CHAPTER
285
PROTECTION OF AVIATION (TOKYO, HAGUE AND MONTREAL CONVENTIONS) |
ARRANGEMENT OF
SECTIONS |
PART I
PRELIMINARY |
SECTION |
|
|
PART II
PROVISIONS GIVING EFFECT TO THE TOKYO CONVENTION |
Interpretation of Part II. |
Application of criminal law to aircraft. |
Extension of local criminal jurisdiction. |
Powers of commander of aircraft. |
Jurisdiction of Convention countries for
extradition purposes. |
Provisions as to evidence in connection with
aircraft. |
PART III
PROVISIONS GIVING EFFECT TO THE HAGUE CONVENTION |
|
Violence against passengers or crew. |
Extradition for hijacking. |
PART IV
PROVISIONS GIVING EFFECT TO THE MONTREAL CONVENTION |
Interpretation of Part IV. |
Destroying, damaging or endangering safety of
aircraft. |
Other acts endangering or likely to endanger
aircraft. |
Inducing or assisting commission of acts
excepted from sections 13 and 14. |
Penalties and jurisdiction. |
Extradition for offences under this part. |
No conferment of civil remedy under this Part;
saving. |
PART V
GENERAL |
|
Aircraft operated by joint or international
organization. |
Minister's certificate as to use of aircraft. |
|
Powers exercisable on suspicion of intended
offence. |
|
|
SCHEDULE - Provisions of Geneva Convention on the High Seas
to be Treated as Part of the Law of Nations. |
CHAPTER 285 |
PROTECTION OF
AVIATION (TOKYO, HAGUE AND MONTREAL CONVENTIONS) |
An Act to
give effect to the convention for the suppression of unlawful acts against the
safety of civil aviation and to consolidate the law relating to matters
affecting the security of civil aviation. | 24 of 1984 |
[Assent 31st
December, 1984]
[Commencement 4th January, 1985] |
PART I
PRELIMINARY |
1. This Act may be cited as the Protection of Aviation
(Tokyo, Hague and Montreal Conventions) Act. | Short title. |
2. (1) In this Act- | Interpretation. |
"Immigration
Officer" has the meaning assigned to it in section 2(1) of the
Immigration Act; |
"service
aircraft" means any aircraft which is used in the military, customs or
police service of any country. |
(2) Any reference
to the Extradition Act shall be construed as a reference to the
Extradition Act, 1994. |
(3) Any reference
to "military service" includes a reference to naval or air force
service. |
PART II
PROVISIONS GIVING EFFECT TO THE TOKYO CONVENTION |
3. (1) In this Part- | Interpretation of Part II. |
"aircraft"
means any aircraft, whether or not a Bahamian-controlled aircraft, but with the
exception- |
(a) of any
service aircraft: |
Provided
that the Minister may, by order, direct that any of the provisions of this Part
shall apply, with or without modification, to any service aircraft, other than
an aircraft which is used in military service; |
(b) of any
aircraft (other than service aircraft) to the exclusive use of which the Government
is entitled; |
"Bahamian-controlled
aircraft" means an aircraft- |
(a) which is
for the time being registered in The Bahamas; or |
(b) which is
not for the time being registered in any country but in the case of which
either the operator of the aircraft or each person entitled as owner to any
legal or beneficial interest in it- |
(i) is
a person qualified to be the owner of a legal or beneficial interest in an
aircraft registered in The Bahamas; and |
(ii) resides
or has his principal place of business in The Bahamas; or |
(c) which,
being registered in some other country is demised or hired out to a person who,
or to persons each of whom, satisfies the requirements set out in paragraph
(b)(i) and (ii); |
"commander",
in relation to an aircraft, means the member of the crew designated as the
commander of that aircraft by the operator thereof, or failing such a person
the person who is for the time being lawfully the pilot in command of the
aircraft; |
"Convention
country" means a country in which the Convention is for the time being in
force, and a certificate of the Minister charged with responsibility for
Foreign Affairs that any country specified in the certificate is a Convention
country for the purposes of this Act shall be conclusive evidence that the country
in question is for the time being a Convention country; |
"operator",
in relation to an aircraft at any time, means the person who at the time has
lawfully the management of that aircraft; |
"pilot in
command", in relation to an aircraft, means the person who for the time
being is lawfully in charge of the piloting of the aircraft without being under
the direction of any other pilot in the aircraft; |
"the
Convention" means the Convention on Offences and certain other Acts
committed on board Aircraft signed at Tokyo on 14th September, 1963. |
(2) For the
purposes of this Part, the period during which an aircraft is in flight shall
be deemed to include- |
(a) any period
from the moment when the power is applied for the purpose of the aircraft
taking off on a flight until the moment when the landing run (if any) at the
termination of that flight ends; and |
(b) for the
purposes of section 6- |
(i) any
further period from the moment when all external doors, if any, of the aircraft
are closed following embarkation for a flight until the moment when any such
door is opened for disembarkation after that flight; and |
(ii) if
the aircraft makes a forced landing, any period thereafter until the time when
the competent authorities of the country in which the landing takes place take
over the responsibility for the aircraft and for the persons and property on
board (being, if the forced landing takes place in The Bahamas, the time when a
peace officer acting in the execution of his functions, arrives at the place of
landing), |
and any
reference in this Part to an aircraft in flight includes a reference to an
aircraft during any period when it is on the surface of the sea or land but not
within the territorial limits of any country. |
(3) In this Part,
any reference to a country or the territorial limits thereof includes a
reference to the territorial waters, if any, of that country. |
4. (1) Any act taking place on board a
Bahamian-controlled aircraft while in flight elsewhere than in or over The
Bahamas and which, if taking place in The Bahamas, would constitute an offence
under the law in force in The Bahamas shall constitute that offence: | Application of criminal law to aircraft. |
Provided that this
subsection shall not apply to any act which is, by or under that law, expressly
or impliedly authorised when taking place outside The Bahamas. |
(2) No proceedings
for any offence under the law in force in The Bahamas committed on board an
aircraft while in flight elsewhere than in or over The Bahamas (other than an
offence against the Civil Aviation Act, or any orders or regulations made
thereunder or as mentioned in section 20 thereof) shall be instituted except by
or with the consent of the Attorney-General. |
5. For the purpose of conferring jurisdiction, any
offence under the law in force in The Bahamas, being an offence committed on
board an aircraft in flight, shall be deemed to have been committed in any
place in The Bahamas where the offender may for the time being be. | Extension of local criminal jurisdiction. |
6. (1) The provisions of subsections (2) to (5) shall
have effect for the purposes of any proceedings before any court in The
Bahamas. | Powers of commander of aircraft. |
(2) If the
commander of an aircraft in flight, wherever that aircraft may be, has
reasonable grounds to believe in respect of any person on board the aircraft- |
(a) that the
person in question has done or is about to do any act on the aircraft while it
is in flight which jeopardises or may jeopardise- |
(i) the
safety of the aircraft or of persons or property on board the aircraft; or |
(ii) good
order and discipline on board the aircraft; or |
(b) that the
person in question has done on the aircraft while in flight any act which in
the opinion of the commander is a serious offence under any law in force in the
country in which the aircraft is registered, not being a law of a political
nature or based on racial or religious discrimination, |
then subject
to subsection (4) the commander may take with respect to that person such
reasonable measures, including restraint of his person, as may be necessary- |
(i) to protect
the safety of the aircraft or of persons or property on board the aircraft; or |
(ii) to
maintain good order and discipline on board the aircraft; or |
(iii) to enable
the commander to disembark or deliver that person in accordance with subsection
(5), |
and for the
purposes of paragraph (b) any Bahamian-controlled aircraft shall be deemed to
be registered in The Bahamas whether or not it is in fact so registered and
whether or not it is in fact registered in some other country. |
(3) Any member of
the crew of an aircraft and any other person on board the aircraft may, at the
request or with the authority of the commander of the aircraft, and any such member
shall if so required by that commander, render assistance in restraining any
person whom the commander is entitled under subsection (2) to restrain; and at
any time when the aircraft is in flight any such member or other person may,
without obtaining the authority of the commander, take with respect to any
person on board the aircraft any measures such as are mentioned in subsection
(2) which he has reasonable grounds to believe are immediately necessary to
protect the safety of the aircraft or of persons or property on board the
aircraft. |
(4) Any restraint
imposed on any person on board an aircraft under the powers conferred by the
foregoing provisions of this section shall not be continued after the time when
the aircraft first thereafter ceases to be in flight unless before or as soon
as is reasonably practicable after that time, the commander of the aircraft
causes notification of the fact that a person on board the aircraft is under
restraint, and of the reasons therefor, to be sent to an appropriate authority
of the country in which the aircraft so ceases to be in flight, but subject to
such notification may be continued after that time- |
(a) for any
period (including the period of any further flight) between that time and the
first occasion thereafter on which the commander is able with any requisite
consent of the appropriate authorities to disembark or deliver the person under
restraint in accordance with subsection (5); or |
(b) if the
person under restraint agrees to continue his journey under restraint on board
that aircraft. |
(5) The commander
of an aircraft- |
(a) if in the
case of any person on board the aircraft he has reasonable grounds- |
(i) to
believe as mentioned in paragraph (a) of subsection (2); and |
(ii) to
believe that it is necessary so to do in order to protect the safety of the
aircraft or of persons or property on board the aircraft or to maintain good
order and discipline on board the aircraft, may disembark that person in any
country in which that aircraft may be; and |
(b) if in the
case of any person on board the aircraft he has reasonable grounds to believe
as mentioned in paragraph (b) of subsection (2), may deliver that person- |
(i) in
The Bahamas, to a peace officer or immigration officer; or |
(ii) in
any country which is a Convention country, to an officer having functions
corresponding to the functions in The Bahamas either of a peace officer or of
an immigration officer. |
(6) The commander
of an aircraft- |
(a) if he
disembarks any person in pursuance of paragraph (a) of subsection (5), in the
case of a Bahamian-controlled aircraft, in any country or, in the case of any
other aircraft, in The Bahamas, shall report the fact of, and the reasons for,
that disembarkation to- |
(i) an
appropriate authority in the country of disembarkation; and |
(ii) the
appropriate diplomatic or consular office of the country of nationality of that
person; |
(b) if he
intends to deliver any person in accordance with paragraph (b) of subsection
(5) in The Bahamas or, in the case of a Bahamian-controlled aircraft, in any
other country which is a Convention country, shall before or as soon as
reasonably practicable after landing give notification of his intention and of
the reasons therefor- |
(i) where
the country in question is The Bahamas, to a peace officer or immigration
officer or, in the case of any other country, to an officer having functions
corresponding to the functions in The Bahamas either of a peace officer or of
an immigration officer; and |
(ii) in
either case to the appropriate diplomatic or consular officer of the country of
nationality of that person, |
and any
commander of an aircraft who without reasonable cause fails to comply with the
requirements of this subsection shall be liable on summary conviction to a fine
of five hundred dollars. |
7. For the purposes of the application of the
Extradition Act to crimes committed on board an aircraft in flight, any
aircraft registered in a Convention country shall, at any time, while that
aircraft is in flight, be deemed to be within the jurisdiction of that country
whether or not it is for the time being also within the jurisdiction of any
other country; and paragraphs (1) to (3) of section 16 of the Extradition Act
shall have effect also where a person's surrender is sought in respect of a
crime committed on board an aircraft in flight which lands in The Bahamas, but
as if in paragraph (3) for references to the port where the vessel lies there
were substituted references to the place at which the person whose surrender is
sought is disembarked. | Jurisdiction of Convention countries for extradition
purposes. |
8. (1) Where, in proceedings before any court in The
Bahamas for an offence committed on board an aircraft, the testimony of any
person is required and the court is satisfied that such person cannot be found
in The Bahamas, there shall, subject to subsection (2), be admissible in
evidence before that court any deposition relating to the subject matter of
those proceedings, previously made on oath by that person outside The Bahamas
and which was so made- | Provisions as to evidence in connection with aircraft. |
(a) in the
presence of the person charged with the offence; and |
(b) before a
judge or magistrate of any country in the Commonwealth or before any consular
officer within the meaning of the Merchant Shipping Act. |
(2) Any such
deposition shall be authenticated by the signature of the judge, magistrate or
officer aforesaid before whom it was made, and shall be certified by him to
have been taken in the presence of the person charged as aforesaid. |
(3) It shall not
be necessary in any proceedings to prove the signature or official character of
the person appearing to have authenticated any deposition, or to have given
such a certificate, as aforesaid; and such a certificate shall, unless the
contrary is proved, be sufficient evidence in any proceedings that the person
charged as aforesaid was present at the making of the deposition. |
(4) If a complaint
is made to such an officer as aforesaid that any offence has been committed on
a Bahamian-controlled aircraft while in flight elsewhere than in or over The
Bahamas, it shall be lawful for that officer to inquire into the case upon
oath. |
(5) In this
section, the expression "deposition" includes any affidavit,
affirmation or statement made upon oath; and nothing in this section shall
prejudice the admission as evidence of any deposition which is admissible in
evidence apart from this section. |
PART III
PROVISIONS GIVING EFFECT TO THE HAGUE CONVENTION |
9. (1) Subject to subsection (2), a person on board an
aircraft in flight who unlawfully, by use of force or threats of any kind,
seizes the aircraft or exercises control of it, commits the offence of
hijacking, whatever his nationality, whatever the State in which the aircraft
is registered, and whether the aircraft is in The Bahamas or elsewhere. | Hijacking. |
(2) If- |
(a) the
aircraft is a service aircraft; or |
(b) both the
place of take-off and the place of landing are in the territory of the State in
which the aircraft is registered, |
subsection
(1) shall not apply unless- |
(i) the person
seizing or exercising control of the aircraft is a citizen of The Bahamas; or |
(ii) his act
is committed in The Bahamas; or |
(iii) the
aircraft is registered in The Bahamas or is a Bahamian service aircraft. |
(3) A person who- |
(a) commits the
offence of hijacking; or |
(b) in The
Bahamas, induces or assists the commission elsewhere of an act which would be
the offence of hijacking but for subsection (2), |
shall be
liable on conviction on information to imprisonment for life. |
(4) For the
purposes of this section, the period during which an aircraft is in flight
shall be deemed to include any period from the moment when all its external
doors are closed following embarkation until the moment when any such door is
opened for disembarkation, and, in the case of a forced landing, any period
until the competent authorities of the State in which that landing takes place
take over responsibility for the aircraft and for persons and property on board
(being, if the forced landing takes place in The Bahamas, the time when a peace
officer acting in the execution of his functions, arrives at the place of
landing). |
(5) In relation to
any offence of hijacking committed outside The Bahamas section 5 shall apply
and for the purpose of such application in respect of a service aircraft
paragraph (a) of the definition of aircraft in section 3(1) shall be deemed to
have been omitted. |
(6) For the
purposes of this section, the territorial waters of any State shall be treated
as part of its territory. |
10. Without prejudice to section 4, where a person (of
whatever nationality) does on board any aircraft (wherever registered) and
while outside The Bahamas any act which, if done in The Bahamas, would
constitute the offence of murder, attempted murder, manslaughter or assault or
an offence under section 269, 270, 272, 273, 274, 275 or 276 of the Penal
Code, or section 3 of the Explosive Substances (Illegal Use and Possession) Act,
or section 34 of the Firearms Act, his act shall constitute that offence if
it is done in connection with the offence of hijacking committed or attempted
by him on board that aircraft. | Violence against passengers or crew. |
11. (1) The list of extradition crimes in the
Extradition Act shall be deemed to include any offence under this Part and (so
far as not included in that list by virtue of the foregoing) any attempt to
commit such an offence. | Extradition for hijacking. |
(2) Subject to
sections 19(1) and 25(2), where the Extradition Act does not apply
in the case of any foreign State which is a party to the Convention, an order
providing for the Extradition Act to apply in the case of that State may be
made with like effect and subject to like terms and conditions as if authorised
by section 4 of that Act and, for the purposes of any such order, the
Convention shall be treated as an arrangement such as mentioned in that
section: |
Provided that
where the Extradition Act applies by virtue of an order under this subsection,
no such application shall relate to any extradition crimes within the meaning
of the Extradition Act except offences under this Part and attempts to commit
such offences. |
(3) In this
section "the Convention" means the Convention for the Suppression of
Unlawful Seizure of Aircraft signed at The Hague on 16th December, 1970. |
PART IV
PROVISIONS GIVING EFFECT TO THE MONTREAL CONVENTION |
12. (1) In this Part- | Interpretation of Part IV. |
"act of
violence" means- |
(a) any act
done in The Bahamas- |
(i) which
constitutes the offence of murder, attempted murder, manslaughter, or an
assault or an offence under sections 269, 270, 272, 273, 274, 275 or 276 of the Penal Code or section 34 of the Firearms Act; or |
(ii) whereby
an explosion of a nature likely to endanger life, or to cause serious injury to
property, is maliciously caused by means of any explosive substance, whether or
not any injury to person or property is actually caused; or |
(b) any act
done outside The Bahamas which, if done in The Bahamas, would constitute an act
of violence within the meaning assigned to that expression by paragraph (a); |
"article"
includes any substance, whether in solid or liquid form or in the form of a gas
or vapour; |
"explosive
substance" includes any materials or apparatus for making any explosive
substance, any apparatus, machine, implement or article or materials used, or
intended to be used, or adapted for causing or aiding in causing, any explosion
in or with any explosive substance and any part of any such apparatus, machine
or implement; |
"property"
includes any land, buildings or works, any aircraft or vehicle and any baggage,
cargo or other article of any description; |
"unlawfully"- |
(a) in relation
to the commission of an act in The Bahamas, means so as (apart from the
provisions of this Part) to constitute an offence under the law of The Bahamas; |
(b) in relation
to the commission of an act outside The Bahamas, means so that the commission
of the act would (apart from the provisions of this Part) have been an offence
under the law of The Bahamas if it had been committed in The Bahamas. |
(2) The provisions
of section 9(4) shall apply in relation to this Part as they apply in relation
to Part III. |
(3) For the
purposes of this Part, an aircraft shall be taken to be in service during the
whole of the period which begins with the pre-flight preparation of the
aircraft for a flight and ends twenty-four hours after the aircraft lands upon
completion of that flight, and also at any time (not falling within that
period) while the aircraft is in flight. |
13. (1) It shall, subject to subsection (4), be an
offence for any person unlawfully and intentionally- | Destroying, damaging or endangering safety of
aircraft. |
(a) to destroy
an aircraft in service or so to damage an aircraft in service as to render it
incapable of flight or as to be likely to endanger its safety in flight; or |
(b) to commit
on board an aircraft in flight any act of violence which is likely to endanger
the safety of the aircraft. |
(2) It shall also,
subject to subsection (4), be an offence for any person unlawfully and
intentionally to place, or cause to be placed, on an aircraft in service any
device or substance which is likely to destroy the aircraft, or is likely so to
damage it as to render it incapable of flight or as to be likely to endanger
its safety in flight, but nothing in this subsection shall be construed as
limiting the circumstances in which the commission of any act- |
(a) may
constitute an offence under subsection (1); or |
(b) may
constitute attempting or conspiring to commit, or aiding, abetting, counselling
or procuring, the commission of such an offence. |
(3) Except as
provided by subsection (4), subsections (1) and (2) apply whether any such act
as is therein mentioned is committed in The Bahamas or elsewhere, whatever the
nationality of the person committing the act and whatever the State in which
the aircraft is registered. |
(4) Subsections
(1) and (2) do not apply to any act committed in relation to any service
aircraft unless- |
(a) the act is
committed in The Bahamas; or |
(b) where the
act is committed outside The Bahamas, the person committing it is a citizen of
The Bahamas. |
14. (1) It shall, subject to subsections (5) and (6),
be an offence for any person unlawfully and intentionally to destroy or damage
any property to which this subsection applies, or to interfere with the
operation of any such property, where the destruction, damage or interference
is likely to endanger the safety of aircraft in flight. | Other acts endangering or likely to endanger aircraft. |
(2) Subsection (1)
applies to any property used for the provision of air navigation facilities,
including any land, building or ship so used, and including any apparatus or
equipment so used, whether it is on board an aircraft or elsewhere. |
(3) It shall also,
subject to subsections (4) and (5), be an offence for any person intentionally
to communicate any information which is false, misleading or deceptive in a
material particular, where the communication of the information endangers the
safety of an aircraft in flight or is likely to endanger the safety of aircraft
in flight. |
(4) It shall be a
defence for a person charged with an offence under subsection (3) to prove
that, when he communicated the information- |
(a) he believed
and had reasonable grounds for believing, the information to be true; or |
(b) he was
lawfully employed to perform duties which consisted of or included the
communication of information and that he communicated the information in good
faith in the performance of those duties. |
(5) Subsections
(1) and (3) do not apply to the commission of any act unless either the act is
committed in The Bahamas or, where it is committed outside The Bahamas- |
(a) the person
committing it is a citizen of The Bahamas; or |
(b) the
commission of the act endangers or is likely to endanger the safety in flight
of a civil aircraft registered in The Bahamas or demised or hired out to a
person whose principal place of business, or (if he has no place of business)
whose permanent residence, is in The Bahamas; or |
(c) the act is
committed on board a civil aircraft referred to in paragraph (b); or |
(d) the act is
committed on board a civil aircraft which lands in The Bahamas with the person
who committed the act still on board. |
(6) Subsection (1)
also does not apply to any act committed outside The Bahamas and so committed
in relation to property which is situated outside The Bahamas and is not used
for the provision of air navigation facilities in connection with international
air navigation, unless the person committing the act is a citizen of The
Bahamas. |
(7) In this
section "civil aircraft" means any aircraft, other than a service
aircraft. |
15. (1) It shall be an offence for any person in The
Bahamas to induce or assist the commission outside The Bahamas of any act
which- | Inducing or assisting commission of acts excepted from
sections 13 and 14. |
(a) would, but
for section 13(4) be an offence under section 13; or |
(b) would, but
for subsection (5) or (6) of section 14, be an offence under section 14. |
(2) Subsection (1)
shall, in relation to any offence under section 13 or 14, have effect without
prejudice to the provisions of sections 85 and 328 of the Penal Code. |
16. (1) Any person who commits an offence under this
Part shall be liable on conviction on information to imprisonment for life. | Penalties and jurisdiction. |
(2) Section 9(5)
shall apply in relation to any offence under section 13 or 14, being an offence
committed outside The Bahamas, as it applies in relation to any offence of
hijacking committed outside The Bahamas. |
17. (1) The list of extradition crimes in the
Extradition Act shall be deemed to include any offence under this Part and (so
far as not included in that list by virtue of the foregoing) any attempt to
commit such an offence. | Extradition for offences under this Part. |
(2) Subject to
sections 19(1) and 25(2), where the Extradition Act does not apply
in the case of any foreign State which is a party to the Convention, an order
providing for the Extradition Act to apply in the case of that State may be
made with like effect and subject to like terms and conditions as if authorised
by section 4 of that Act and, for the purposes of any such order, the
Convention shall be treated as an arrangement such as mentioned in that
section: |
Provided that
where the Extradition Act applies by virtue of an order under this subsection,
no such application shall relate to any extradition crimes within the meaning
of the Extradition Act except offences under this Part or attempts to commit
such offences. |
(3) In this
section "the Convention" means the Convention for the Suppression of
Unlawful Acts against the Safety of Civil Aviation signed at Montreal on 23rd
September, 1971. |
18. Nothing in the provisions of sections 13, 14 and
15- | No conferment of civil remedy under this Part; Saving. |
(a) confers a
right of action in any civil proceedings in respect of any contravention of
this Part; or |
(b) derogates
from any right of action or other remedy (whether civil or criminal) in
proceedings instituted otherwise than under this Part. |
PART V
GENERAL |
19. (1) All authority for the making of orders under
sections 11 and 17 shall be vested in the Minister charged with responsibility
for Foreign Affairs. | Extradition. |
(2) For the
purposes of the
Extradition Act, any act (wherever committed)- |
(a) which is an
offence under Part III or IV, or an attempt to commit such an offence, or would
be such an offence or attempt but for section 9(2) or section 13(4) or
subsection (5) or (6) or section 14; and |
(b) which is an
offence against the law of any foreign State in the case of which the
Extradition Act applies, |
shall be
deemed to be an offence committed within the jurisdiction of that State. |
20. If the Minister by order declares- | Aircraft operated by joint or international
organization. |
(a) that any
two or more States named in the order have established an organization or
agency which operates aircraft; and |
(b) that one of
those States has been designated to exercise the powers of the State of
registration, or to be considered as the State thereof, in relation to all or
any aircraft so operated, |
then, for
the purposes of such provisions of this Act as the order shall prescribe, the
State declared under paragraph (b) shall be deemed to be the State in which all
aircraft so operated, or (as the case may be) any such aircraft specified in
the order, are registered. |
21. (1) A certificate of the Minister stating whether
or not- | Minister's certificate as to use of aircraft. |
(a) an aircraft
is or was at any time a service aircraft; |
(b) an aircraft
is one to the exclusive use of which the Government is or was, at any time,
entitled; |
(c) military
service is the service in reference to which an aircraft is or was at any time
a service aircraft, |
for the
purposes of any provisions of this Act, shall be conclusive evidence of the
matter so certified. |
(2) Any document
purporting to be such a certificate as is mentioned in subsection (1) shall he
deemed to be such a certificate, unless the contrary is proved. |
22. (1) No proceedings for any offence under Part III
or IV shall be instituted except by or with the consent of the
Attorney-General. | Prosecution of offence. |
(2) Nothing in
subsection (1) or in section 4(2) shall prevent the arrest, or the issue of a
warrant for the arrest, of any person in respect of any offence under this Act,
or the remanding in custody or on bail of any person charged with any such
offence. |
(3) For the
purposes of Parts III, IV and of this Part, the territorial sea of, and
archipelagic waters adjacent to, The Bahamas shall be treated as included in
The Bahamas. |
23. Where a peace officer has reasonable cause to
suspect that a person about to embark on an aircraft in The Bahamas, or a
person on board such an aircraft, intends to commit an offence under PART III
or IV in relation to the aircraft, the peace officer may prohibit him from
travelling on board the aircraft; and for the purpose of enforcing such
prohibition may- | Powers exercisable on suspicion of intended offence. |
(a) prevent him
from embarking on the aircraft, or as the case may be, remove him from the
aircraft; |
(b) arrest him
without warrant and detain him for so long as may be necessary for that
purpose. |
24. For the avoidance of doubt, it is hereby declared
that for the purposes of any proceedings before any court in The Bahamas in
respect of piracy, the provisions set out in the Schedule, being provisions of
theConvention
on the High Seas signed at Geneva on the 29th April, 1958, shall be treated as
constituting part of the law of nations; and any such court having jurisdiction
in respect of piracy committed on the high seas shall have jurisdiction in
respect of piracy committed by or against an aircraft wherever that piracy is
committed. | Piracy. |
25. (1) The provisions of the Tokyo Convention Act,
1967 and of the Hijacking Act, 1971 of the United Kingdom as applied to The
Bahamas by the Tokyo Convention Act, 1967 (Overseas Territories) Order, 1968
and the Hijacking Act, 1971 (Overseas Territories) Order, 1971, respectively,
are hereby repealed. | Repeal. |
(2)
Notwithstanding the repeal of the provisions effected by subsection (1) all
laws made under the repealed provisions or the Extradition Act for the purpose
of the carrying out of the repealed provisions in their application to The
Bahamas and having effect therein at the commencement of this Act shall, in so
far as such laws are not inconsistent with this Act, or like provision made by
or under this Act, continue to have effect as if references in those laws to
the repealed provisions were references to the respective provisions of this
Act subject to such modifications, adaptations, qualifications and exceptions
as may be necessary for the purpose. |
SCHEDULE (Section 24) |
PROVISIONS OF
GENEVA CONVENTION ON THE HIGH SEAS
TO BE TREATED AS PART OF THE LAW OF NATIONS |
ARTICLE 15 |
Piracy consists of
any of the following acts: |
(1) Any illegal
acts of violence, detention or any act of depredation, committed for private
ends by the crew or the passengers of a private ship or a private aircraft, and
directed: |
(a) On
the high seas, against another ship or aircraft, or against persons or property
on board such ship or aircraft; |
(b) Against
a ship, aircraft, persons or property in a place outside the jurisdiction of
any State; |
(2) Any act of
voluntary participation in the operation of a ship or of an aircraft with
knowledge of facts making it a pirate ship or aircraft; |
(3) Any act of
inciting or of intentionally facilitating an act described in subparagraph (1) or
subparagraph (2) of this article. |
ARTICLE 16 |
The acts of
piracy, as defined in article 15, committed by a warship, government ship or
government aircraft whose crew has mutinied and taken control of the ship or
aircraft are assimilated to acts committed by a private ship. |
ARTICLE 17 |
A ship or aircraft
is considered a pirate ship or aircraft if it is intended by the persons in
dominant control to be used for the purpose of committing one of the acts
referred to in article 15. The same applies if the ship or aircraft has been
used to commit any such act, so long as it remains under the control of the
persons guilty of that act. |