them in Article 96 of the Convention; and
(h) the term "territory" has the meaning assigned to it in Article 2 of the Convention, provided that, in the case of New Zealand, the term "territory" shall exclude the Cook Islands, Niue and Tokelau.
Article
2
Grant of
Rights
1. Each Contracting Party
grants to the other Contracting Party the following rights for the conduct of
international air services
by the airline designated by the other Contracting
Party:
(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) to make stops in the said territory for the purpose of taking up and discharging, while operating the route specified in the Annex, international traffic in passengers, cargo and mail, separately or in combination.
2.
Nothing in paragraph 1 of this Article shall be deemed to confer on a designated
airline of one Contracting Party the privilege
of taking up, in the territory of
the other Contracting Party, passengers, cargo and mail carried for remuneration
or hire and destined
for another point in the territory of that other
Contracting Party.
3.
Passengers, baggage and cargo in direct transit through the territory of either
Contracting Party and not leaving the area of the
airport reserved for such
purpose shall be subject to no more than a simplified control. Baggage and cargo
in direct transit shall
be exempt from customs duties and other similar
taxes.
Article
3
Designation and
Authorisation
1. Each Contracting Party
shall have the right to designate in writing to the other Contracting Party one
or more airlines to operate
the agreed services on the specified routes and to
withdraw or alter such
designations.
2. On receipt of
such designation and subject to the provisions of Article 4 of this Agreement,
the aeronautical authorities of the
other Contracting Party shall grant without
delay to the airline or airlines so designated the appropriate authorisations to
operate
the agreed services for which that airline has been
designated.
3. Upon receipt of
such authorisations the airline may begin at any time to operate the agreed
services, in whole or in part, provided
that the airline complies with the
applicable provisions of this Agreement, in particular, that tariffs are
established in accordance
with the provisions of Article 10 of this
Agreement.
Article 4
Revocation
and Limitation of Authorisation
1. The aeronautical authorities of each Contracting Party shall have the right to withhold the authorisations referred to in Article 3 of this Agreement with respect to an airline designated by the other Contracting Party, to revoke or suspend such authorisations or impose conditions, temporarily or permanently:
(a) in the event of failure by such airline to qualify before the aeronautical authorities of that Contracting Party under the laws and regulations normally and reasonably applied by these authorities in conformity with the Convention;
(b) in the event of failure by such airline to comply with the laws and regulations of that Contracting Party;
(c) in the event that they are not satisfied that substantial ownership and effective control of the airline are vested in the Contracting Party designating the airline or in its nationals; and
(d) in case the airline otherwise fails to operate in accordance with the conditions prescribed under this Agreement.
2.
Unless immediate action is essential to prevent further infringement of the laws
and regulations referred to above, the rights
enumerated in paragraph 1 of this
Article shall be exercised only after consultations with the aeronautical
authorities of the other
Contracting Party in conformity with Article 14 of this
Agreement.
Article 5
Application
of Laws and Regulations
1. The laws, regulations
and procedures of one Contracting Party relating to the admission to, remaining
in, or departure from its
territory of aircraft engaged in international air
navigation or to the operation and navigation of such aircraft shall be complied
with by the airline or airlines of the other Contracting Party upon entrance
into, departure from and while within the said
territory.
2. The laws and
regulations of one Contracting Party respecting entry, clearance, transit,
immigration, passports, customs and quarantine
shall be complied with by the
airline or airlines of the other Contracting Party and by or on behalf of its
crews, passengers, cargo
and mail upon transit of, admission to, departure from
and while within the territory of such a Contracting
Party.
3. Neither of the
Contracting Parties shall give preference to its own or any other airline over
an airline of the other Contracting
Party engaged in similar international air
services in the application of its customs, immigration, quarantine and similar
regulations.
Article 6
Recognition
of Certificates and Licences (Safety)
1. Certificates of
airworthiness, certificates of competency and licences, issued or validated by
one Contracting Party and still
in force, shall be recognised as valid by the
other Contracting Party for the purpose of operating the agreed services on the
routes
specified in the Annex provided that such certificates or licences were
issued or validated pursuant to, and in conformity with,
the standards
established under the Convention. Each Contracting Party reserves the right,
however, to refuse to recognise, for the
purpose of flights above or landing
within its own territory, certificates of competency and licences granted to its
own nationals
by the other Contracting
Party.
2. Each Contracting
Party may request consultations concerning the safety standards maintained by
the other Contracting Party relating
to aeronautical facilities, aircrew,
aircraft, and operation of the designated airlines. If, following such
consultations, one Contracting
Party finds that the other Contracting Party does
not effectively maintain and administer safety standards and requirements in
these
areas that at least equal the minimum standards which may be established
pursuant to the Convention, the other Contracting Party
shall be notified of
such findings and the steps considered necessary to conform with these minimum
standards; and the other Contracting
Party shall take appropriate corrective
action. Each Contracting Party reserves the right to withhold, revoke or limit
the operating
authorisation or technical permission of an airline or airlines
designated by the other Contracting Party in the event the other
Contracting
Party does not take such appropriate action within a reasonable
time.
Article
7
Aviation
Security
1. Consistent with their
rights and obligations under international law, 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, and the Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful
Acts against the Safety of Civil Aviation, signed at Montreal on 23 September
1971.
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 crew, 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 Organisation
and designated as Annexes to the Convention on International Civil Aviation to
the
extent that such security provisions are applicable to the Contracting
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.
4. Each Contracting
Party agrees that such operators of aircraft may be required to 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 positive 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.
6. Should one
Contracting Party have problems with regard to the application of the aviation
security provisions of this Article,
the aeronautical authorities of either
Contracting Party may request immediate consultations with the aeronautical
authorities of
the other Contracting Party.
Article
8
Customs Duties and Other
Charges
1. Each Contracting Party
shall on a basis of reciprocity exempt the designated airline or airlines of the
other contracting Party
to the fullest extent possible under its national law
from import restrictions, customs duties, excise taxes, inspection fees and
other national duties and charges on aircraft, fuel, lubricating oils,
consumable technical supplies, spare parts including engines,
regular aircraft
equipment, aircraft stores (including liquor, tobacco and other products
destined for sale to passengers in limited
quantities during the flight) and
other items intended for use or used solely in connection with the operation or
servicing of aircraft
of the designated airline or airlines of such other
Contracting Party operating the agreed
services.
2. The exemptions
granted by this Article shall apply to the items referred to in paragraph 1 of
this Article:
(a) introduced into the territory of one Contracting Party by or on behalf of the designated airline or airlines of the other Contracting Party;
(b) retained on board aircraft of the designated airline or airlines of one Contracting Party upon arriving in or leaving the territory of the other Contracting Party;
(c) taken on board aircraft of the designated airline or airlines of one Contracting Party in the territory of the other contracting Party and intended for use in operating the agreed services;
whether
or not such items are used or consumed wholly within the territory of the
Contracting Party granting the exemption, provided
such items are not alienated
in the territory of the said Contracting
Party.
3. The regular airborne
equipment, as well as the materials and supplies normally retained on board the
aircraft of the designated
airline or airlines of either contracting Party may
be unloaded in the territory of the other Contracting Party only with the
approval
of the Customs authorities of that territory. In such case, 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.
4. Printed ticket
stock, air waybills and publicity materials introduced into the territory of one
Contracting Party by or on behalf
of the designated airline of the other
contracting Party, shall be exempt on the basis of reciprocity from all customs
duties, inspection
fees and other similar fees and
charges.
5. The exemptions
provided for in paragraphs 1 and 2 of this Article shall also be available where
a designated airline of one Contracting
Party has contracted with another
airline, which similarly enjoys such exemptions in the territory of the other
Contracting Party,
for the loan or transfer in the said territory of the terms
specified in paragraphs 1 and 2 of this Article.
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.
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
Tariffs
1. The tariffs to be
charged by the designated airlines of the two Contracting Parties for carriage
between New Zealand and Papua
New Guinea will be those approved by the
aeronautical authorities of both sides. The aeronautical authorities of either
contracting
Party may require tariffs for an agreed service to be filed for
approval (in such form as they may separately require), in which
case such
filing shall be submitted at least sixty (60) days before the proposed effective
date, unless those aeronautical authorities
permit the filing to be made on a
shorter notice.
2. Such tariffs
may be agreed by the designated airlines of both Contracting Parties seeking
approval of the tariffs. However, a designated
airline will not be precluded
from proposing, nor the aeronautical authorities from approving, any tariff, if
that airline has failed
to obtain the agreement of the other designated airlines
to such tariff, or because no other designated airline is operating on the
same
route.
3. Where any tariffs are
required to be filed, they shall become effective after their approval by the
aeronautical authorities of
both Contracting Parties. If the aeronautical
authorities of neither Contracting Party have expressed disapproval within
thirty (30)
days from the date of submission, in accordance with paragraph 1 of
this Article, these tariffs shall be deemed approved. In the
event of the period
for submission being reduced, as provided for in paragraph 1 above, the
aeronautical authorities of the two Contracting
Parties may agree that the
period within which any disapproval must be notified shall be less than thirty
(30) days.
4. The tariffs
charged by the designated airlines of one Contracting Party for carriage between
the territory of the other Contracting
Party and the territory of a State which
is not a Contracting Party shall be subject to the approval of the aeronautical
authorities
of the other Contracting Party and of such non-Contracting State,
respectively: provided, however, that the aeronautical authorities
of
Contracting Party shall not require a different tariff from the tariff of their
own airlines 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 no less than fifteen
(15)
days' notice provided however that a Contracting Party shall permit the
designated airline concerned to apply the same tariffs as
its own airlines for
comparable services between the same points.
Article
11
Airline
Representatives
1. The designated airline
or airlines of one Contracting Party shall be allowed, on the basis of
reciprocity, to bring into and to
maintain in the territory of the other
Contracting Party their representatives and commercial, operational and
technical staff as
required in connection with the operation of agreed
services.
2. These staff
requirements may, at the option of the designated airline or airlines of one
Contracting Party, be satisfied by its
own personnel or by using the services of
any other organisation, company or airline operating in the territory of the
other contracting
Party, and authorised to perform such services in the
territory of that Contracting
Party.
3. The representatives
and staff shall be subject to the laws and regulations in force of the other
Contracting Party, and, consistent
with such laws and regulations, each
Contracting Party shall, on the basis of reciprocity and with the minimum of
delay, grant the
necessary employment authorisations, visitor visas or other
similar documents to the representatives and staff referred to in paragraph
1 of
this Article.
Article
12
Commercial Opportunities and
Transfer of Funds
1. Each designated airline
shall have the right to engage in the sale of air transportation in the
territory of the other Contracting
Party directly and, at its discretion,
through its agents. Each designated airline shall have the right to sell
transportation in
the currency of that territory or, to the extent permitted by
national law, in freely convertible currencies of other countries,
and to the
same extent any person shall be free to purchase such transportation in
currencies accepted for sale by that
airline.
2. Each Contracting
Party grants to any designated airline of the other contracting Party the right
of free transfer at the official
rate of exchange of the excess of receipts over
expenditure earned by that airline in its territory in connection with the
carriage
of passengers, mail and cargo.
Article13
Statistics
The aeronautical
authorities of either Contracting Party shall supply to the aeronautical
authorities of the other Contracting Party,
at their request, such periodic or
other statements of statistics as may be reasonably required for the purpose of
reviewing the
capacity provided on the agreed services.
Article
14
Consultation
1. In a spirit of close
cooperation, the aeronautical authorities of the Contracting Parties shall
consult each other from time to
time with a view to ensuring the implementation
of, and satisfactory compliance with, the provisions of this Agreement and of
its
Annex, and shall also consult when necessary to provide for modification
thereof.
2. Either Contracting
Party may request consultation, which may be through discussion or by
correspondence and shall begin with in
a period of sixty (60) days of receipt of
a written request, unless both Contracting Parties agree to an extension of this
period.
Article 15
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, or either Contracting
Party may submit the dispute 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 arbitrators. Each of the Contracting Parties shall nominate an
arbitrator within a period of sixty (60) days from the date of receipt by either
Contracting Party from the other of a notice through
diplomatic channels
requesting arbitration of the dispute 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 period specified, the
President of the Council of the International Civil Aviation Organisation
may be
requested by either Contracting Party to appoint an arbitrator or arbitrators as
the case requires. In all cases the third
arbitrator shall be a national of a
third State and shall act as President of the arbitral
tribunal.
3. The Contracting
Parties shall comply with any decision given under paragraph 2 of this
Article.
Article
16
Modification of
Agreement
If either of the
Contracting Parties considers it desirable to modify any provision of this
Agreement, it may request consultations
with the other Contracting Party. Such
consultations, which may be between aeronautical authorities and which may be
through discussion
or by correspondence, shall begin within a period of sixty
(60) days of receipt of a written request unless both Contracting Parties
agree
to an extension of this period. Any modifications so agreed shall come into
force when they have been confirmed by an exchange
of diplomatic
notes.
Article
17
Multilateral
Convention
This Agreement and its
Annex shall be amended so as to conform with any multilateral convention which
may become binding on both Contracting
Parties.
Article
18
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, such notice shall
be communicated simultaneously to the International Civil Aviation Organisation.
The Agreement shall terminate twelve (12) months after the date of receipt of
the notice by the other contracting Party, unless the
notice to terminate is
withdrawn by agreement before the expiry of this period. In the absence of
acknowledgement of receipt by the
other Contracting Party, the notice shall be
deemed to have been received fourteen (14) days after the receipt of the notice
by the
International Civil Aviation Organisation.
Article
19
Registration
This Agreement and any
amendment thereto shall be registered with the International Civil Aviation
Organisation.
Article 20
Entry
Into Force
This Agreement shall enter
into force on the date of
signature.
IN
WITNESS WHEREOF the undersigned, being
duly authorised thereto by their respective Governments, have signed the present
Agreement.
DONE
in Duplicate at Wellington, New
Zealand on this 15th day of February 1994 in the English
language.
|
FOR
THE GOVERNMENT OF NEW
ZEALAND
[Signed] Jim Bolger |
FOR
THE GOVERNMENT OF PAPUA NEW
GUINEA
[Signed] Paias Wingti |
ROUTE
SCHEDULE
1. Routes to be operated in
both directions by airlines designated by New Zealand:
|
Points
of Origin
|
Intermediate
Points
|
Points
in PNG
|
Points
Beyond
|
|
A) Points in New
Zealand
|
-
|
Port
Moresby
|
Japan
Seoul Taipei |
|
B) Points in New
Zealand
|
-
|
Port
Moresby
|
Singapore
Bangkok Hong Kong |
2. Routes to be
operated in both directions by airlines designated by Papua New
Guinea:
|
Points
of Origin
|
Intermediate
Points
|
Points
in PNG
|
Points
Beyond
|
|
A) Points in Papua New
Guinea
|
-
|
Auckland
|
|
Note:
The exercise of beyond rights under
Section 1 of the Route Schedule shall be subject to agreed arrangements in place
from time to
time between the aeronautical authorities of the Contracting
Parties.
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