CIAO
DATE: 11/01
The Arab Convention For The Suppression Of Terrorism
League of Arab States
April 1998
Translated from Arabic by the United Nations English translation service (Unofficial translation) 29 May 2000
League of Arab
States
The Arab Convention for the Suppression of Terrorism
Adopted by the Council of Arab Ministers of the Interior and the Council of
Arab Ministers of Justice
Cairo,
April 1998
Preamble
The Arab states signatory hereto,
Desiring to promote mutual cooperation in the suppression of terrorist offences, which pose a threat to the security and stability of the Arab Nation and endanger its vital interests,
Being committed to the highest moral and religious principles and, in particular, to the tenets of the Islamic Sharia, as well as to the humanitarian heritage of an Arab Nation that rejects all forms of violence and terrorism and advocates the protection of human rights, with which precepts the principles of international law conform, based as they are on cooperation among peoples in the promotion of peace,
Being further committed to the Pact of the League of Arab States, the Charter of the United Nations and all the other international convents and instruments to which the Contracting States to this Convention are parties,
Affirming the right of peoples to combat foreign occupation and aggression by whatever means, including armed struggle, in order to liberate their territories and secure their right to self-determination, and independence and to do so in such a manner as to preserve the territorial integrity of each Arab country, of the foregoing being in accordance with the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations and with the Organization's resolutions.
Have agreed to conclude this convention and to invite any Arab State that did not participate in its conclusion to accede hereto.
Part One: Definitions
and General Provisions
Article 1
Each of the following terms shall be understood in the light of the definition give;
- Contracting State
Any member State
of the League of Arab States that has ratified this Convention and that has
deposited its instruments of ratification with the General Secretariat of
the League.
- Terrorism
Any act or threat
of violence, whatever its motives or purposes, that occurs in the advancement
of an individual or collective criminal agenda and seeking to sow panic among
people, causing fear by harming them, or placing their lives, liberty or security
in danger, or seeking to cause damage to the environment or to public or private
installations or property or to occupying or seizing them, or seeking to jeopardize
a national resources.
- Terrorist offence
Any offence
or attempted offence committed in furtherance of a terrorist objective in
any of the Contracting States, or against their nationals, property or interests,
that is punishable by their domestic law. The offences stipulated in the following
conventions, except where conventions have not been ratified by Contracting
States or where offences have been excluded by their legislation, shall also
be regarded as terrorist offences:
- The Tokyo
Convention on offences and Certain Other Acts Committed on Board Aircraft,
of 14 September 1963;
- The Hague
Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Seizure of Aircraft, of 16 December
1970;
- The Montreal Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Acts against the
Safety of Civil Aviation, of 23 September 1971, and the Protocol thereto
of 10 May 1984;
- The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Crimes against Internationally
Protected Persons, including Diplomatic Agents, of 14 December 1973;
- The International Convention against the Taking of Hostages, of 17 December
1979;
- The provisions of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea,
of 1982, relating to piracy on the high seas.
Article 2
- All cases of
struggle by whatever means, including armed struggle, against foreign occupation
and aggression for liberation and self-determination, in accordance with the
principles of international law, shall not be regarded as an offence. This
provision shall not apply to any act prejudicing the territorial integrity
of any Arab State.
- None of the terrorist offences indicated in the preceding article shall be regarded as a political offence. In the application of this Convention, none of the following offences shall be regarded as a political offence, even if committed for political motives:
- Attacks on the kings, Heads of State or rulers of the contracting States or on their spouses and families;
- Attacks on crown princes, vice-presidents, prime ministers or ministers in any of the Contracting States;
- Attacks on persons enjoying diplomatic immunity, including ambassadors and diplomats serving in or accredited to the Contracting States;
- Premeditated murder or theft accompanied by the use of force directed against individuals, the authorities or means of transport and communications;
- Acts of sabotage and destruction of public property and property assigned to a public service, even if owned by another Contracting State;
- The manufacture, illicit trade in or possession of weapons, munitions or explosives, or other items that may be used to commit terrorist offences.
Part Two: Principles
of Arab Cooperation for the Suppression of Terrorism
Chapter I:
The Security Field
Section I: Measures
for the prevention and suppression of terrorist offences:
Article 3
Contracting States undertake not to organize, finance or commit terrorist acts or to be accessories thereto in any manner whatsoever. In their commitment to the prevention and suppression of terrorist offence in accordance with their domestic laws and procedures, they shall endeavour:
- Preventive measure:
- To prevent the use of their territories as a base for planning, organizing,
executing, attempting or taking part in terrorist crime in any manner whatsoever.
This includes the prevention of terrorists; infiltration into, or residence
in their territories either as individuals or groups, receiving or giving
refuge to them, training, arming, financing, or providing any facilitation
to them;
- To cooperate and coordinate action among Contracting States, particularly
neighbouring countries suffering from similar or common terrorist offences;
- To develop and strengthen systems for the detection of the movement, importation,
exportation, stockpilling and use of weapons, munitions and explosives and
of other means of aggression, murder and destruction as well as procedures
for monitoring their passage through customs and across borders in order
to prevent their transfer from one Contracting State to another or to third-party
States other than for lawful purposes;
- To develop and strengthen systems concerned with surveillance procedures
and the securing of borders and points of entry overland and by air in order
to prevent illicit entry thereby;
- To strengthen mechanisms for the security and protection of eminent persons,
vital installations and means of public transportation,
- To enhance the protection, security and safety of diplomatic and consular
persons and missions and international and regional organizations accredited
to Contracting Stages, in accordance with the relevant international agreements,
which govern this subject;
- To reinforce security-related information activities and to coordinate
them with those of each State in accordance with its information policy,
with a view to exposing the objectives of terrorist groups and organizations,
thwarting their schemes and demonstrating the danger they pose to security
and stability;
- To establish, in each Contracting State, a database for the accumulation
and analysis of information relating to terrorist elements, groups, movements
and organizations and for the monitoring of developments with respect to
the terrorist phenomenon and of successful experiences in counterterrorism,
and to keep such information up to date and make it available to the competent
authorities of Contracting States, within the limits established by the
domestic laws and procedures of each State;
- Measures of
suppression
- To arrest the perpetrators of terrorist offences and to prosecute them
in accordance with national law or extradite them in accordance with the
provision's of this Convention or of any bilateral treaty between the requesting
State and the requested State;
- To provide effective protection for those working in the criminal justice
field;
- To provide effective protection for sources of information concerning
terrorist offences and for witnesses thereof;
- To extend necessary assistance to victims of terrorism;
- To establish effective cooperation between the relevant agencies and the
public in countering terrorism by, inter alia, establishing appropriate
guarantees and incentives to encourage the reporting of terrorist acts,
the provision of information to assist in their investigation, and cooperation
in the arrest of perpetrators.
Section II: Arab
cooperation for the prevention and suppression of terrorist offences
Article 4
Contracting
States shall cooperate for the prevention and suppressionof terrorist offences,
in accordance with the domestic laws and regulations of each State, as set
forth hereunder:
- Exchanging of information
- Contracting States shall undertake to promote the exchange of information
between and among them concerning:
- The activities and crimes of terrorist groups and of their leaders and
members; their headquarters and training; the means and sources by which
they are funded and armed; the types of weapons, munitions and explosives
used by them; and other means of aggression, murder and destruction;
- The means of communication and propaganda used by terrorist groups,
their modus operandi; the movements of their leaders and members; and
the travel documents that they use.
- Each contracting State shall undertake to notify any other Contracting
State in an expeditious manner of the information it has concerning any
terrorist offence that takes place in its territory and is intended to harm
the interests of that State or of its nationals and to include in such notification
statements concerning the circumstances surrounding the offence, those who
committed it, its victims, the losses occasioned by it and the devices and
methods used in its perpetration, to the extent compatible with the requirements
of the investigation and inquiry.
- Contracting States shall undertake to cooperate with each other in the
exchange of information for the suppression of terrorist offences and promptly
to notify other Contracting States of all the information or data in their
possession that may prevent the occurrence of terrorist offences in their
territory, against their nationals or residents or against their interests.
- Each Contracting
State shall undertake to furnish any other Contracting State with any information
or data in its possession that may:
- Assist in the arrest of a person or persons accused of committing
a terrorist offence against the interests of that State or of being
implicated in such an offence whether by aiding and abetting, collusion
or incitement;
- Lead to the seizure of any weapons, munitions or explosives or any
devices or funds used or intended for use to commit a terrorist offence.
- Contracting States shall undertake to maintain the confidentiality of
the information that they exchange among themselves and not to furnish it
to any State that is not a Contracting State or any other party without
the prior consent of the State that was the source of the information.
- Investigations:
Contracting
States shall undertake to promote cooperation among themselves and to provide
assistance with respect to measures for the investigation and arrest of
fugitives suspected or convicted of terrorist offences in accordance with
the laws and regulations of each state.
- Exchange of
expertise:
- Contracting States shall cooperate in the conduct and exchange of research
studies for the suppression of terrorist offences and shall exchange expertise
in the counterterrorism field.
- Contracting States shall cooperate, within the limits of their resources,
in providing all possible technical assistance for the formulation of
programmes or the holding of joint training courses or training courses
intended for one state or for a group of Contracting Sttes, as required
for the benefit of those working in counterterrorism with the aim of developing
their scientific and practical abilities and enhancing their performance.
Chapter II:
The Judicial Field
Section I: Extradition
of Offenders
Article 5
Contracting
States shall undertake to extradite those indicated for or convicted of terrorist
offences whose extradition is requested by any of these states in accordance
with the rules and conditions stipulated in this convention.
Article 6
Extradition
shall not be permissible in any of the following circumstances:
- If the offence for which extradition is requested is regarded under the
laws in force in the requested State as an offence of a political nature;
- If the offence for which extradition is requested relates solely to a
dereliction of military duties;
- If the offence for which extradition is requested was committed in the
territory of the requested contracting State, except where the offence has
harmed the interests of the requesting State and its laws provide for the
prosecution and punishment for such offences and where the requested State
has not initiated any investigation or prosecution;
- If a final judgement having the force of res judicata has been rendered
in respect of the offence in the requested Contracting State or in a third
Contracting State;
- If, on delivery of the request for extradition, proceedings have been
terminated or punishment has, under the law of the requesting State, lapsed
because of the passage of time;
- If the offence was committed outside the territory of the requesting State
by a person who is not a national of that State and the law of the requested
State does not allow prosecution for the same category of offence when committed
outside its territory by such a person;
- If the requesting State has granted amnesty to perpetrators of offences
that include the offence in question;
- If the legal system of the requested State does not allow it to extradite
its nationals. In this case, the requested State shall prosecute any such
persons who commit in any of the other Contracting States a terrorist offence
that is punishable in both States by deprivation of liberty for a period
of at least one year or more. The nationality of the person whose extradition
is sought shall be determined as at the date on which the offence in question
was committed, and use shall be made in this regard of the investigation
conducted by the requesting state.
Article 7
Should the person
whose extradition is sought be under investigation, on trial or already convicted
for another offence in the requested State, his concluded, the trial is completed
or the sentence is imposed. The requested State may nevertheless extradite
him on an interim basis for questioning or trial provided that he is returned
to that State before serving the sentence imposed on him in the requesting
State.
Article 8
For purposes
of the extradition of offenders under this Convention, no account shall be
taken of any difference there may be in the domestic legislation of Contracting
States in the legal designation of the offence as a felony or a misdemeanour
or in the penalty assigned to it, provided that it is punishable under the
laws of both States by deprivation of liberty for a period of at least one
year or more.
Section II: Judicial
Delegation
Article 9
Each Contracting
State may request any other Contracting State to undertake in its territory
and on its behalf any judicial procedure relating to an action arising out
of a terrorist offence and, in particular:
- To hear the testimony of witnesses and take depositions as evidence;
- To effect service of judicial documents;
- To execute searches and seizures;
- To examine and inspect evidence;
- To obtain relevant documents and records or certified copies thereof.
Article 10
Each of the
Contracting States shall undertake to implement judicial delegations relating
to terrorist offences, but such assistance may be refused in either of the
two following cases:
- Where the request relates to an offence that is subject to investigation
or prosecution in the requested State;
- Where granting the request might be prejudicial to the sovereignty, security
or public order of the requested State.
Article 11
The request
for judicial delegation shall be granted promptly in accordance with the provisions
of the domestic law of the requested State. The latter may postpone the execution
of the request until such time as any ongoing investigation or prosecution
involving the same matter are completed or any compelling reasons for postponement
cease to exist, provided that the requesting State is notified of such postponement.
Article 12
- A measure that is undertaken by means of a judicial delegation, in accordance
with the provisions of this Conventions, shall have the same legal effect
as if it had been taken by the competent authority of the requesting State
- The result of implementing the judicial delegation may be used only for
the purpose for which the delegation is issued.
Section III: Judicial
cooperation
Article 13
Each contracting
State shall provide the other States with all possible and necessary assistance
for investigations or prosecutions relating to terrorist offences.
Article 14
- Where one of the Contracting States has jurisdiction to prosecute a person
suspected of a terrorist offence, it may request the State in which the
suspect is present to take proceedings against him for that offence, subject
to the agreement of that State and provided that the offence is punishable
in the prosecuting State by deprivation of liberty for a period of at least
one your or more. The requesting state shall, in this event, provide the
requested state with all the investigation documents and evidence relating
to the offence.
- The investigation or prosecution shall be conducted on the basis of the
charge or charges made by the requesting state against the suspect, in accordance
with the provisions and procedures of the law of the prosecuting state.
Article 15
The submission
by the requesting state of a request for prosecution in accordance with paragraph
(a) of the preceding article shall entail the suspension of the measures taken
by it to pursue, investigate and prosecute the suspect whose prosecution is
being requested, with the exception of those required for the purposes of
the judicial cooperation and assistance, or the judicial delegation, sought
by the State requested to conduct the prosecution.
Article 16
- The measures taken in either the requesting State or that in which the
prosecution takes place shall be subject to the law of the State in which
they are taken and they shall have the force accorded to them by that law.
- The requesting State may try or retry a person whose prosecution it has
requested only if the requested State declines to prosecute him.
- The State requested to take proceedings shall in all cases undertake to
notify the requesting State of what action it has taken with regard to the
request and of the outcome of the investigation or prosecution.
Article 17
The State requested
to take proceedings may take all the measures and steps established by its
law with respect to the accused both before the request to take proceedings
reaches it and subsequently.
Article 18
The transfer
of competence for prosecution shall not prejudice the rights of the victim
of the offence, who reserves the right to approach the courts of the requesting
State or the prosecuting State with a view to claiming his civil-law rights
as a result of the offence.
Section IV: Seizure
of assets and proceeds derived from the offence
Article 19
- If it is decided to extradite the requested person, any Contracting State
shall undertake to seize and hand over to the requesting State the property
used and proceeds derived from or relating to the terrorist offence, whether
in the possession of the person whose extradition is sought or that of a
third party.
- Once it has been established that they relate to the terrorist offence,
the items indicated in the preceding paragraph shall be surrendered even
if the person to be extradited is not handed over because he has absconded
or died or for any other reason.
- The provisions of the two preceding paragraphs shall be without prejudice
to the rights of any Contracting State or of bona fide third parties in
the property or proceeds in question.
Article 20
The State requested
to hand over property and proceeds may take all the precautionary measures
necessary to discharge its obligation to hand them over. It may also retain
such property or proceeds on a temporary basis if they are required for pending
criminal proceedings or may, for the same reason, hand them over to the requesting
State on condition that they are returned.
Section V: Exchange
of evidence
Article 21
Contracting
States shall undertake to have the evidence of any terrorist offence committed
in their territory against another Contracting State examined by their competent
agencies, and they may seek the assistance of any other Contracting State
in doing so. They shall take the necessary measures to preserve such evidence
and ensure its legal validity. They alone shall examination to the State against
whose interests the offence was committed, and the Contracting State or States
whose assistance is sought shall not pass this information to any third party.
Part Three: Mechanisms
for Implementing Cooperation
Chapter I:
Extradition Procedures
Article 22
Requests for
extradition shall be made between the competent authorities in the Contracting
States directly, through their ministries of justice or the equivalent or
through the diplomatic channel.
Article 23
The request
for extradition shall be made in writing and shall be accompanied by the following:
- The original or an authenticated copy of the indictment or detention order
or any other documents having the same effect and issued in accordance with
the procedure laid down in the law of the requesting State;
- A statement of the offences for which extradition is requested, showing
the time and place of their commission, their legal designation and a reference
to the legal provisions applicable thereto, together with a copy of the
relevant provisions;
- As accurate a description as possible of the person whose extradition
is sought, together with any other information that may serve to establish
his identity and nationality.
Article 24
- The judicial authorities in the requesting State may apply to the requested
State by any of the means of written communication for the provisional detention
of the person being sought pending the presentation of the request for extradition.
- In this case, the State from which extradition is requested may detain
the person being sought on a provisional basis. If the request for extraction
is not presented together with the necessary documents specified in the
preceding article, the person whose extradition is being sought may not
be detained for more than 30 days from the date of his arrest.
Article 25
The requesting
State shall submit a request accompanied by the documents specified in article
23 of this Convention. If the requested State determines that the request
is in order, its competent authorities shall grant the request in accordance
with its own law and its decision shall be promptly communicated to the requesting
State.
Article 26
- In all of the cases stipulated in the two preceding articles, the period
of provisional detention shall not exceed 60 days from the date of arrest.
- During the period specified in the preceding paragraph, the possibility
of provisional release is not excluded provided that the State from which
extradition is requested takes any measures it considers necessary to prevent
the escape of the person sought.
- Such release shall not prevent the rearrest of the person concerned or
his extradition if a request for extradition is received subsequently.
Article 27
Should the requested
State consider that it requires supplementary information in order to ascertain
whether the conditions stipulated in this Chapter has been met, it shall notify
the requesting State accordingly and a date for the provision of such information
shall be established.
Article 28
Should the requested
State receive several requests for extradition from different States, either
for the same offence or for different offences, it shall make its decision
having regard to all the circumstances and, in particular, the possibility
of subsequent extradition, the respective dates o when the requests were received,
the relative seriousness of the offences and the place where the offences
were committed.
Chapter II:
Procedures for Judicial Delegation
Article 29
Request relating
to judicial delegations shall contain the following information:
- The authority presenting the request;
- The subject of and reason for the request;
- An exact statement, to the extent possible, of the identity and nationality
of the person concerned;
- A description of the offence in connection with which the request for
a judicial delegation is being made, its legal designation, the penalty
established for its commission, and as much information as possible on the
circumstances so as to facilitate the proper functioning of the judicial
delegation.
Article 30
- The request for a judicial delegation shall be addressed by the Ministry
of Justice of the requesting State to the Ministry of Justice of the requested
State and shall be returned through the same channel.
- In case of urgency, the request for a judicial delegation shall be addressed
by the judicial authorities of the requesting State directly to the judicial
authorities of the requested State, and a copy of the request shall be sent
at the same time to the Ministry of Justice of the requested State. The
request, accompanied by the documents relating to its implementation, shall
be returned through the channel stipulated in the preceding paragraph.
- The request for a judicial delegation may be sent by the judicial authorities
directly to the competent authority in the requested State, and replies
may be forwarded directly through this authority.
Article 31
Requests for
judicial delegation and their accompanying documents must be signed and must
bear the seal of the competent authority or be authenticated by it. Such documents
shall be exempt from all formalities that may be required by the legislation
of the requested State.
Article 32
Should an authority
that receives a request for a judicial delegation not have the competence
to deal with it, it shall automatically refer it to the competent authority
in its State. In the event the request has been sent directly, it shall notify
the requesting State in the same manner.
Article 33
Every refusal
of a request for a judicial delegation must be accompanied by a statement
of the grounds for such refusal.
Chapter III:
Measures for the Protection of Witnesses and Experts
Article 34
If, in the estimation
of a requesting State, the appearance of a witness or expert before its judicial
authority is of particular importance, it shall indicate this fact in its
request. The request or summons to appear shall indicate the approximate amount
of the allowances and the travel and subsistence expenses and shall include
an undertaking to pay them. The requested State shall invite the witness or
expert to appear and shall inform the requesting State of the response.
Article 35
- A witness or an expert who does not comply with a summons to appear shall
not be subject to any penalty or coercive measure, not withstanding any
contrary statement in the summons.
- Where a witness or an expert travels to the territory of the requesting
State of his own accord, he should be summoned to appear in accordance with
the provisions of the domestic legislation of that State.
Article 36
- A witness or an expert shall not be prosecuted, detained or subjected
to any restrictions on his personal liberty in the territory of the requesting
State in respect of any acts or convictions that preceded the person's departure
from the requested State, regardless of his nationality, as long as his
appearance before the judicial authorities of that State is in response
to a summons.
- No witness or expert, regardless of his nationality, who appears before
the judicial authorities of a requesting State in response to a summons
may be prosecuted, detained or subjected to any restriction on his personal
liberty in the territory of that State in respect of any acts or convictions
not specified in the summons and that preceded the person's departure from
the territory of the requested State.
- The immunity stipulated in this article shall lapse if the witness or
expert sought, being free to leave, remains in the territory of the requesting
State for a period of 30 consecutive days after his presence is not longer
required by the judicial authorities or, having left the territory of the
requesting State, has voluntarily returned.
Article 37
- The requesting
State shall take all necessary measures to protect witnesses and experts
from any publicity that might endanger them, their families or their property
as a result of their provision of testimony or expertise and shall, in particular,
guarantee confidentiality with respect to:
- The date, place and means of their arrival in the requesting state;
- Their place of residence, their movements and the places they frequent;
- Their testimony and the information they provide before the competent
judicial authorities.
- The requesting State shall undertake to provide the necessary protection
for the security of witnesses and experts and of members of their families
that is required by their situation, the circumstances of the case in connection
with which they are sought and the types of risks that can be anticipated.
Article 38
- Where a witness or expert whose appearance, is sought by a requesting State
is in custody in the requested State, he may be temporarily transferred to
the location of the hearing where he is requested to provide his testimony
under conditions and at times to be determined by the requested State. Such
transfer may be refused if:
- The witness or expert in custody objects;
- His presence is required for criminal proceedings in the territory of
the requested State;
- His transfer would prolong the term of his detention;
- There are considerations militating against his transfer.
- The witness or expert thus transferred shall continue to be held in custody
in the territory of the requesting State until such time as he is returned
to the requested State unless the latter State requests that he be released.
Part Four: Final
Provisions
Article 39
This Convention is subject to ratification, acceptance or approval by the signatory States, and instruments of ratification, acceptance or approval shall be deposited with the General Secretariat of the League of Arab States within 30 days of the date of such ratification, acceptance or approval. The General Secretariat shall notify member States of the deposit of each such instrument and of its date.
Article 40
- This convention shall enter into force on the thirtieth day after the date as of which instruments of ratification, acceptance or approval have been deposited by seven Arab States.
- This Convention shall enter into force for any other Arab State only after the instrument of ratification, acceptance or approval has been deposited and 30 days have elapsed from the date of that deposit.
Article 41
No Contracting State may make any reservation that explicitly or implicitly violates the provisions of this Convention or is incompatible with its objectives.
Article 42
A contracting State may denounce this Convention only by written request addressed to the Secretary-General of the League of Arab States.
Denunciation shall take effect six months from the date the request is addressed to the Secretary-General of the League of Arab States.
The provisions of this Convention shall remain in force in respect of requests submitted before this period expires.
Done at Cairo,
this twenty-second day of April 1998, in a single copy, which shall be deposited
with the General Secretariat of the League of Arab States. A certified copy
shall be kept at the General Secretariat of the Council of Arab Ministers of
the Interior, and certified copies shall be transmitted to each of the parties
that are signatories to this Convention or that accede hereto.
In witness whereof, the Arab Ministers of the Interior and Ministers of Justice have signed this Convention on behalf of their respective states.
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