{"kind":"expression","expression":{"expr_id":"53","doc_id":"53","label":"1997 Revision","is_as_enacted":"f","commenced_on":null,"superseded_on":null,"valid_from":null,"valid_to":null,"is_current":"t","incorporating":null,"akn_expr_iri":"\/akn\/ky\/act\/1969\/6\/eng@1997-01-01","akn_envelope":"{\"_canary\": {\"iri\": {\"work\": \"\/akn\/ky\/act\/1969\/6\", \"expression\": \"\/akn\/ky\/act\/1969\/6\/eng@1997-01-01\", \"manifestation\": \"\/akn\/ky\/act\/1969\/6\/eng@1997-01-01.pdf\"}, \"pdf\": {\"md5\": \"ceeb7a39fe3d20ce113399ac7215c1a1\", \"path\": \"\/Users\/q\/kyleg-data\/working\/PRINCIPAL\/1969\/1969-0006\/1969-0006_1997 Revision.pdf\", \"pages\": 26, \"filename\": \"1969-0006_1997 Revision.pdf\"}, \"errors\": [], \"extraction\": {\"model\": null, \"stats\": {\"word_count\": 7859, \"paragraph_count\": 12, \"text_char_count\": 48094}, \"usage\": null, \"method\": \"pymupdf-text\", \"version\": \"kyleg-akn-1.0\", \"extracted_at\": \"2026-06-22\"}, \"classification\": \"text_layer\", \"validation_flags\": [], \"docai_processor_id\": null}, \"akomaNtoso\": {\"act\": {\"body\": [{\"eId\": \"sec_n1\", \"num\": null, \"text\": \"10. Right of diplomatic agents and consular officers to administer oaths and do notarial acts 11. FIRST SCHEDULE PROVISIONS OF VIENNA CONVENTION HAVING THE FORCE OF LAW IN THE ISLANDS SECOND SCHEDULE PROVISIONS FOR GIVING EFFECT TO OTHER AGREEMENTS Consular Relations Law (1997 Revision) CONSULAR RELATIONS LAW (1997 Revision) ENACTED by the Legislature of the Cayman Islands.\", \"element\": \"section\", \"heading\": null}, {\"eId\": \"sec_1\", \"num\": \"1.\", \"text\": \"Short title 1. This Law may be cited as the Consular Relations Law (1997 Revision).\", \"element\": \"section\", \"heading\": null}, {\"eId\": \"sec_2\", \"num\": \"2.\", \"text\": \"Interpretation 2. For the purposes of section 5, 6 or 7 a ship, and for the purposes of section 5 an aircraft, shall be treated as belonging to a State in such circumstances as may be specified by regulation under that section; and different circumstances may be so specified with respect to different classes of ship or aircraft.\", \"element\": \"section\", \"heading\": null}, {\"eId\": \"sec_3\", \"num\": \"3.\", \"text\": \"Application of Vienna Convention 3. (1) Subject to subsections (2) to (10) and 4 (2), the provisions set out in the First Schedule (being Articles or parts of Articles of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations signed in 1963) shall have the force of law in the Islands and shall, for that purpose, be construed in accordance with subsections (2) to (10). (2) In those provisions \u2014 \u201cauthorities of the receiving State\u201d shall be construed as including any constable and any person exercising a power of entry to any premises under any enactment; Consular Relations Law \u201cgrave crime\u201d shall be construed as meaning any offence punishable (on first conviction) with imprisonment for a term that may extend to five years or with a more severe sentence; \u201cMinistry of Foreign Affairs\u201d shall be construed as meaning the Department of the Secretary of State concerned; \u201cnational of the receiving State\u201d shall be construed as meaning a British Citizen, a British Dependant Territories Citizen, a British Overseas Citizen, a British subject or a British protected person within the meaning of the British Nationality Act, 1981 of the United Kingdom [U.K. Act 1981 c.61]. (3) The reference in paragraph 2 of Article 17 to any privileges and immunities accorded by customary international law or by international agreements shall be construed as a reference to any privileges and immunities conferred under the International Organisations Act 1968 of the United Kingdom [U.K. Act 1968 c. 48]. (4) The references in Article 44 to matters connected with the exercise of the functions of members of a consular post shall be construed as references to matters connected with the exercise of consular functions by consular officers or consular employees. (5) For the purposes of Article 45 and that Article as applied by Article 58, a waiver shall be deemed to have been expressed by a State if it has been expressed by the head, or any person for the time being performing the functions of head, of the diplomatic mission of that State or, if there is no such mission, of the consular post concerned. (6) Article 48 shall not effect any agreement made between the Islands and any other State before the 17th July, 1969 and shall not be taken to prevent the making of any such agreement after such date. (7) Articles 50, 51, 52, 54, 62 and 67 shall be construed as granting any privilege or immunity which they require to be granted. (8) The reference in Article 57 to the privileges and immunities provided in Chapter II shall be construed as referring to those provided in Section II of that chapter. (9) The reference in Article 70 to the rules of international law concerning diplomatic relations shall be construed as a reference to section 2(1) and Part II of the Diplomatic Privileges and Immunities Law (1997 Revision). (10) The references in Article 71 to additional privileges and immunities that may be granted by the receiving State or privileges and immunities so far as these are granted by the receiving State shall be construed as referring to such privileges and immunities as may be specified by the Governor by regulation. Consular Relations Law (1997 Revision)\", \"element\": \"section\", \"heading\": null}, {\"eId\": \"sec_4\", \"num\": \"4.\", \"text\": \"Restrictions of privileges and immunities 4. If it appears to the Governor that the privileges and immunities accorded to a consular post of the Islands in a territory of any State, or to persons connected with such a consular post, are less than those conferred by this Law on a consular post of that State or on persons connected with such a consular post, the Governor may, by regulation, withdraw such of the privileges and immunities so conferred from all or any of the consular posts of that State or from such persons connected therewith as appears to the Governor to be proper.\", \"element\": \"section\", \"heading\": null}, {\"eId\": \"sec_5\", \"num\": \"5.\", \"text\": \"Agreements providing for additional or reduced privileges and immunities 5. (1) Where any agreement made between the Islands and any other State provides for according to consular posts and persons connected with them privileges and immunities not accorded to them by this Law, the Governor may, by regulation, exercise, with respect to the consular posts of that State and persons connected with them, the powers specified in the Second Schedule so far as may be necessary to give effect to that agreement. (2) Where any agreement made between the Islands and any other State provides for according to consular posts and persons connected with them some but not all of the privileges and immunities accorded to them by this Law, the Governor may, by regulation, provide for excluding, with respect to consular posts of that State and persons connected with them, any of those privileges and immunities which are not provided for by the agreement.\", \"element\": \"section\", \"heading\": null}, {\"eId\": \"sec_6\", \"num\": \"6.\", \"text\": \"Civil jurisdiction concerning service on board ship or aircraft 6. The Governor may, by regulation, make provision for excluding or limiting the jurisdiction of any court in the Islands to entertain proceedings relating to the remuneration or any contract of service of the master, commander or a member of the crew of any ship or aircraft belonging to a State specified in the regulations, except where a consular officer of that State has been notified of the intention to invoke the jurisdiction of that court and has not objected within such time as may be specified by or under the regulations.\", \"element\": \"section\", \"heading\": null}, {\"eId\": \"sec_7\", \"num\": \"7.\", \"text\": \"Jurisdiction over offences committed on board ship 7. (1) The Governor may, by regulation, make provision for securing that, where an offence is alleged to have been committed on board any ship by the master or a member of the crew and the ship belongs to a State specified in the regulations, proceedings for the offence instituted otherwise than at the request or with the consent of a consular officer of that State are not to be entertained by any court in the Islands, unless \u2014 (a) the offence is alleged to have been committed by or against a person who is a national of the receiving State or against a person other than the master or a member of the crew; Consular Relations Law (b) the offence is one involving the tranquillity or safety of a port, or the law relating to safety of life at sea, public health, oil pollution, wireless telegraphy, immigration or customs or is of any other description specified in the regulations; or (c) the offence is a grave crime. (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), an offence which affects the property of any person shall be deemed to have been committed against him. (3) For the purposes of subsection (1), any document purporting to be signed by or on behalf of a consular officer and stating that he has requested or consented to the institution of any proceedings shall be sufficient proof of that fact unless the contrary is shown.\", \"element\": \"section\", \"heading\": null}, {\"eId\": \"sec_8\", \"num\": \"8.\", \"text\": \"Detention on board ship for disciplinary offences 8. The Governor may, by regulation, designate any State for the purposes of this section; and where a State is so designated, a member of the crew of a ship belonging to that State who is detained in custody on board for a disciplinary offence shall not be deemed to be unlawfully detained unless \u2014 (a) his detention is unlawful under the laws of that State or the conditions of detention are inhumane or unjustifiably severe; or (b) there is reasonable cause for believing that his life or liberty will be endangered for reasons of race, nationality, political opinion or religion, in any country to which the ship is likely to go.\", \"element\": \"section\", \"heading\": null}, {\"eId\": \"sec_9\", \"num\": \"9.\", \"text\": \"Refund of customs duty on hydrocarbon oils 9. (1) The Treasury may authorise the Collector of Customs to make, if he thinks fit, arrangements for securing the refund of customs duty paid on any hydrocarbon oils (within the meaning of the Customs Law (1997 Revision)) which are \u2014 (a) bought in the Islands; and (b) used for such purpose that, had they been imported for that use, exemption from customs duty thereon would have been required to be granted by virtue of Article 50 in the First Schedule or regulations made under section 5(1). (2) Any arrangements made under subsection (1) may impose conditions subject to which any refund is to be made. (3) Any amount refunded under arrangements made under subsection (1) shall be defrayed out of the moneys standing to the credit of the General Account of the Collector of Customs. Consular Relations Law (1997 Revision)\", \"element\": \"section\", \"heading\": null}, {\"eId\": \"sec_10\", \"num\": \"10.\", \"text\": \"Right of diplomatic agents and consular officers to administer oaths and do notarial acts in certain cases 10. (1) A diplomatic agent or consular officer of any State may, if authorised to do so under the laws of that State, administer oaths, take affidavits and do notarial acts \u2014 (a) required by a person for use in that State or under the laws thereof; or (b) otherwise required by a national of that State but not for use in the Islands except under the laws of some other country. (2) The Governor may, by regulation, exclude or restrict the provisions of subsection (1) in relation to the diplomatic agents or consular officers of any State if it appears to him that, in any territory of that State, diplomatic agents or consular officers of the Islands are not permitted to perform functions corresponding in nature and extent to those authorised by that subsection. (3) In this section \u2014 \u201cdiplomatic agent\u201d has the same meaning as in section 2(1) of the Diplomatic Immunity and Privileges Law (1997 Revision).\", \"element\": \"section\", \"heading\": null}, {\"eId\": \"sec_11\", \"num\": \"11.\", \"text\": \"Evidence 11. If, in any proceedings, any question arises whether or not any person is entitled to any privilege or immunity under this Law, a certificate issued by or under the authority of the Governor stating any fact relating to that question shall be conclusive evidence of that fact. Consular Relations Law (1997 Revision) FIRST SCHEDULE FIRST SCHEDULE PROVISIONS OF VIENNA CONVENTION HAVING THE FORCE OF LAW IN THE ISLANDS Article 1 Definitions 1. For the purposes of the present Convention, the following expressions shall have the meanings hereunder assigned to them- (a) \u201cconsular post\u201d means any consulate-general, consulate, vice-consulate or consular agency; (b) \u201cconsular district\u201d means the area assigned to a consular post for the exercise of consular functions; (c) \u201chead of consular post\u201d means the person charged with the duty of acting in that capacity; (d) \u201cconsular officer\u2019 means any person including the head of a consular post, entrusted in that capacity with the exercise of consular functions: (e) \u201cconsular employee\u201d means any person employed in the administrative or technical service of a consular post; (f) \u201cmember of the service staff\u201d means any person employed in the domestic service of a consular post: (g) \u201cmembers of the consular post\u201d means consular officers, consular employees and members of the service staff; (h) \u201cmembers of the consular staff\u201d means consular officers, other than the head of a consular post, consular employees and members of the service staff; (i) \u201cmember of the private staff\u201d means a person who is employed exclusively in the private service of a member of the consular post; (j) \u201cconsular premises\u201d means the buildings or parts of buildings and the land ancillary thereto, irrespective of ownership, used exclusively for the purposes of the consular post; (k) \u201cconsular archives\u201d includes all the papers, documents, correspondence, books, films, tapes and registers of the consular post, together with the ciphers and codes, the card-indexes and any article of furniture intended for their protection or safekeeping. 2. Consular officers are of two categories, namely career consular officers and honorary consular officers. The provisions of Chapter II of the present Convention apply to consular posts headed by career consular officers; the provisions of Chapter III govern consular posts headed by honorary consular officers. FIRST SCHEDULE Consular Relations Law 3. The particular status of members of the consular posts who are nationals or permanent residents of the receiving State is governed by Article 71 of the present Convention. CHAPTER I. - CONSULAR RELATIONS IN GENERAL Article 5 Consular Functions Consular Functions consist in- (a) protecting in the receiving State the interests of the sending State and of its nationals, both individuals and bodies corporate, within the limits permitted by international law; (b) furthering the development of commercial, economic, cultural and scientific relations between the sending State and the receiving State and otherwise promoting friendly relations between them in accordance with the provisions of the present Convention; (c) ascertaining by all lawful means conditions and developments in the commercial, economic, cultural and scientific life of the receiving State, reporting thereon to the Government of the sending State and giving information to persons interested; (d) issuing passports and travel documents to nationals of the sending State, and visas or appropriate documents to persons wishing to travel to the sending State; (e) helping and assisting nationals, both individuals and bodies corporate, of the sending State; (f) acting as notary and civil registrar and in capacities of a similar kind, and performing certain functions of an administrative nature, provided that there is nothing contrary thereto in the laws and regulations of the receiving State; (g) safeguarding the interests of nationals, both individuals and bodies corporate, of the sending State in cases of succession mortis causa in the territory of the receiving State; in accordance with the laws and regulations of the receiving State: (h) safeguarding, within the limits imposed by the laws and regulations of the receiving State, the interests of minors and other persons lacking full capacity who are nationals of the sending State, particularly where any guardianship or trusteeship is required with respect to such persons; (i) subject to the practices and procedures obtaining in the receiving State, representing or arranging appropriate representation for nationals of the sending State before the tribunals and other authorities of the receiving State, for the purpose of obtaining, in accordance with the laws and regulations of the receiving State, provisional measures for the preservation of the rights and interests of these nationals, where, because Consular Relations Law (1997 Revision) FIRST SCHEDULE of the absence or any other reason, such nationals are unable at the proper time to assume the defence of their rights and interests; (j) transmitting judicial and extra-judicial documents or executing letters rogatory or commissions to take evidence for the courts of the sending State in accordance with international agreements in force or, in the absence of such international agreements, in any other manner compatible with the laws and regulations of the receiving State; (k) exercising rights of supervision and inspection provided for in the laws and regulations of the sending State in respect of vessels having the nationality of the sending State, and of aircraft registered in that State, and in respect of their crews; (l) extending assistance to vessels and aircraft mentioned in sub-paragraph (k) of this Article and to their crews, taking statements regarding the voyage of a vessel, examining and stamping the ship\u2019s papers, and, without prejudice to the powers of the authorities of the receiving State, conducting investigations into any incidents which occurred during the voyage, and settling disputes of any kind between the master, the officers and the seamen in so far as this may be authorised by the laws and regulations of the sending State; (m) performing any other functions entrusted to a consular post by the sending State which are not prohibited by the laws and regulations of the receiving State or to which no objection is taken by the receiving State or which are referred to in the international agreements in force between the sending State and the receiving State. Article 15 Temporary Exercise of the Functions of the Head of a Consular Post 1. If the head of a consular post is unable to carry out his functions or the position of head of consular post is vacant, an acting head of post may act provisionally as head of the consular post. 2. The full name of the acting head of post shall be notified either by the diplomatic mission of the sending State or, if that State has no such mission in the receiving State, by the head of the consular post, or, if he is unable to do so, by any competent authority of the sending State, to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the receiving State or to the authority designated by that Ministry. As a general rule, this notification shall be given in advance. The receiving State may make the admission as acting head of post of a person who is neither a diplomatic agent nor a consular officer of the sending State in the receiving State conditional on its consent. 3. The competent authorities of the receiving State shall afford assistance and protection to the acting head of the post. While he is in charge of the post, the provisions of the present Convention shall apply to him on the same basis as to the head of the consular post concerned. The receiving State shall not, however, be obliged to grant to an FIRST SCHEDULE Consular Relations Law acting head of post any facility, privilege or immunity which the head of the consular post enjoys only subject to conditions not fulfilled by the acting head of post. 4. When in the circumstances referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article, a member of the diplomatic staff of the diplomatic mission of the sending State in the receiving State is designated by the sending State as an acting head of post, he shall, if the receiving State does not object thereto, continue to enjoy diplomatic privileges and immunities. Article 17 Performance of Diplomatic Acts by Consular Officers 1. In a State where the sending State has no diplomatic mission and is not represented by a diplomatic mission of a third State, a consular officer may, with the consent of the receiving State, and without affecting his consular status, be authorised to perform diplomatic acts. The performances of such acts by a consular officer shall not confer upon him any right to claim diplomatic privileges and immunities. 2. A consular officer may, after notification addressed to the receiving State, act as representative of the sending State to any inter-governmental organisation. When so acting, he shall be entitled to enjoy any privileges and immunities accorded to such a representative by customary international law or by international agreements; however, in respect of the performance by him of any consular function, he shall not be entitled to any greater immunity from jurisdiction than that to which a consular officer is entitled under the present Convention. CHAPTER II-FACILITIES, PRIVILEGES AND IMMUNITIES RELATING TO CONSULAR POSTS, CAREER CONSULAR OFFICERS AND OTHER MEMBERS OF A CONSULAR POST Section 1.-Facilities, Privileges and Immunities Relating to a Consular Post Article 31 Inviolability of the Consular Premises 1. Consular premises shall be inviolable to the extent provided in this Article. 2. The Authorities of the receiving State shall not enter that part of the consular premises which is used exclusively for the purpose of the work of the consular post except with the consent of the head of the consular post or of his designee or of the head of the diplomatic mission of the sending State. The consent of the head of the consular post may, however, be assumed in case of fire or disaster requiring prompt protective action. 3. The consular premises, their furnishings, the property of the consular post and its means of transport shall be immune from any form of requisition for purposes of national defence or public utility. If expropriation is necessary for such purposes, all possible steps shall be taken to avoid impeding the performance of consular functions, and prompt, adequate and effective compensation shall be paid to the sending State. Consular Relations Law (1997 Revision) FIRST SCHEDULE Article 32 Exemption from Taxation of Consular Premises 1. Consular premises and the residence of the career head of consular post of which the sending State or any person acting on its behalf is the owner or lessee shall be exempt from all national, regional or municipal dues and taxes whatsoever, other than such as represent payment for specific services rendered. 2. The exemption from taxation referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article shall not apply to such dues and taxes if, under the law of the receiving State, they are payable by the person who contracted with the sending State or with the person acting on its behalf. Article 33 Inviolability of the Consular Archives and Documents The consular archives and documents shall be inviolable at all times and wherever they may be. Article 35 Freedom of Communication 1. The receiving State shall permit and protect freedom of communication on the part of the consular post for all official purposes. In communicating with the Government, the diplomatic missions and other consular posts, wherever situated, of the sending State, the consular post may employ all appropriate means, including diplomatic or consular couriers, diplomatic or consular bags and messages in code or cipher. However, the consular post may install and use a wireless transmitter only with the consent of the receiving State. 2. The official correspondence of the consular post shall be inviolable. Official correspondence means all correspondence relating to the consular post and its functions. 3. The consular bag shall be neither opened nor detained. Nevertheless, if the competent authorities of the receiving State have serious reason to believe that the bag contains something other than the correspondence, documents or articles referred to in paragraph 4 of this Article, they may request that the bag be opened in their presence by an authorised representative of the sending State. If this request is refused by the authorities of the sending State, the bag shall be returned to its place of origin. 4. The packages constituting the consular bag shall bear visible external marks of their character and may contain only official correspondence and documents or articles intended exclusively for official use. 5. The consular courier shall be provided with an official document indicating his status and the number of packages constituting the consular bag. Except with the consent of the receiving State he shall be neither a national of the receiving State, nor, unless he is a national of the sending State, a permanent resident of the receiving State. In the FIRST SCHEDULE Consular Relations Law performance of his functions he shall be protected by the receiving State. He shall enjoy personal inviolability and shall not be liable to any form of arrest or detention. 6. The sending State, its diplomatic missions and its consular posts may designate consular couriers ad hoc. In such cases the provisions of paragraph 5 of this Article shall also apply except that the immunities therein mentioned shall cease to apply when such a courier has delivered to the consignee the consular bag in his charge. 7. A consular bag may be entrusted to the captain of a ship or of a commercial aircraft scheduled to land at an authorised port of entry. He shall be provided with an official document indicating the number of packages constituting the bag, but he shall not be considered to be a consular courier. By arrangement with the appropriate local authorities, the consular post may send one of its members to take possession of the bag directly and freely from the captain of the ship or of the aircraft. Consular Relations Law (1997 Revision) FIRST SCHEDULE Article 39 Consular Fees and Charges 1. The consular post may levy in the territory of the receiving State the fees and charges provided by the laws and regulations of the sending State for consular acts. 2. The sums collected in the form of the fees and charges referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article, and the receipts for such fees and charges, shall be exempt from all dues and taxes in the receiving State. Section II - Facilities, Privileges and Immunities Relating to Career Consular Officers and Other Members of a Consular Post Article 41 Personal Inviolability of Consular Officers 1. Consular officers shall not be liable to arrest or detention pending trial, except in the case of a grave crime and pursuant to a decision by the competent judicial authority. 2. Except in the case specified in paragraph 1 of this Article consular officers shall not be committed to prison or liable to any other form of restriction on their personal freedom save in execution of a judicial decision of final effect. Article 43 Immunity from Jurisdiction 1. Consular officers and consular employees shall not be amenable to the jurisdiction of the judicial or administrative authorities of the receiving State in respect of acts performed in the exercise of consular functions. 2. The provisions of paragraph 1 of this Article shall not, however, apply in respect of a civil action either- (a) arising out of a contract concluded by a consular officer or a consular employee in which he did not contract expressly or impliedly as an agent of the sending State; or (b) by a third party for damage arising from an accident in the receiving State caused by a vehicle, vessel or aircraft. Article 44 Liability to Give Evidence 1. Members of a consular post may be called upon to attend as witnesses in the courts of judicial or administrative proceedings. A consular employee or a member of the service staff shall not, except in the cases mentioned in paragraph 3 of this Article, decline to give evidence. If a consular officer should decline to do so, no coercive measure or penalty may be applied to him. FIRST SCHEDULE Consular Relations Law 2. The authority requiring the evidence of a consular officer shall avoid interference with the performance of his functions. It may, when possible, take such evidence at his residence or at the consular post or accept a statement from him in writing. 3. Members of a consular post are under no obligation to give evidence concerning matters connected with the exercise of their functions or to produce official correspondence and documents relating thereto. They are also entitled to decline to give evidence as expert witnesses with regard to the law of the sending State. Article 45 Waiver of Privileges and Immunities 1. The sending State may waive, with regard to a member of the consular post any of the privileges and immunities provided for in Articles 41, 43 and 44. 2. The waiver shall in all cases be express, except as provided in paragraph 3 of this Article, and shall be communicated to the receiving State in writing. 3. The initiation of proceedings by a consular officer or a consular employee in a matter where he might enjoy immunity from jurisdiction under Article 43 shall preclude him from invoking immunity from jurisdiction and in respect of any counter-claim directly connected with the principal claim. 4. The waiver of immunity from jurisdiction for the purposes of civil or administrative proceedings shall not be deemed to imply the waiver of immunity from the measures of execution resulting from the judicial decision; in respect of such measures, a separate waiver shall be necessary. Article 48 Social Security Exemption 1. Subject to the provisions of paragraph 3 of this Article, members of the consular post with respect to services rendered by them for the sending State and members of their families forming part of their households, shall be exempt from social security provisions which may be in force in the receiving State. 2. The exemption provided for in paragraph 1 of this Article shall apply also to members of the private staff who are in the sole employ of members of the consular post, on condition- (a) that they are not nationals of or permanently resident in the receiving State; and (b) that they are covered by the social security provisions which are in force in the sending State or a third State. 3. Members of the consular post who employ persons to whom the exemption provided for in paragraph 2 of this Article does not apply shall observe the obligations which the social security provisions of the receiving State impose upon employers. Consular Relations Law (1997 Revision) FIRST SCHEDULE 4. The exemption provided for in paragraphs 1 and 2 of this Article shall not preclude voluntary participation in the social security system of the receiving State, provided that such participation is permitted by that State. Article 49 Exemption from Taxation 1. Consular officers and consular employees and members of their families forming part of their households shall be exempt from all dues and taxes, personal or real, national, regional or municipal, except- (a) indirect taxes of a kind which are normally incorporated in the price of goods or services; (b) dues or taxes on private immovable property situated in the territory of the receiving State subject to the provisions of Article 32; (c) estate, succession or inheritance duties and duties on transfers, levied by the receiving State, subject to the provisions of paragraph (b) of Article 51; (d) dues and taxes on private income, including capital gains, having its source in the receiving State and capital taxes relating to investments made in commercial or financial undertakings in the receiving State; (e) charges levied for specific services rendered; (f) registration, court or record fees, mortgage dues and stamp duties subject to the provisions of Article 32. 2. Members of the service staff shall be exempt from dues and taxes on the wages which they receive for their services. 3. Members of the consular post who employ persons whose wages or salaries are not exempt from income tax in the receiving State shall observe the obligations which the laws and regulations of that State impose upon employers concerning the levying of income tax. Article 50 Exemption from Customs Duties and Inspection 1. The receiving State shall, in accordance with such laws and regulations as it may adopt, permit entry of and grant exemption from all customs duties, taxes, and related charges other than charges for storage, cartage and similar services, on- (a) articles for the official use of the consular post; (b) articles for the personal use of a consular officer or members of his family forming part of his household, including articles intended for his establishment. The articles intended for consumption shall not exceed the quantities necessary for direct utilisation by the persons concerned. 2. Consular employees shall enjoy the privileges and exemptions specified in paragraph 1 of this Article in respect of articles imported at the time of first installation. FIRST SCHEDULE Consular Relations Law 3. Personal baggage accompanying consular officers and members of their families forming part of their households shall be exempt from inspection. It may be inspected only if there is serious reason to believe that it contains articles other than those referred to in sub-paragraph (b) of paragraph 1 of this Article or articles the import or export of which is prohibited by the laws and regulations of the receiving State or which are subject to its quarantine laws and regulations. Such inspection shall be carried out in the presence of the consular officer or member of his family concerned. Article 51 Estate of a Member of the Consular Post or of a Member of his Family In the event of the death of a member of the consular post or of a member of his family forming part of his household, the receiving State- (a) shall permit the export of the movable property of the deceased, with the exception of any such property acquired in the receiving State the export of which was prohibited at the time of his death; (b) shall not levy national, regional or municipal estate, succession or inheritance duties, and duties on transfers, on movable property the presence of which in the receiving State was due solely to the presence in that State of the deceased as a member of the consular post or as a member of the family of a member of the consular post. Article 52 Exemption from Personal Services and Contributions The receiving State shall exempt members of the consular post and members of their families forming part of their households from all personal services, from all public service of any kind whatsoever, and from military obligations such as those connected with requisitioning, military contributions and billeting. Article 53 Beginning and End of Consular Privileges and Immunities 1. Every member of the consular post shall enjoy the privileges and immunities provided in the present Convention from the moment he enters the territory of the receiving State on proceeding to take up his post, or, if already in its territory, from the moment when he enters on his duties with the consular post. 2. Members of the family of a member of the consular post forming part of his household and members of his private staff shall receive the privileges and immunities provided in the present Convention from the date from which he enjoys privileges and immunities in accordance with paragraph l of this Article or from the date of their entry into the territory of the receiving State or from the date of their becoming a member of such family or private staff, whichever is the latest. Consular Relations Law (1997 Revision) FIRST SCHEDULE 3. When the functions of a member of the consular post have come to an end, his privileges and immunities and those of a member of his family forming part of his household or a member of his private staff shall normally cease at the moment when the person concerned leaves the receiving State or on the expiry of a reasonable period in which to do so, whichever is the sooner, but shall subsist until that time, even in case of armed conflict. In the case of the persons referred to in paragraph 2 of this Article, their privileges and immunities shall come to an end when they cease to belong to the household or to be in the service of a member of the consular post provided however, that if such persons intend leaving the receiving State within a reasonable period thereafter, their privileges and immunities shall subsist until the time of their departure. 4. However, with respect to acts performed by a consular officer or a consular employee in the exercise of his functions, immunity from jurisdiction shall continue to subsist without limitation of time. 5. In the event of the death of a member of the consular post, the members of his family forming part of his household shall continue to enjoy the privileges and immunities accorded to them until they leave the receiving State or until the expiry of a reasonable period enabling them to do so, whichever is the sooner. Article 54 Obligations of Third State 1. If a consular officer passes through or is in the territory of a third State, which has granted him a visa if a visa was necessary, while proceeding to take up or return to his post or when returning to the sending State, the third State shall accord to him all immunities provided for by the other Articles of the present Convention as may be required to ensure his transit or return. The same shall apply in the case of any member of his family forming part of his household enjoying such privileges and immunities who are accompanying the consular officer or travelling separately to join him or to return to the sending State. 2. In circumstances similar to those specified in paragraph 1 of this Article, third States shall not hinder the transit through their territory of other members of the consular post or of members of their families forming part of their households. 3. Third States shall accord to official correspondence and to other official communications in transit, including messages in code or cipher, the same freedom and protection as the receiving State is bound to accord under the present Convention. They shall accord to consular couriers who have been granted a visa, if a visa was necessary, and to consular bags in transit, the same inviolability and protection as the receiving State is bound to accord under the present Convention. 4. The obligations of third States under paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of this Article shall also apply to the persons mentioned respectively in those paragraphs, and to official communications and to consular bags, whose presence in the territory of the third State is due to force majeure. FIRST SCHEDULE Consular Relations Law Article 55 Respect for the Laws and Regulations of the Receiving State 2. The consular premises shall not be used in any manner incompatible with the exercise of consular functions. 3. The provisions of paragraph 2 of this Article shall not exclude the possibility of offices of other institutions or agencies being installed in part of the building in which the consular premises are situated, provided that the premises assigned to them are separate from those used by the consular post. In that event, the said offices shall not, for the purposes of the present convention, be considered to form part of the consular premises. Article 57 Special Provisions Concerning Private Gainful Occupation 2. Privileges and immunities provided in this Chapter shall not be accorded- (a) to consular employees or to members of the service staff who carry on any private gainful occupation in the receiving State; (b) to members of the family of a person referred to in subparagraph (a) of this paragraph or to members of his private staff; (c) to members of the family of a member of a consular post who themselves carry on any private gainful occupation in the receiving State. Consular Relations Law (1997 Revision) FIRST SCHEDULE CHAPTER III-REGIME RELATING TO HONORARY CONSULAR OFFICERS AND CONSULAR POSTS HEADED BY SUCH OFFICERS Article 58 General Provisions Relating to Facilities, Privileges and Immunities 1. Articles 35 and 39, paragraph 3 of Article 54 and paragraphs 2 and 3 of Article 55 shall apply to consular posts headed by an honorary consular officer. In addition, the facilities, privileges and immunities of such consular posts shall be governed by Articles 60, 61 and 62. 2. Article 43, paragraph 3 of Article 44, Articles 45 and 53 shall apply to honorary consular officers. In addition, the facilities, privileges and immunities of such consular officers shall be governed by Articles 66 and 67. 3. Privileges and immunities provided in the present Convention shall not be accorded to members of the family of an honorary consular officer or of a consular employee employed at a consular post headed by an honorary consular officer. Article 60 Exemption from Taxation of Consular Premises 1. Consular premises of a consular post headed by an honorary consular officer of which the sending State is the owner or lessee shall be exempt from all national, regional or municipal dues and taxes whatsoever, other than such as represent payment for specific services rendered. 2. The exemption from taxation referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article shall not apply to such dues and taxes if, under the laws and regulations of the receiving State, they are payable by the person who contracted with the sending State. Article 61 Inviolability of Consular Archives and Documents The consular archives and documents of a consular post headed by an honorary consular officer shall be inviolable at all times and wherever they may be, provided that they are kept separate from other papers and documents and, in particular, from the private correspondence of the head of a consular post and of any person working with him, and from the materials, books or documents relating to their profession or trade. Article 62 Exemption From Customs Duties The receiving State shall, in accordance with such laws and regulations as it may adopt, permit entry of, and grant exemption from all customs duties, taxes, and related charges other than charges for storage, cartage and similar services on the following articles, provided that they are for the official use of a consular post headed by an honorary consular officer: coat-of-arms, flags, sign-boards, seals and stamps, books, official FIRST SCHEDULE Consular Relations Law printed matter, office furniture, office equipment and similar articles supplied by or at the instance of the sending State to the consular post. Article 66 Exemption From Taxation An honorary consular officer shall be exempt from all dues and taxes on the remuneration and emoluments which he receives from the sending State in respect of the exercise of consular functions. Article 67 Exemption from Personal Services And Contributions The receiving State shall exempt honorary consular officers from all personal services and from all public services of any kind whatsoever and from military obligations such as those connected with requisitioning, military contributions and billeting. Consular Relations Law (1997 Revision) FIRST SCHEDULE CHAPTER IV-GENERAL PROVISIONS Article 70 Exercise of Consular Functions by Diplomatic Missions 1. The provisions of the present Convention apply also, so far as the context permits, to the exercise of consular functions by a diplomatic mission. 2. The names of members of a diplomatic mission assigned to the consular section or otherwise charged with the exercise of the consular functions of the mission shall be notified to the Ministry for Foreign Affairs of the receiving State or to the authority designated by that Ministry. 4. The privileges and immunities of the members of a diplomatic mission referred to in paragraph 2 of this Article shall continue to be governed by the rules of international law concerning diplomatic relations. Article 71 Nationals or Permanent Residents of the Receiving State 1. Except in so far as additional facilities, privileges and immunities may be granted by the receiving State, consular officers who are nationals of or permanently resident in the receiving State shall enjoy only immunity from jurisdiction and personal inviolability in respect of official acts performed in the exercise of their functions, and the privilege provided in paragraph 3 of Article 44. 2. Other members of the consular post who are nationals of or permanently resident in the receiving State and members of their families, as well as members of the families of consular officers referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article, shall enjoy facilities, privileges and immunities only in so far as these are granted to them by the receiving State. Those members of the families of members of the consular post and those members of the private staff who are themselves nationals of or permanently resident in the receiving State shall likewise enjoy facilities, privileges and immunities only in so far as these are granted to them by the receiving State. SECOND SCHEDULE Consular Relations Law SECOND SCHEDULE Section 3(1) PROVISIONS FOR GIVING EFFECT TO OTHER AGREEMENTS 1. The like exemption from dues and taxes may be extended to the residence of any member of a consular post as is accorded under Article 32 in the First Schedule I to this Law to the residence of the career head of a consular post. 2. Paragraph 1 of Article 49 in the First Schedule may be extended to members of the service staff. 3. Paragraph 2 of this Article 50 in the First Schedule may be applied as if it were among the Articles mentioned in paragraph 2 of Article 58 in that Schedule, as if the reference to consular employees included members of the service staff and also such members of the families of consular employees or of members of the service staff as form part of their households, and as if the words \u201cin respect of articles imported at the time of first installation\u201d were omitted. Publication in revised form authorised by the Governor in Council this 2nd day of September, 1997. Carmena H. Parsons Clerk of Executive Council\", \"element\": \"section\", \"heading\": null}], \"meta\": {\"notes\": null, \"workflow\": null, \"lifecycle\": {\"source\": \"#cilegis\", \"eventRef\": [{\"eId\": \"e_commence_1997_01_01\", \"date\": \"1997-01-01\", \"type\": \"generation\", \"source\": \"#cilegis\"}]}, \"references\": {\"source\": \"#canary\", \"TLCRole\": [], \"TLCEvent\": [{\"eId\": \"ev_commencement\", \"href\": \"\/akn\/ontology\/canary\/event\/commencement\", \"showAs\": \"commencement\"}], \"TLCPerson\": [], \"TLCConcept\": [{\"eId\": \"inForce\", \"href\": \"\/akn\/ontology\/canary\/concept\/temporal\/in-force\", \"showAs\": \"in force\"}], \"TLCProcess\": [], \"TLCLocation\": [], \"TLCOrganization\": [{\"eId\": \"cilegis\", \"href\": \"\/akn\/ontology\/canary\/organization\/editor\/cilegis\", \"showAs\": \"Cayman Islands legislation mirror (kyleg)\"}]}, \"temporalData\": {\"source\": \"#cilegis\", \"temporalGroup\": [{\"eId\": \"tg_inforce_1997_01_01\", \"timeInterval\": [{\"end\": null, \"start\": \"#e_commence_1997_01_01\", \"duration\": null, \"refersTo\": \"#inForce\"}]}]}, \"classification\": null, \"identification\": {\"source\": \"#cilegis\", \"FRBRWork\": {\"FRBRuri\": \"\/akn\/ky\/act\/1969\/6\", \"FRBRdate\": [{\"date\": \"1997-01-01\", \"name\": \"generation\"}], \"FRBRthis\": \"\/akn\/ky\/act\/1969\/6\/!main\", \"FRBRalias\": [{\"name\": \"cmsId\", \"value\": \"1969-0006\"}], \"FRBRauthor\": [{\"as\": \"#editor\", \"href\": \"\/akn\/ontology\/canary\/organization\/editor\/cilegis\"}], \"FRBRnumber\": \"6 of 1969\", \"FRBRcountry\": \"ky\", \"FRBRsubtype\": \"principal\"}, \"FRBRExpression\": {\"FRBRuri\": \"\/akn\/ky\/act\/1969\/6\/eng@1997-01-01\", \"FRBRdate\": [{\"date\": \"1997-01-01\", \"name\": \"generation\"}], \"FRBRthis\": \"\/akn\/ky\/act\/1969\/6\/eng@1997-01-01\/!main\", \"FRBRauthor\": [{\"as\": \"#editor\", \"href\": \"\/akn\/ontology\/canary\/organization\/editor\/cilegis\"}], \"FRBRlanguage\": \"eng\"}, \"FRBRManifestation\": {\"FRBRuri\": \"\/akn\/ky\/act\/1969\/6\/eng@1997-01-01.xml\", \"FRBRdate\": [{\"date\": \"2026-06-22\", \"name\": \"generation\"}], \"FRBRthis\": \"\/akn\/ky\/act\/1969\/6\/eng@1997-01-01.xml\", \"FRBRauthor\": [{\"as\": \"#editor\", \"href\": \"\/akn\/ontology\/canary\/organization\/editor\/cilegis\"}], \"FRBRformat\": \"application\/xml\"}}}, \"name\": \"act\", \"header\": {\"title\": \"Consular Relations Act\", \"actNumber\": \"6 of 1969\", \"longTitle\": null}}, \"doc\": null, \"bill\": null, \"judgment\": null}}","akn_full_text":"CAYMAN ISLANDS\n\nCONSULAR RELATIONS LAW\n\n(1997 Revision)\nSupplement No. 5 published with Gazette No. 20 of 29th September, 1997.\n\nPage 2\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nc\n\nPUBLISHING DETAILS\nRevised under the authority of the Law Revision Law (19 of 1975).\n\nOriginally enacted-\n\nLaw 6 of 1969-21st February, 1969\n\nRevised this 2nd day of September, 1997.\n\nConsular Relations Law (1997 Revision)\nArrangement of Sections\n\nc\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nPage 3\n\nCAYMAN ISLANDS\n\nCONSULAR RELATIONS LAW\n(1997 Revision)\nArrangement of Sections\nSection\nPage\n1.\nShort title ...................................................................................................................................5\n2.\nInterpretation .............................................................................................................................5\n3.\nApplication of Vienna Convention ..............................................................................................5\n4.\nRestrictions of privileges and immunities ...................................................................................7\n5.\nAgreements providing for additional or reduced privileges and immunities .................................7\n6.\nCivil jurisdiction concerning service on board ship or aircraft......................................................7\n7.\nJurisdiction over offences committed on board ship ...................................................................7\n8.\nDetention on board ship for disciplinary offences .......................................................................8\n9.\nRefund of customs duty on hydrocarbon oils..............................................................................8\n10.\nRight of diplomatic agents and consular officers to administer oaths and do notarial acts\nin certain cases ..........................................................................................................................9\n11.\nEvidence ....................................................................................................................................9\nFIRST SCHEDULE\n11\nPROVISIONS OF VIENNA CONVENTION HAVING THE FORCE OF LAW IN THE ISLANDS\n11\nSECOND SCHEDULE\n26\nPROVISIONS FOR GIVING EFFECT TO OTHER AGREEMENTS\n26\n\nConsular Relations Law (1997 Revision)\nSection 1\n\nc\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nPage 5\n\nCAYMAN ISLANDS\n\nCONSULAR RELATIONS LAW\n(1997 Revision)\nENACTED by the Legislature of the Cayman Islands.\n1.\nShort title\n1.\nThis Law may be cited as the Consular Relations Law (1997 Revision).\n2.\nInterpretation\n2.\nFor the purposes of section 5, 6 or 7 a ship, and for the purposes of section 5 an\naircraft, shall be treated as belonging to a State in such circumstances as may be\nspecified by regulation under that section; and different circumstances may be so\nspecified with respect to different classes of ship or aircraft.\n3.\nApplication of Vienna Convention\n3.\n(1) Subject to subsections (2) to (10) and 4 (2), the provisions set out in the First\nSchedule (being Articles or parts of Articles of the Vienna Convention on\nConsular Relations signed in 1963) shall have the force of law in the Islands\nand shall, for that purpose, be construed in accordance with subsections (2)\nto (10).\n(2) In those provisions \u2014\n\u201cauthorities of the receiving State\u201d shall be construed as including any\nconstable and any person exercising a power of entry to any premises under\nany enactment;\n\nSection 3\nConsular Relations Law\n\nPage 6\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nc\n\n\u201cgrave crime\u201d shall be construed as meaning any offence punishable (on first\nconviction) with imprisonment for a term that may extend to five years or with\na more severe sentence;\n\u201cMinistry of Foreign Affairs\u201d shall be construed as meaning the Department\nof the Secretary of State concerned;\n\u201cnational of the receiving State\u201d shall be construed as meaning a British\nCitizen, a British Dependant Territories Citizen, a British Overseas Citizen, a\nBritish subject or a British protected person within the meaning of the British\nNationality Act, 1981 of the United Kingdom [U.K. Act 1981 c.61].\n(3) The reference in paragraph 2 of Article 17 to any privileges and immunities\naccorded by customary international law or by international agreements shall\nbe construed as a reference to any privileges and immunities conferred under\nthe International Organisations Act 1968 of the United Kingdom [U.K. Act\n1968 c. 48].\n(4) The references in Article 44 to matters connected with the exercise of the\nfunctions of members of a consular post shall be construed as references to\nmatters connected with the exercise of consular functions by consular officers\nor consular employees.\n(5) For the purposes of Article 45 and that Article as applied by Article 58, a\nwaiver shall be deemed to have been expressed by a State if it has been\nexpressed by the head, or any person for the time being performing the\nfunctions of head, of the diplomatic mission of that State or, if there is no such\nmission, of the consular post concerned.\n(6) Article 48 shall not effect any agreement made between the Islands and any\nother State before the 17th July, 1969 and shall not be taken to prevent the\nmaking of any such agreement after such date.\n(7) Articles 50, 51, 52, 54, 62 and 67 shall be construed as granting any privilege\nor immunity which they require to be granted.\n(8) The reference in Article 57 to the privileges and immunities provided in\nChapter II shall be construed as referring to those provided in Section II of that\nchapter.\n(9) The reference in Article 70 to the rules of international law concerning\ndiplomatic relations shall be construed as a reference to section 2(1) and Part\nII of the Diplomatic Privileges and Immunities Law (1997 Revision).\n(10) The references in Article 71 to additional privileges and immunities that may\nbe granted by the receiving State or privileges and immunities so far as these\nare granted by the receiving State shall be construed as referring to such\nprivileges and immunities as may be specified by the Governor by regulation.\n\nConsular Relations Law (1997 Revision)\nSection 4\n\nc\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nPage 7\n\n4.\nRestrictions of privileges and immunities\n4.\nIf it appears to the Governor that the privileges and immunities accorded to a\nconsular post of the Islands in a territory of any State, or to persons connected with\nsuch a consular post, are less than those conferred by this Law on a consular post of\nthat State or on persons connected with such a consular post, the Governor may, by\nregulation, withdraw such of the privileges and immunities so conferred from all or\nany of the consular posts of that State or from such persons connected therewith as\nappears to the Governor to be proper.\n5.\nAgreements providing for additional or reduced privileges and immunities\n5.\n(1) Where any agreement made between the Islands and any other State provides\nfor according to consular posts and persons connected with them privileges\nand immunities not accorded to them by this Law, the Governor may, by\nregulation, exercise, with respect to the consular posts of that State and\npersons connected with them, the powers specified in the Second Schedule so\nfar as may be necessary to give effect to that agreement.\n(2) Where any agreement made between the Islands and any other State provides\nfor according to consular posts and persons connected with them some but not\nall of the privileges and immunities accorded to them by this Law, the\nGovernor may, by regulation, provide for excluding, with respect to consular\nposts of that State and persons connected with them, any of those privileges\nand immunities which are not provided for by the agreement.\n6.\nCivil jurisdiction concerning service on board ship or aircraft\n6.\nThe Governor may, by regulation, make provision for excluding or limiting the\njurisdiction of any court in the Islands to entertain proceedings relating to the\nremuneration or any contract of service of the master, commander or a member of\nthe crew of any ship or aircraft belonging to a State specified in the regulations,\nexcept where a consular officer of that State has been notified of the intention to\ninvoke the jurisdiction of that court and has not objected within such time as may be\nspecified by or under the regulations.\n7.\nJurisdiction over offences committed on board ship\n7.\n(1) The Governor may, by regulation, make provision for securing that, where an\noffence is alleged to have been committed on board any ship by the master or\na member of the crew and the ship belongs to a State specified in the\nregulations, proceedings for the offence instituted otherwise than at the request\nor with the consent of a consular officer of that State are not to be entertained\nby any court in the Islands, unless \u2014\n(a)\nthe offence is alleged to have been committed by or against a person who\nis a national of the receiving State or against a person other than the\nmaster or a member of the crew;\n\nSection 8\nConsular Relations Law\n\nPage 8\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nc\n\n(b) the offence is one involving the tranquillity or safety of a port, or the law\nrelating to safety of life at sea, public health, oil pollution, wireless\ntelegraphy, immigration or customs or is of any other description\nspecified in the regulations; or\n(c)\nthe offence is a grave crime.\n(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), an offence which affects the property of\nany person shall be deemed to have been committed against him.\n(3) For the purposes of subsection (1), any document purporting to be signed by or\non behalf of a consular officer and stating that he has requested or consented to\nthe institution of any proceedings shall be sufficient proof of that fact unless\nthe contrary is shown.\n8.\nDetention on board ship for disciplinary offences\n8.\nThe Governor may, by regulation, designate any State for the purposes of this\nsection; and where a State is so designated, a member of the crew of a ship\nbelonging to that State who is detained in custody on board for a disciplinary\noffence shall not be deemed to be unlawfully detained unless \u2014\n(a)\nhis detention is unlawful under the laws of that State or the conditions of\ndetention are inhumane or unjustifiably severe; or\n(b) there is reasonable cause for believing that his life or liberty will be\nendangered for reasons of race, nationality, political opinion or religion,\nin any country to which the ship is likely to go.\n9.\nRefund of customs duty on hydrocarbon oils\n9.\n(1) The Treasury may authorise the Collector of Customs to make, if he thinks fit,\narrangements for securing the refund of customs duty paid on any hydrocarbon\noils (within the meaning of the Customs Law (1997 Revision)) which are \u2014\n(a)\nbought in the Islands; and\n(b) used for such purpose that, had they been imported for that use,\nexemption from customs duty thereon would have been required to be\ngranted by virtue of Article 50 in the First Schedule or regulations made\nunder section 5(1).\n(2) Any arrangements made under subsection (1) may impose conditions subject\nto which any refund is to be made.\n(3) Any amount refunded under arrangements made under subsection (1) shall be\ndefrayed out of the moneys standing to the credit of the General Account of\nthe Collector of Customs.\n\nConsular Relations Law (1997 Revision)\nSection 10\n\nc\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nPage 9\n\n10.\nRight of diplomatic agents and consular officers to administer oaths and\ndo notarial acts in certain cases\n10. (1) A diplomatic agent or consular officer of any State may, if authorised to do so\nunder the laws of that State, administer oaths, take affidavits and do\nnotarial acts \u2014\n(a)\nrequired by a person for use in that State or under the laws thereof; or\n(b) otherwise required by a national of that State but not for use in the\nIslands except under the laws of some other country.\n(2) The Governor may, by regulation, exclude or restrict the provisions of\nsubsection (1) in relation to the diplomatic agents or consular officers of any\nState if it appears to him that, in any territory of that State, diplomatic agents\nor consular officers of the Islands are not permitted to perform functions\ncorresponding in nature and extent to those authorised by that subsection.\n(3) In this section \u2014\n\u201cdiplomatic agent\u201d has the same meaning as in section 2(1) of the Diplomatic\nImmunity and Privileges Law (1997 Revision).\n11.\nEvidence\n11. If, in any proceedings, any question arises whether or not any person is entitled to\nany privilege or immunity under this Law, a certificate issued by or under the\nauthority of the Governor stating any fact relating to that question shall be\nconclusive evidence of that fact.\n\nConsular Relations Law (1997 Revision)\nFIRST SCHEDULE\n\nc\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nPage 11\n\n FIRST SCHEDULE\nPROVISIONS OF VIENNA CONVENTION HAVING THE FORCE OF\nLAW IN THE ISLANDS\nArticle 1\nDefinitions\n1.\nFor the purposes of the present Convention, the following expressions shall have the\nmeanings hereunder assigned to them-\n(a)\n\u201cconsular post\u201d means any consulate-general, consulate, vice-consulate\nor consular agency;\n(b) \u201cconsular district\u201d means the area assigned to a consular post for the\nexercise of consular functions;\n(c)\n\u201chead of consular post\u201d means the person charged with the duty of\nacting in that capacity;\n(d) \u201cconsular officer\u2019 means any person including the head of a consular\npost, entrusted in that capacity with the exercise of consular functions:\n(e)\n\u201cconsular employee\u201d means any person employed in the administrative\nor technical service of a consular post;\n(f)\n\u201cmember of the service staff\u201d means any person employed in the\ndomestic service of a consular post:\n(g) \u201cmembers of the consular post\u201d means consular officers, consular\nemployees and members of the service staff;\n(h) \u201cmembers of the consular staff\u201d means consular officers, other than the\nhead of a consular post, consular employees and members of the service\nstaff;\n(i)\n\u201cmember of the private staff\u201d means a person who is employed\nexclusively in the private service of a member of the consular post;\n(j)\n\u201cconsular premises\u201d means the buildings or parts of buildings and the\nland ancillary thereto, irrespective of ownership, used exclusively for the\npurposes of the consular post;\n(k) \u201cconsular archives\u201d includes all the papers, documents, correspondence,\nbooks, films, tapes and registers of the consular post, together with the\nciphers and codes, the card-indexes and any article of furniture intended\nfor their protection or safekeeping.\n2.\nConsular officers are of two categories, namely career consular officers and\nhonorary consular officers. The provisions of Chapter II of the present Convention apply\nto consular posts headed by career consular officers; the provisions of Chapter III govern\nconsular posts headed by honorary consular officers.\n\nFIRST SCHEDULE\nConsular Relations Law\n\nPage 12\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nc\n\n3.\nThe particular status of members of the consular posts who are nationals or\npermanent residents of the receiving State is governed by Article 71 of the present\nConvention.\nCHAPTER I. - CONSULAR RELATIONS IN GENERAL\nArticle 5\nConsular Functions\nConsular Functions consist in-\n(a)\nprotecting in the receiving State the interests of the sending State and of\nits nationals, both individuals and bodies corporate, within the limits\npermitted by international law;\n(b) furthering the development of commercial, economic, cultural and\nscientific relations between the sending State and the receiving State and\notherwise promoting friendly relations between them in accordance with\nthe provisions of the present Convention;\n(c)\nascertaining by all lawful means conditions and developments in the\ncommercial, economic, cultural and scientific life of the receiving State,\nreporting thereon to the Government of the sending State and giving\ninformation to persons interested;\n(d) issuing passports and travel documents to nationals of the sending State,\nand visas or appropriate documents to persons wishing to travel to the\nsending State;\n(e)\nhelping and assisting nationals, both individuals and bodies corporate, of\nthe sending State;\n(f)\nacting as notary and civil registrar and in capacities of a similar kind, and\nperforming certain functions of an administrative nature, provided that\nthere is nothing contrary thereto in the laws and regulations of the\nreceiving State;\n(g) safeguarding the interests of nationals, both individuals and bodies\ncorporate, of the sending State in cases of succession mortis causa in the\nterritory of the receiving State; in accordance with the laws and\nregulations of the receiving State:\n(h) safeguarding, within the limits imposed by the laws and regulations of\nthe receiving State, the interests of minors and other persons lacking full\ncapacity who are nationals of the sending State, particularly where any\nguardianship or trusteeship is required with respect to such persons;\n(i)\nsubject to the practices and procedures obtaining in the receiving State,\nrepresenting or arranging appropriate representation for nationals of the\nsending State before the tribunals and other authorities of the receiving\nState, for the purpose of obtaining, in accordance with the laws and\nregulations of the receiving State, provisional measures for the\npreservation of the rights and interests of these nationals, where, because\n\nConsular Relations Law (1997 Revision)\nFIRST SCHEDULE\n\nc\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nPage 13\n\nof the absence or any other reason, such nationals are unable at the\nproper time to assume the defence of their rights and interests;\n(j)\ntransmitting judicial and extra-judicial documents or executing letters\nrogatory or commissions to take evidence for the courts of the sending\nState in accordance with international agreements in force or, in the\nabsence of such international agreements, in any other manner\ncompatible with the laws and regulations of the receiving State;\n(k) exercising rights of supervision and inspection provided for in the laws\nand regulations of the sending State in respect of vessels having the\nnationality of the sending State, and of aircraft registered in that State,\nand in respect of their crews;\n(l)\nextending assistance to vessels and aircraft mentioned in sub-paragraph\n(k) of this Article and to their crews, taking statements regarding the\nvoyage of a vessel, examining and stamping the ship\u2019s papers, and,\nwithout prejudice to the powers of the authorities of the receiving State,\nconducting investigations into any incidents which occurred during the\nvoyage, and settling disputes of any kind between the master, the officers\nand the seamen in so far as this may be authorised by the laws and\nregulations of the sending State;\n(m) performing any other functions entrusted to a consular post by the\nsending State which are not prohibited by the laws and regulations of the\nreceiving State or to which no objection is taken by the receiving State or\nwhich are referred to in the international agreements in force between the\nsending State and the receiving State.\n\nArticle 15\nTemporary Exercise of the Functions of the Head of a Consular Post\n1.\nIf the head of a consular post is unable to carry out his functions or the position of\nhead of consular post is vacant, an acting head of post may act provisionally as head of\nthe consular post.\n2.\nThe full name of the acting head of post shall be notified either by the diplomatic\nmission of the sending State or, if that State has no such mission in the receiving State, by\nthe head of the consular post, or, if he is unable to do so, by any competent authority of\nthe sending State, to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the receiving State or to the\nauthority designated by that Ministry. As a general rule, this notification shall be given in\nadvance. The receiving State may make the admission as acting head of post of a person\nwho is neither a diplomatic agent nor a consular officer of the sending State in the\nreceiving State conditional on its consent.\n3.\nThe competent authorities of the receiving State shall afford assistance and\nprotection to the acting head of the post. While he is in charge of the post, the provisions\nof the present Convention shall apply to him on the same basis as to the head of the\nconsular post concerned. The receiving State shall not, however, be obliged to grant to an\n\nFIRST SCHEDULE\nConsular Relations Law\n\nPage 14\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nc\n\nacting head of post any facility, privilege or immunity which the head of the consular\npost enjoys only subject to conditions not fulfilled by the acting head of post.\n4.\nWhen in the circumstances referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article, a member of\nthe diplomatic staff of the diplomatic mission of the sending State in the receiving State\nis designated by the sending State as an acting head of post, he shall, if the receiving\nState does not object thereto, continue to enjoy diplomatic privileges and immunities.\nArticle 17\nPerformance of Diplomatic Acts by Consular Officers\n1.\nIn a State where the sending State has no diplomatic mission and is not represented\nby a diplomatic mission of a third State, a consular officer may, with the consent of the\nreceiving State, and without affecting his consular status, be authorised to perform\ndiplomatic acts. The performances of such acts by a consular officer shall not confer\nupon him any right to claim diplomatic privileges and immunities.\n2.\nA consular officer may, after notification addressed to the receiving State, act as\nrepresentative of the sending State to any inter-governmental organisation. When so\nacting, he shall be entitled to enjoy any privileges and immunities accorded to such a\nrepresentative by customary international law or by international agreements; however, in\nrespect of the performance by him of any consular function, he shall not be entitled to\nany greater immunity from jurisdiction than that to which a consular officer is entitled\nunder the present Convention.\nCHAPTER II-FACILITIES, PRIVILEGES AND IMMUNITIES RELATING TO\nCONSULAR POSTS, CAREER CONSULAR OFFICERS AND OTHER\nMEMBERS OF A CONSULAR POST\nSection 1.-Facilities, Privileges and Immunities Relating to a Consular Post\n\nArticle 31\nInviolability of the Consular Premises\n1.\nConsular premises shall be inviolable to the extent provided in this Article.\n2.\nThe Authorities of the receiving State shall not enter that part of the consular\npremises which is used exclusively for the purpose of the work of the consular post\nexcept with the consent of the head of the consular post or of his designee or of the head\nof the diplomatic mission of the sending State. The consent of the head of the consular\npost may, however, be assumed in case of fire or disaster requiring prompt protective\naction.\n3.\nThe consular premises, their furnishings, the property of the consular post and its\nmeans of transport shall be immune from any form of requisition for purposes of national\ndefence or public utility. If expropriation is necessary for such purposes, all possible\nsteps shall be taken to avoid impeding the performance of consular functions, and\nprompt, adequate and effective compensation shall be paid to the sending State.\n\nConsular Relations Law (1997 Revision)\nFIRST SCHEDULE\n\nc\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nPage 15\n\nArticle 32\nExemption from Taxation of Consular Premises\n1.\nConsular premises and the residence of the career head of consular post of which\nthe sending State or any person acting on its behalf is the owner or lessee shall be exempt\nfrom all national, regional or municipal dues and taxes whatsoever, other than such as\nrepresent payment for specific services rendered.\n2.\nThe exemption from taxation referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article shall not\napply to such dues and taxes if, under the law of the receiving State, they are payable by\nthe person who contracted with the sending State or with the person acting on its behalf.\nArticle 33\nInviolability of the Consular Archives and Documents\nThe consular archives and documents shall be inviolable at all times and wherever they\nmay be.\nArticle 35\nFreedom of Communication\n1.\nThe receiving State shall permit and protect freedom of communication on the part\nof the consular post for all official purposes. In communicating with the Government, the\ndiplomatic missions and other consular posts, wherever situated, of the sending State, the\nconsular post may employ all appropriate means, including diplomatic or consular\ncouriers, diplomatic or consular bags and messages in code or cipher. However, the\nconsular post may install and use a wireless transmitter only with the consent of the\nreceiving State.\n2.\nThe official correspondence of the consular post shall be inviolable. Official\ncorrespondence means all correspondence relating to the consular post and its functions.\n3.\nThe consular bag shall be neither opened nor detained. Nevertheless, if the\ncompetent authorities of the receiving State have serious reason to believe that the bag\ncontains something other than the correspondence, documents or articles referred to in\nparagraph 4 of this Article, they may request that the bag be opened in their presence by\nan authorised representative of the sending State. If this request is refused by the\nauthorities of the sending State, the bag shall be returned to its place of origin.\n4.\nThe packages constituting the consular bag shall bear visible external marks of their\ncharacter and may contain only official correspondence and documents or articles\nintended exclusively for official use.\n5.\nThe consular courier shall be provided with an official document indicating his\nstatus and the number of packages constituting the consular bag. Except with the consent\nof the receiving State he shall be neither a national of the receiving State, nor, unless he is\na national of the sending State, a permanent resident of the receiving State. In the\n\nFIRST SCHEDULE\nConsular Relations Law\n\nPage 16\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nc\n\nperformance of his functions he shall be protected by the receiving State. He shall enjoy\npersonal inviolability and shall not be liable to any form of arrest or detention.\n6.\nThe sending State, its diplomatic missions and its consular posts may designate\nconsular couriers ad hoc. In such cases the provisions of paragraph 5 of this Article shall\nalso apply except that the immunities therein mentioned shall cease to apply when such a\ncourier has delivered to the consignee the consular bag in his charge.\n7.\nA consular bag may be entrusted to the captain of a ship or of a commercial aircraft\nscheduled to land at an authorised port of entry. He shall be provided with an official\ndocument indicating the number of packages constituting the bag, but he shall not be\nconsidered to be a consular courier. By arrangement with the appropriate local\nauthorities, the consular post may send one of its members to take possession of the bag\ndirectly and freely from the captain of the ship or of the aircraft.\n\nConsular Relations Law (1997 Revision)\nFIRST SCHEDULE\n\nc\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nPage 17\n\nArticle 39\nConsular Fees and Charges\n1.\nThe consular post may levy in the territory of the receiving State the fees and\ncharges provided by the laws and regulations of the sending State for consular acts.\n2.\nThe sums collected in the form of the fees and charges referred to in paragraph 1 of\nthis Article, and the receipts for such fees and charges, shall be exempt from all dues and\ntaxes in the receiving State.\nSection II - Facilities, Privileges and Immunities Relating to Career Consular\nOfficers and Other Members of a Consular Post\n\nArticle 41\nPersonal Inviolability of Consular Officers\n1.\nConsular officers shall not be liable to arrest or detention pending trial, except in the\ncase of a grave crime and pursuant to a decision by the competent judicial authority.\n2.\nExcept in the case specified in paragraph 1 of this Article consular officers shall not\nbe committed to prison or liable to any other form of restriction on their personal freedom\nsave in execution of a judicial decision of final effect.\nArticle 43\nImmunity from Jurisdiction\n1.\nConsular officers and consular employees shall not be amenable to the jurisdiction\nof the judicial or administrative authorities of the receiving State in respect of acts\nperformed in the exercise of consular functions.\n2.\nThe provisions of paragraph 1 of this Article shall not, however, apply in respect of\na civil action either-\n(a)\narising out of a contract concluded by a consular officer or a consular\nemployee in which he did not contract expressly or impliedly as an agent\nof the sending State; or\n(b) by a third party for damage arising from an accident in the receiving\nState caused by a vehicle, vessel or aircraft.\n\nArticle 44\nLiability to Give Evidence\n1.\nMembers of a consular post may be called upon to attend as witnesses in the courts\nof judicial or administrative proceedings. A consular employee or a member of the\nservice staff shall not, except in the cases mentioned in paragraph 3 of this Article,\ndecline to give evidence. If a consular officer should decline to do so, no coercive\nmeasure or penalty may be applied to him.\n\nFIRST SCHEDULE\nConsular Relations Law\n\nPage 18\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nc\n\n2.\nThe authority requiring the evidence of a consular officer shall avoid interference\nwith the performance of his functions. It may, when possible, take such evidence at his\nresidence or at the consular post or accept a statement from him in writing.\n3.\nMembers of a consular post are under no obligation to give evidence concerning\nmatters connected with the exercise of their functions or to produce official\ncorrespondence and documents relating thereto. They are also entitled to decline to give\nevidence as expert witnesses with regard to the law of the sending State.\nArticle 45\nWaiver of Privileges and Immunities\n1.\nThe sending State may waive, with regard to a member of the consular post any of\nthe privileges and immunities provided for in Articles 41, 43 and 44.\n2.\nThe waiver shall in all cases be express, except as provided in paragraph 3 of this\nArticle, and shall be communicated to the receiving State in writing.\n3.\nThe initiation of proceedings by a consular officer or a consular employee in a\nmatter where he might enjoy immunity from jurisdiction under Article 43 shall preclude\nhim from invoking immunity from jurisdiction and in respect of any counter-claim\ndirectly connected with the principal claim.\n4.\nThe waiver of immunity from jurisdiction for the purposes of civil or administrative\nproceedings shall not be deemed to imply the waiver of immunity from the measures of\nexecution resulting from the judicial decision; in respect of such measures, a separate\nwaiver shall be necessary.\nArticle 48\nSocial Security Exemption\n1.\nSubject to the provisions of paragraph 3 of this Article, members of the consular\npost with respect to services rendered by them for the sending State and members of their\nfamilies forming part of their households, shall be exempt from social security provisions\nwhich may be in force in the receiving State.\n2.\nThe exemption provided for in paragraph 1 of this Article shall apply also to\nmembers of the private staff who are in the sole employ of members of the consular post,\non condition-\n(a)\nthat they are not nationals of or permanently resident in the receiving\nState; and\n(b) that they are covered by the social security provisions which are in force\nin the sending State or a third State.\n3.\nMembers of the consular post who employ persons to whom the exemption\nprovided for in paragraph 2 of this Article does not apply shall observe the obligations\nwhich the social security provisions of the receiving State impose upon employers.\n\nConsular Relations Law (1997 Revision)\nFIRST SCHEDULE\n\nc\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nPage 19\n\n4.\nThe exemption provided for in paragraphs 1 and 2 of this Article shall not preclude\nvoluntary participation in the social security system of the receiving State, provided that\nsuch participation is permitted by that State.\nArticle 49\nExemption from Taxation\n1.\nConsular officers and consular employees and members of their families forming\npart of their households shall be exempt from all dues and taxes, personal or real,\nnational, regional or municipal, except-\n(a)\nindirect taxes of a kind which are normally incorporated in the price of\ngoods or services;\n(b) dues or taxes on private immovable property situated in the territory of\nthe receiving State subject to the provisions of Article 32;\n(c)\nestate, succession or inheritance duties and duties on transfers, levied by\nthe receiving State, subject to the provisions of paragraph (b) of Article\n51;\n(d) dues and taxes on private income, including capital gains, having its\nsource in the receiving State and capital taxes relating to investments\nmade in commercial or financial undertakings in the receiving State;\n(e)\ncharges levied for specific services rendered;\n(f)\nregistration, court or record fees, mortgage dues and stamp duties subject\nto the provisions of Article 32.\n2.\nMembers of the service staff shall be exempt from dues and taxes on the wages\nwhich they receive for their services.\n3.\nMembers of the consular post who employ persons whose wages or salaries are not\nexempt from income tax in the receiving State shall observe the obligations which the\nlaws and regulations of that State impose upon employers concerning the levying of\nincome tax.\nArticle 50\nExemption from Customs Duties and Inspection\n1.\nThe receiving State shall, in accordance with such laws and regulations as it may\nadopt, permit entry of and grant exemption from all customs duties, taxes, and related\ncharges other than charges for storage, cartage and similar services, on-\n(a)\narticles for the official use of the consular post;\n(b) articles for the personal use of a consular officer or members of his\nfamily forming part of his household, including articles intended for his\nestablishment. The articles intended for consumption shall not exceed the\nquantities necessary for direct utilisation by the persons concerned.\n2.\nConsular employees shall enjoy the privileges and exemptions specified in\nparagraph 1 of this Article in respect of articles imported at the time of first installation.\n\nFIRST SCHEDULE\nConsular Relations Law\n\nPage 20\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nc\n\n3.\nPersonal baggage accompanying consular officers and members of their families\nforming part of their households shall be exempt from inspection. It may be inspected\nonly if there is serious reason to believe that it contains articles other than those referred\nto in sub-paragraph (b) of paragraph 1 of this Article or articles the import or export of\nwhich is prohibited by the laws and regulations of the receiving State or which are\nsubject to its quarantine laws and regulations. Such inspection shall be carried out in the\npresence of the consular officer or member of his family concerned.\nArticle 51\nEstate of a Member of the Consular Post or of a Member of his Family\nIn the event of the death of a member of the consular post or of a member of his family\nforming part of his household, the receiving State-\n(a)\nshall permit the export of the movable property of the deceased, with the\nexception of any such property acquired in the receiving State the export\nof which was prohibited at the time of his death;\n(b) shall not levy national, regional or municipal estate, succession or\ninheritance duties, and duties on transfers, on movable property the\npresence of which in the receiving State was due solely to the presence in\nthat State of the deceased as a member of the consular post or as a\nmember of the family of a member of the consular post.\n\nArticle 52\nExemption from Personal Services and Contributions\nThe receiving State shall exempt members of the consular post and members of their\nfamilies forming part of their households from all personal services, from all public\nservice of any kind whatsoever, and from military obligations such as those connected\nwith requisitioning, military contributions and billeting.\nArticle 53\nBeginning and End of Consular Privileges and Immunities\n1.\nEvery member of the consular post shall enjoy the privileges and immunities\nprovided in the present Convention from the moment he enters the territory of the\nreceiving State on proceeding to take up his post, or, if already in its territory, from the\nmoment when he enters on his duties with the consular post.\n2.\nMembers of the family of a member of the consular post forming part of his\nhousehold and members of his private staff shall receive the privileges and immunities\nprovided in the present Convention from the date from which he enjoys privileges and\nimmunities in accordance with paragraph l of this Article or from the date of their entry\ninto the territory of the receiving State or from the date of their becoming a member of\nsuch family or private staff, whichever is the latest.\n\nConsular Relations Law (1997 Revision)\nFIRST SCHEDULE\n\nc\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nPage 21\n\n3.\nWhen the functions of a member of the consular post have come to an end, his\nprivileges and immunities and those of a member of his family forming part of his\nhousehold or a member of his private staff shall normally cease at the moment when the\nperson concerned leaves the receiving State or on the expiry of a reasonable period in\nwhich to do so, whichever is the sooner, but shall subsist until that time, even in case of\narmed conflict. In the case of the persons referred to in paragraph 2 of this Article, their\nprivileges and immunities shall come to an end when they cease to belong to the\nhousehold or to be in the service of a member of the consular post provided however, that\nif such persons intend leaving the receiving State within a reasonable period thereafter,\ntheir privileges and immunities shall subsist until the time of their departure.\n4.\nHowever, with respect to acts performed by a consular officer or a consular\nemployee in the exercise of his functions, immunity from jurisdiction shall continue to\nsubsist without limitation of time.\n5.\nIn the event of the death of a member of the consular post, the members of his\nfamily forming part of his household shall continue to enjoy the privileges and\nimmunities accorded to them until they leave the receiving State or until the expiry of a\nreasonable period enabling them to do so, whichever is the sooner.\nArticle 54\nObligations of Third State\n1.\nIf a consular officer passes through or is in the territory of a third State, which has\ngranted him a visa if a visa was necessary, while proceeding to take up or return to his\npost or when returning to the sending State, the third State shall accord to him all\nimmunities provided for by the other Articles of the present Convention as may be\nrequired to ensure his transit or return. The same shall apply in the case of any member of\nhis family forming part of his household enjoying such privileges and immunities who\nare accompanying the consular officer or travelling separately to join him or to return to\nthe sending State.\n2.\nIn circumstances similar to those specified in paragraph 1 of this Article, third\nStates shall not hinder the transit through their territory of other members of the consular\npost or of members of their families forming part of their households.\n3.\nThird States shall accord to official correspondence and to other official\ncommunications in transit, including messages in code or cipher, the same freedom and\nprotection as the receiving State is bound to accord under the present Convention. They\nshall accord to consular couriers who have been granted a visa, if a visa was necessary,\nand to consular bags in transit, the same inviolability and protection as the receiving State\nis bound to accord under the present Convention.\n4.\nThe obligations of third States under paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of this Article shall also\napply to the persons mentioned respectively in those paragraphs, and to official\ncommunications and to consular bags, whose presence in the territory of the third State is\ndue to force majeure.\n\nFIRST SCHEDULE\nConsular Relations Law\n\nPage 22\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nc\n\nArticle 55\nRespect for the Laws and Regulations of the Receiving State\n2.\nThe consular premises shall not be used in any manner incompatible with the\nexercise of consular functions.\n3.\nThe provisions of paragraph 2 of this Article shall not exclude the possibility of\noffices of other institutions or agencies being installed in part of the building in which the\nconsular premises are situated, provided that the premises assigned to them are separate\nfrom those used by the consular post. In that event, the said offices shall not, for the\npurposes of the present convention, be considered to form part of the consular premises.\nArticle 57\nSpecial Provisions Concerning Private Gainful Occupation\n2.\nPrivileges and immunities provided in this Chapter shall not be accorded-\n(a)\nto consular employees or to members of the service staff who carry on\nany private gainful occupation in the receiving State;\n(b) to members of the family of a person referred to in subparagraph (a) of\nthis paragraph or to members of his private staff;\n(c)\nto members of the family of a member of a consular post who themselves\ncarry on any private gainful occupation in the receiving State.\n\nConsular Relations Law (1997 Revision)\nFIRST SCHEDULE\n\nc\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nPage 23\n\nCHAPTER III-REGIME RELATING TO HONORARY CONSULAR OFFICERS\nAND CONSULAR POSTS HEADED BY SUCH OFFICERS\n\nArticle 58\nGeneral Provisions Relating to Facilities, Privileges and Immunities\n1.\nArticles 35 and 39, paragraph 3 of Article 54 and paragraphs 2 and 3 of Article 55\nshall apply to consular posts headed by an honorary consular officer. In addition, the\nfacilities, privileges and immunities of such consular posts shall be governed by Articles\n60, 61 and 62.\n2.\nArticle 43, paragraph 3 of Article 44, Articles 45 and 53 shall apply to honorary\nconsular officers. In addition, the facilities, privileges and immunities of such consular\nofficers shall be governed by Articles 66 and 67.\n3.\nPrivileges and immunities provided in the present Convention shall not be accorded\nto members of the family of an honorary consular officer or of a consular employee\nemployed at a consular post headed by an honorary consular officer.\nArticle 60\nExemption from Taxation of Consular Premises\n1.\nConsular premises of a consular post headed by an honorary consular officer of\nwhich the sending State is the owner or lessee shall be exempt from all national, regional\nor municipal dues and taxes whatsoever, other than such as represent payment for\nspecific services rendered.\n2.\nThe exemption from taxation referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article shall not\napply to such dues and taxes if, under the laws and regulations of the receiving State, they\nare payable by the person who contracted with the sending State.\nArticle 61\nInviolability of Consular Archives and Documents\nThe consular archives and documents of a consular post headed by an honorary consular\nofficer shall be inviolable at all times and wherever they may be, provided that they are\nkept separate from other papers and documents and, in particular, from the private\ncorrespondence of the head of a consular post and of any person working with him, and\nfrom the materials, books or documents relating to their profession or trade.\nArticle 62\nExemption From Customs Duties\nThe receiving State shall, in accordance with such laws and regulations as it may adopt,\npermit entry of, and grant exemption from all customs duties, taxes, and related charges\nother than charges for storage, cartage and similar services on the following articles,\nprovided that they are for the official use of a consular post headed by an honorary\nconsular officer: coat-of-arms, flags, sign-boards, seals and stamps, books, official\n\nFIRST SCHEDULE\nConsular Relations Law\n\nPage 24\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nc\n\nprinted matter, office furniture, office equipment and similar articles supplied by or at the\ninstance of the sending State to the consular post.\nArticle 66\nExemption From Taxation\nAn honorary consular officer shall be exempt from all dues and taxes on the remuneration\nand emoluments which he receives from the sending State in respect of the exercise of\nconsular functions.\nArticle 67\nExemption from Personal Services And Contributions\nThe receiving State shall exempt honorary consular officers from all personal services\nand from all public services of any kind whatsoever and from military obligations such as\nthose connected with requisitioning, military contributions and billeting.\n\nConsular Relations Law (1997 Revision)\nFIRST SCHEDULE\n\nc\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nPage 25\n\nCHAPTER IV-GENERAL PROVISIONS\nArticle 70\nExercise of Consular Functions by Diplomatic Missions\n1.\nThe provisions of the present Convention apply also, so far as the context permits,\nto the exercise of consular functions by a diplomatic mission.\n2.\nThe names of members of a diplomatic mission assigned to the consular section or\notherwise charged with the exercise of the consular functions of the mission shall be\nnotified to the Ministry for Foreign Affairs of the receiving State or to the authority\ndesignated by that Ministry.\n4.\nThe privileges and immunities of the members of a diplomatic mission referred to in\nparagraph 2 of this Article shall continue to be governed by the rules of international law\nconcerning diplomatic relations.\nArticle 71\nNationals or Permanent Residents of the Receiving State\n1.\nExcept in so far as additional facilities, privileges and immunities may be granted\nby the receiving State, consular officers who are nationals of or permanently resident in\nthe receiving State shall enjoy only immunity from jurisdiction and personal inviolability\nin respect of official acts performed in the exercise of their functions, and the privilege\nprovided in paragraph 3 of Article 44.\n2.\nOther members of the consular post who are nationals of or permanently resident in\nthe receiving State and members of their families, as well as members of the families of\nconsular officers referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article, shall enjoy facilities, privileges\nand immunities only in so far as these are granted to them by the receiving State. Those\nmembers of the families of members of the consular post and those members of the\nprivate staff who are themselves nationals of or permanently resident in the receiving\nState shall likewise enjoy facilities, privileges and immunities only in so far as these are\ngranted to them by the receiving State.\n\nSECOND SCHEDULE\nConsular Relations Law\n\nPage 26\nRevised as at 2nd day of September , 1997\nc\n\nSECOND SCHEDULE\nSection 3(1)\nPROVISIONS FOR GIVING EFFECT TO OTHER AGREEMENTS\n1.\nThe like exemption from dues and taxes may be extended to the residence of any\nmember of a consular post as is accorded under Article 32 in the First Schedule I to this\nLaw to the residence of the career head of a consular post.\n2.\nParagraph 1 of Article 49 in the First Schedule may be extended to members of the\nservice staff.\n3.\nParagraph 2 of this Article 50 in the First Schedule may be applied as if it were\namong the Articles mentioned in paragraph 2 of Article 58 in that Schedule, as if the\nreference to consular employees included members of the service staff and also such\nmembers of the families of consular employees or of members of the service staff as form\npart of their households, and as if the words \u201cin respect of articles imported at the time of\nfirst installation\u201d were omitted.\n\nPublication in revised form authorised by the Governor in Council this 2nd day of\nSeptember, 1997.\nCarmena H. 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