28. Article
Šīs Konvencijas noteikumi Pušu
attiecībās prevalē pār Preambulas otrās rindkopas 1., 2., 3. un
4.apakšpunktā minēto starptautisko dokumentu noteikumiem, no
kuriem katrs tiek uzskatīts par spēku zaudējušu, kad visas Puses
būs kļuvušas par šīs Konvencijas Pusēm.
To apliecinot, apakšā minētās
personas attiecīgo valdību pilnvarojumā parakstījušas šo
Konvenciju, kas tika atvērta parakstīšanai Leiksaksesā, Ņujorkā,
tūkstoš deviņi simti piecdesmitā gada divdesmit pirmajā martā un
kuras apliecinātu un precīzu kopiju Ģenerālsekretārs nosūta visām
Apvienoto Nāciju Organizācijas dalībvalstīm un citām valstīm, kas
minētas 23.pantā.
Nobeiguma
protokols
Nekas šajā Konvencijā nekaitē tiem
normatīvajiem aktiem, kuros ir noteikumi par cilvēku
tirdzniecības un prostitūcijas izmantošanu no trešo personu puses
novēršanu, un kas nodrošina stingrākus noteikumus, kādi ir šajā
Konvencijā.
Noteikumi, ko satur Konvencijas
23. līdz 26.panti, ir attiecināmi uz šo Protokolu.
CONVENTION
FOR THE SUPPRESSION OF THE TRAFFIC IN PERSONS AND OF THE
EXPLOITATION OF THE PROSTITUTION OF OTHERS
Approved by
General Assembly resolution 317 (IV) of 2 December 1949
Entry into
force: 25 July 1951, in accordance with article 24
Preamble
Whereas prostitution and the
accompanying evil of the traffic in persons for the purpose of
prostitution are incompatible with the dignity and worth of the
human person and endanger the welfare of the individual, the
family and the community,
Whereas, with respect to the
suppression of the traffic in women and children, the following
international instruments are in force:
(1)International Agreement of 18
May 1904 for the Suppression of the White Slave Traffic, as
amended by the Protocol approved by the General Assembly of the
United Nations on 3 December 1948,
(2)International Convention of 4
May 1910 for the Suppression of the White Slave Traffic, as
amended by the above-mentioned Protocol,
(3)International Convention of 30
September 1921 for the Suppression of the Traffic in Women and
Children, as amended by the Protocol approved by the General
Assembly of the United Nations on 20 October 1947,
(4)International Convention of 11
October 1933 for the Suppression of the Traffic in Women of Full
Age, as amended by the aforesaid Protocol,
Whereas the League of Nations in
1937 prepared a draft Convention extending the scope of the
above-mentioned instruments, and
Whereas developments since 1937
make feasible the conclusion of a convention consolidating the
above-mentioned instruments and embodying the substance of the
1937 draft Convention as well as desirable alterations
therein:
Now therefore
The Contracting parties
Hereby agree as hereinafter
provided :
Article 1
The Parties to the present
Convention agree to punish any person who, to gratify the
passions of another:
(1)Procures, entices or leads
away, for purposes of prostitution, another person, even with the
consent of that person;
(2)Exploits the prostitution of
another person, even with the consent of that person.
Article 2
The Parties to the present
Convention further agree to punish any person who:
(1)Keeps or manages, or knowingly
finances or takes part in the financing of a brothel;
(2)Knowingly lets or rents a
building or other place or any part thereof for the purpose of
the prostitution of others.
Article 3
To the extent permitted by
domestic law, attempts to commit any of the offences referred to
in articles 1 and 2, and acts preparatory to the commission
thereof, shall also be punished.
Article 4
To the extent permitted by
domestic law, intentional participation in the acts referred to
in articles 1 and 2 above shall also be punishable.
To the extent permitted by
domestic law, acts of participation shall be treated as separate
offences whenever this is necessary to prevent impunity.
Article 5
In cases where injured persons are
entitled under domestic law to be parties to proceedings in
respect of any of the offences referred to in the present
Convention, aliens shall be so entitled upon the same terms as
nationals.
Article 6
Each Party to the present
Convention agrees to take all the necessary measures to repeal or
abolish any existing law, regulation or administrative provision
by virtue of which persons who engage in or are suspected of
engaging in prostitution are subject either to special
registration or to the possession of a special document or to any
exceptional requirements for supervision or notification.
Article 7
Previous convictions pronounced in
foreign States for offences referred to in the present Convention
shall, to the extent permitted by domestic law, be taken into
account for the purposes of:
(1)Establishing recidivism;
(2)Disqualifying the offender from
the exercise of civil rights.
Article 8
The offences referred to in
articles 1 and 2 of the present Convention shall be regarded as
extraditable offences in any extradition treaty which has been or
may hereafter be concluded between any of the Parties to this
Convention.
The Parties to the present
Convention which do not make extradition conditional on the
existence of a treaty shall henceforward recognize the offences
referred to in articles 1 and 2 of the present Convention as
cases for extradition between themselves.
Extradition shall be granted in
accordance with the law of the State to which the request is
made.
Article 9
In States where the extradition of
nationals is not permitted by law, nationals who have returned to
their own State after the commission abroad of any of the
offences referred to in articles 1 and 2 of the present
Convention shall be prosecuted in and punished by the courts of
their own State.
This provision shall not apply if,
in a similar case between the Parties to the present Convention,
the extradition of an alien cannot be granted.
Article 10
The provisions of article 9 shall
not apply when the person charged with the offence has been tried
in a foreign State and, if convicted, has served his sentence or
had it remitted or reduced in conformity with the laws of that
foreign State.
Article 11
Nothing in the present Convention
shall be interpreted as determining the attitude of a Party
towards the general question of the limits of criminal
jurisdiction under international law.
Article 12
The present Convention does not
affect the principle that the offences to which it refers shall
in each State be defined, prosecuted and punished in conformity
with its domestic law.
Article 13
The Parties to the present
Convention shall be bound to execute letters of request relating
to offences referred to in the Convention in accordance with
their domestic law and practice.
The transmission of letters of
request shall be effected:
(1)By direct communication between
the judicial authorities; or
(2)By direct communication between
the Ministers of Justice of the two States, or by direct
communication from another competent authority of the State
making the request to the Minister of Justice of the State to
which the request is made; or
(3)Through the diplomatic or
consular representative of the State making the request in the
State to which the request is made; this representative shall
send the letters of request direct to the competent judicial
authority or to the authority indicated by the Government of the
State to which the request is made, and shall receive direct from
such authority the papers constituting the execution of the
letters of request.
In cases 1 and 3 a copy of the
letters of request shall always be sent to the superior authority
of the State to which application is made.
Unless otherwise agreed, the
letters of request shall be drawn up in the language of the
authority making the request, provided always that the State to
which the request is made may require a translation in its own
language, certified correct by the authority making the
request.
Each Party to the present
Convention shall notify to each of the other Parties to the
Convention the method or methods of transmission mentioned above
which it will recognize for the letters of request of the latter
State.
Until such notification is made by
a State, its existing procedure in regard to letters of request
shall remain in force.
Execution of letters of request
shall not give rise to a claim for reimbursement of charges or
expenses of any nature whatever other than expenses of
experts.
Nothing in the present article
shall be construed as an undertaking on the part of the Parties
to the present Convention to adopt in criminal matters any form
or methods of proof contrary to their own domestic laws.
Article 14
Each Party to the present
Convention shall establish or maintain a service charged with the
co-ordination and centralization of the results of the
investigation of offences referred to in the present
Convention.
Such services should compile all
information calculated to facilitate the prevention and
punishment of the offences referred to in the present Convention
and should be in close contact with the corresponding services in
other States.
Article 15
To the extent permitted by
domestic law and to the extent to which the authorities
responsible for the services referred to in article 14 may judge
desirable, they shall furnish to the authorities responsible for
the corresponding services in other States the following
information:
(1)Particulars of any offence
referred to in the present Convention or any attempt to commit
such offence;
(2)Particulars of any search for
any prosecution, arrest, conviction, refusal of admission or
expulsion of persons guilty of any of the offences referred to in
the present Convention, the movements of such persons and any
other useful information with regard to them.
The information so furnished shall
include descriptions of the offenders, their fingerprints,
photographs, methods of operation, police records and records of
conviction.
Article 16
The Parties to the present
Convention agree to take or to encourage, through their public
and private educational, health, social, economic and other
related services, measures for the prevention of prostitution and
for the rehabilitation and social adjustment of the victims of
prostitution and of the offences referred to in the present
Convention.
Article 17
The Parties to the present
Convention undertake, in connection with immigration and
emigration, to adopt or maintain such measures as are required,
in terms of their obligations under the present Convention, to
check the traffic in persons of either sex for the purpose of
prostitution.
In particular they undertake:
(1)To make such regulations as are
necessary for the protection of immigrants or emigrants, and in
particular, women and children, both at the place of arrival and
departure and while en route;
(2)To arrange for appropriate
publicity warning the public of the dangers of the aforesaid
traffic;
(3)To take appropriate measures to
ensure supervision of railway stations, airports, seaports and en
route, and of other public places, in order to prevent
international traffic in persons for the purpose of
prostitution;
(4)To take appropriate measures in
order that the appropriate authorities be informed of the arrival
of persons who appear, prima facie, to be the principals and
accomplices in or victims of such traffic.
Article 18
The Parties to the present
Convention undertake, in accordance with the conditions laid down
by domestic law, to have declarations taken from aliens who are
prostitutes, in order to establish their identity and civil
status and to discover who has caused them to leave their State.
The information obtained shall be communicated to the authorities
of the State of origin of the said persons with a view to their
eventual repatriation.
Article 19
The Parties to the present
Convention undertake, in accordance with the conditions laid down
by domestic law and without prejudice to prosecution or other
action for violations thereunder and so far as possible:
(1)Pending the completion of
arrangements for the repatriation of destitute victims of
international traffic in persons for the purpose of prostitution,
to make suitable provisions for their temporary care and
maintenance;
(2)To repatriate persons referred
to in article 18 who desire to be repatriated or who may be
claimed by persons exercising authority over them or whose
expulsion is ordered in conformity with the law. Repatriation
shall take place only after agreement is reached with the State
of destination as to identity and nationality as well as to the
place and date of arrival at frontiers. Each Party to the present
Convention shall facilitate the passage of such persons through
its territory.
Where the persons referred to in
the preceding paragraph cannot themselves repay the cost of
repatriation and have neither spouse, relatives nor guardian to
pay for them, the cost of repatriation as far as the nearest
frontier or port of embarkation or airport in the direction of
the State of origin shall be borne by the State where they are in
residence, and the cost of the remainder of the journey shall be
borne by the State of origin.
Article 20
The Parties to the present
Convention shall, if they have not already done so, take the
necessary measures for the supervision of employment agencies in
order to prevent persons seeking employment, in particular women
and children, from being exposed to the danger of
prostitution.
Article 21
The Parties to the present
Convention shall communicate to the Secretary-General of the
United Nations such laws and regulations as have already been
promulgated in their States, and thereafter annually such laws
and regulations as may be promulgated, relating to the subjects
of the present Convention, as well as all measures taken by them
concerning the application of the Convention. The information
received shall be published periodically by the Secretary-General
and sent to all Members of the United Nations and to non-member
States to which the present Convention is officially communicated
in accordance with article 23.
Article 22
If any dispute shall arise between
the Parties to the present Convention relating to its
interpretation or application and if such dispute cannot be
settled by other means, the dispute shall, at the request of any
one of the Parties to the dispute, be referred to the
International Court of Justice.
Article 23
The present Convention shall be
open for signature on behalf of any Member of the United Nations
and also on behalf of any other State to which an invitation has
been addressed by the Economic and Social Council.
The present Convention shall be
ratified and the instruments of ratification shall be deposited
with the Secretary-General of the United Nations.
The States mentioned in the first
paragraph which have not signed the Convention may accede to
it.
Accession shall be effected by
deposit of an instrument of accession with the Secretary-General
of the United Nations.
For the purposes of the present
Convention the word "State" shall include all the colonies and
Trust Territories of a State signatory or acceding to the
Convention and all territories for which such State is
internationally responsible.
Article 24
The present Convention shall come
into force on the ninetieth day following the date of deposit of
the second instrument of ratification or accession.
For each State ratifying or
acceding to the Convention after the deposit of the second
instrument of ratification or accession, the Convention shall
enter into force ninety days after the deposit by such State of
its instrument of ratification or accession.
Article 25
After the expiration of five years
from the entry into force of the present Convention, any Party to
the Convention may denounce it by a written notification
addressed to the Secretary-General of the United Nations.
Such denunciation shall take
effect for the Party making it one year from the date upon which
it is received by the Secretary-General of the United
Nations.
Article 26
The Secretary-General of the
United Nations shall inform all Members of the United Nations and
non-member States referred to in article 23:
(a)Of signatures, ratifications
and accessions received in accordance with article 23;
(b)Of the date on which the
present Convention will come into force in accordance with
article 24;
(c)Of denunciations received in
accordance with article 25.
Article 27
Each Party to the present
Convention undertakes to adopt, in accordance with its
Constitution, the legislative or other measures necessary to
ensure the application of the Convention.
Article 28
The provisions of the present
Convention shall supersede in the relations between the Parties
thereto the provisions of the international instruments referred
to in subparagraphs 1, 2, 3 and 4 of the second paragraph of the
Preamble, each of which shall be deemed to be terminated when all
the Parties thereto shall have become Parties to the present
Convention.
Final
protocol
Nothing in the present Convention
shall be deemed to prejudice any legislation which ensures, for
the enforcement of the provisions for securing the suppression of
the traffic in persons and of the exploitation of others for
purposes of prostitution, stricter conditions than those provided
by the present Convention.
The provisions of articles 23 to
26 inclusive of the Convention shall apply to the present
Protocol.
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