The Iraq and Kuwait (United Nations Sanctions) (Dependent Territories) Order 1990
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UNITED NATIONS The Iraq and Kuwait (United Nations Sanctions) (Dependent Territories) Order 1990
At the Court at HM Yacht Britannia the 8th day of August 1990 Present, The Queen's Most Excellent Majesty in Council
1.(1) This Order may be cited as the Iraq and Kuwait (United Nations Sanctions) (Dependent Territories) Order 1990. (2) This Order shall come into force on the 9th August 1990. (3)
(4) In this Order the following expressions have the meanings hereby respectively assigned to them, that is to say:
2.(1) Except under the authority of a licence granted by the Governor or specified in Article 2 of the Iraq and Kuwait (United Nations Sanctions) Order 1990[2] any goods exported from either Iraq or Kuwait after the 6th August 1990 are prohibited from being imported into the Territory. (2) Any person who imports any goods into the Territory in contravention of paragraph 1 of this Article shall be guilty of an offence. (3) Nothing in this Article shall be construed so as to prejudice any other provision of law prohibiting or restricting the importation of goods into the Territory.
3.(1) Except under the authority of a licence granted under Article 2(1) of the Iraq and Kuwait (United Nations Sanctions) Order 1990 no person shall
(2) No person shall deal in any goods that have been exported from Iraq or Kuwait after the 6th August 1990, that is to say, shall, by way of trade or otherwise for gain, acquire or dispose of such goods or of any property or interest in them or any right to or charge upon them or process them or do any act calculated to promote any such acquisition, disposal or processing by himself or any other person. Provided that the aforesaid prohibition shall not apply, if a licence has been granted under paragraph (1) of this Article and is in force, to any dealing authorised by the said licence.
4. Except under the authority of a licence granted by the Governor under this Order or under the Export of Goods(Control) (Iraq and Kuwait Sanctions) Order 1990[3] no person shall
5.(1) The provisions of Articles 3 and 4 shall apply to any person within the Territory to which this Order extends and to any person elsewhere who:
(2) Any person specified in paragraph 1 of this Article who contravenes the provisions of Article 3(1) or (2) or Article 4 shall be guilty of an offence.
6.(1) Except under the authority of a licence specified in Article 4 of this Order all goods are prohibited from being exported to Iraq or Kuwait. (2) Any person who exports any goods from the Territory in contravention of paragraph (1) of this Article shall be guilty of an offence against this Order. (3) Nothing in this Article shall be construed so as to prejudice any other provision of law prohibiting or restricting the exportation of goods from the Territory.
7.(1) Without prejudice to the generality of Article 3 of this Order, no ship or aircraft to which this Article applies and no land transport vehicle within the Territory shall be used for the carriage of any goods if those goods are being or have been exported from Iraq or Kuwait in contravention of Article 3 of this Order. (2) Without prejudice to the generality of Article 4 of this Order, no ship or aircraft to which this Article applies and no land transport vehicle within the Territory shall be used for the carriage of any goods if the carriage is, or forms part of, carriage from any place outside Iraq or Kuwait to any destination therein or to any person for the purposes of any business carried on in or operated from Iraq or Kuwait. (3) This Article applies to British ships registered in the Territory, to aircraft so registered and to any other ship or aircraft that is for the time being chartered to any person who is
(4) If any ship, aircraft or land transport vehicle is used in contravention of paragraph (1) of this Article, then each of the following persons
(5) If any ship, aircraft or land transport vehicle is used in contravention of paragraph (2) of this Article, then
(6) Nothing in this Article applies to goods in respect of which a licence granted by the Secretary of State or the Governor is in force under:
(7) Nothing in this Article shall be construed so as to prejudice any other provision of law prohibiting or restricting the use of ships, aircraft or land transport vehicles.
8.(1) Where any authorised officer, that is to say, any such officer as is referred to in section 692(1) of the Merchant Shipping Act 1894[4], has reason to suspect that any British ship registered in the United Kingdom or in any other country or place to which this Order extends has been or is being or is about to be used in contravention of paragraph (1) or paragraph (2) of Article 5 of the Order, he may (either alone or accompanied and assisted by persons under his authority) board the ship and search her and, for that purpose, may use or authorise the use of reasonable force, and he may request the master of the ship to furnish such information relating to the ship and her cargo and produce for his inspection such documents so relating and such cargo as he may specify; and an authorised officer (either there and then or upon consideration of any information furnished or document or cargo produced in pursuance of such a request) may, in the case of a ship that is reasonably suspected of being or of being about to be used in contravention of Article 5(2) of this Order, exercise the following further powers with a view to the prevention of the commission (or the continued commission) of any such contravention or in order that enquiries into the matter may be pursued, that is to say, he may either direct the master to refrain, except with the consent of an authorised officer, from landing at any port specified by the officer any part of the ship's cargo that is so specified or request the master to take any one or more of the following steps:
(2) Without prejudice to the provisions of paragraph of this Article, where a master refuses or fails to comply with a request made under this Article that his ship shall or shall not proceed to or from any place or where an authorised officer otherwise has reason to suspect that such a request that has been so made may not be complied with, any such officer may take such steps as appear to him to be necessary to secure compliance with that request and, without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing, may for that purpose enter upon, or authorise entry upon, that ship and use, or authorise the use of, reasonable force. (3) Where the Governor of the Territory or any person authorised by him for that purpose either generally or in a particular case has reason to suspect that any aircraft registered in the United Kingdom or in any other country or place to which this Order extends or any aircraft for the time being chartered to any person specified in paragraph 3 of Article 7 of this Order has been or is being or is about to be used in contravention of paragraph (1) or paragraph (2) of Article 7 of this Order then the Governor or that authorised person or that officer may request the charterer, the operator and the commander of the aircraft or any of them to furnish such information relating to the aircraft and its cargo and produce for their or his inspection such documents so relating and such cargo as they or he may specify, and that authorised person or that officer may (either alone or accompanied and assisted by persons under his authority) board the aircraft and search it and, for that purpose, may use or authorise the use of reasonable force; and, if the aircraft is then in the Territory, the Governor or any such authorised person or any such officer (either there and then or upon consideration of any information furnished or document or cargo produced in pursuance of such a request) may further request the charterer, operator and the commander or any of them to cause the aircraft to remain in the Territory until notified that the aircraft may depart; and the charterer, the operator and the commander shall comply with any such request. (4) Without prejudice to the provisions of paragraph (8) of this Article, where the Governor or any person authorised by him as aforesaid or any such officer as aforesaid has reason to suspect that any request that an aircraft should remain in the Territory that has been made under paragraph (3) of this Article may not be complied with the Governor or that authorised person or that officer may take such steps as appear to him to be necessary to secure compliance with that request and, without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing, may for that purpose
(5) A person authorised by the Governor to exercise any power for the purposes of paragraph (3) or paragraph (4) of this Article shall, if requested to do so, produce evidence of this authority before exercising that power. (6) No information furnished or document produced by any person in pursuance of a request made under this Article shall be disclosed except
(7) Any power conferred by this Article to request the furnishing of information or the production of a document or of cargo for inspection shall include a power to specify whether the information should be furnished orally or in writing and in what form and to specify the time by which and the place in which the information should be furnished or the document or cargo produced for inspection. (8) Each of the following persons shall be guilty of an offence against this Order, that is to say:
(9) Nothing in this Article shall be construed so as to prejudice any other provision of law conferring powers or imposing restrictions or enabling restrictions to be imposed with respect to ships or aircraft.
9. The provisions of Schedule 1 to this Order shall have effect in order to facilitate the obtaining, by or on behalf of the Governor of the Territory of evidence and information for the purpose of securing compliance with or detecting evasion of this Order and in order to facilitate the obtaining, by or on behalf of the Governor of the Territory of evidence of the commission of an offence against this Order or with respect to any of the matters regulated by this Order, of an offence relating to customs.
10.(1) Any person guilty of an offence against this Order shall be liable
(2) Where any body corporate is guilty of an offence against this Order, and that offence is proved to have been committed with the consent or connivance of, or to be attributable to any neglect on the part of, any director, manager, secretary or other similar officer of the body corporate of any person who was purporting to act in any such capacity, he, as well as the body corporate, shall be guilty of that offence and shall be liable to be proceeded against and punished accordingly. (3) Summary proceedings for an offence against this Order, being an offence alleged to have been committed outside the Territory, may be commenced at any time not later than twelve months from the date on which the person charged first enters the Territory after committing the offence. (4) Proceedings against any person for an offence against this Order may be taken before the appropriate court in the Territory, or in any territory to which this Order extends, having jurisdiction in the place where that person is for the time being. (5) No proceedings for an offence against this Order shall be instituted in a scheduled territory except by or with the consent of the principal public officer of the territory having responsibility for criminal prosecutions.
11.(1) The Governor of the Territory may to such extent and subject to such restrictions and conditions as he may think proper, delegate or authorise the delegation of any of his powers under this Order (other than the power to give authority under Schedule 1 to this Order to apply for a search warrant) to any person, or class or description of persons, approved by him, and references in this Order to the Governor shall be construed accordingly. (2) Any licences granted under this Order may be either general or special, may be subject to or without conditions, may be limited so as to expire on a specified date unless renewed and may be varied or revoked by the authority that granted them.
12.(1) This Order applies to or in relation to any ship or aircraft or any body corporate that purports to be registered in any particular place or, as the case may be, that purports to be incorporated or constituted under the law of that place as it applies to or in relation to any ship or aircraft that is so registered or any body corporate that is so incorporated or constituted. (2) Any provision of this Order which prohibits the doing of a thing except under the authority of a licence granted by the Governor or under the Iraq and Kuwait (United Nations Sanctions) Order 1990 or the Export of Goods (Control) (Iraq and Kuwait Sanctions) Order 1990 shall not have effect in relation to any such thing done in a country or place other than the Territory to which this Order extends or done elsewhere outside the Territory by a person who is ordinarily resident in, or by a body incorporated or constituted under the law of, that country or place, provided that it is so done under the authority of a licence or with permission granted, in accordance with any law in force in that country or place (being a law substantially corresponding to the relevant provision of this Order), by the authority competent in that behalf under that law.
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