Agreement relating to Refugee seamen
Parties with reservations, declarations and objections
Party | Reservations / Declarations | Objections |
---|---|---|
Italy | Yes | No |
Netherlands, the Kingdom of the | Yes | No |
New Zealand | Yes | No |
Portugal | Yes | No |
Italy
30-05-1969
1. Italy's accession to the Agreement should be interpreted as applying to all provisions
which do not conflict with the Italian Navigation Code currently in force and which
do not entail amendments or exceptions to that Code.
2. In the Contracting Parties to the Geneva Convention of 29 July 1951, all refugees
except seafarers are deemed to become lawfully resident, as referred to in article
28 of the said Convention and paragraphs 6 and 11 of the Schedule, on the date they
receive authorisation to reside in the State in question.
Extracts from the Italian Navigation Code:
Article 119, paragraph 1
All Italian citizens between the ages of 15 and 25 may be registered as seafarers,
provided they meet the conditions laid down in the regulations for each category.
For doctors, the age limit shall be raised to 35 years.
Article 318
The crew of national armed vessels in the Republic's ports shall be made up entirely
of Italian citizens.
In special cases, the Ministry of the Merchant Navy may authorise the inclusion among
the ordinary seamen of foreign citizens, who may make up no more than one third of
the crew.
Article 319
In foreign ports for maritime or inland navigation, if it is impossible to find either
seamen or navigators of Italian nationality, it is permitted to recruit foreign citizens;
they may make up no more than a quarter of the crew, and shall be engaged only for
the duration of the voyage in question.
In special cases, the consular authority may authorise the recruitment of foreign
citizens in numbers representing a proportion greater than that specified in the preceding
paragraph.
Netherlands, the Kingdom of the
18-10-2010
The Kingdom of the Netherlands consisted of three parts: the Netherlands, the Netherlands
Antilles and Aruba. The Netherlands Antilles consisted of the islands of Curaçao,
Sint Maarten, Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba.
With effect from 10 October 2010, the Netherlands Antilles ceased to exist as a part
of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. Since that date, the Kingdom consists of four parts:
the Netherlands, Aruba, Curaçao and Sint Maarten.
Curaçao and Sint Maarten enjoy internal self-government within the Kingdom, as Aruba
and, up to 10 October 2010, the Netherlands Antilles do. The other islands of the
Netherlands Antilles - Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba - are administratively integrated
in the Netherlands, forming 'the Caribbean part of the Netherlands'.
These changes constitute a modification of the internal constitutional relations within
the Kingdom of the Netherlands. The Kingdom of the Netherlands will accordingly remain
the subject of international law with which agreements are concluded.
The Agreement [...], that applied until now only to the European part of the Netherlands
and Aruba, [is] declared applicable to the Caribbean part of the Netherlands. The
Government of the Netherlands is responsible for implementing the Agreement [...].
New Zealand
21-10-1974
The accession shall not extend to the Cook Islands, Niue and the Tokelau Islands.
Portugal
03-03-1965
[...] that the acceptance, by Portugal, of the said Agreement, doesn't imply the obligations of assuring employment in the portuguese ships to the refugee seamen.