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Treaty between Çakaristan and Mercury: Difference between revisions

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President of Mercury  
President of Mercury  
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== See also ==
* [[Foreign relations of Çakaristan]]


[[category:Treaties]]
[[category:Treaties]]

Latest revision as of 07:18, 10 July 2023

The Treaty of friendship and cooperation between the Ultimate Çakar Sultanate and the Republic of Mercury was signed and ratified in 1693 AN.

Text

EmblemofÇakaristan.png Coat of arms of Mercury.png


TREATY OF FRIENDSHIP AND COOPERATION

BETWEEN

THE ULTIMATE ÇAKAR SULTANATE

AND

THE REPUBLIC OF MERCURY


His Majesty, Akbar Çakar, Sultan of Çakaristan

and

His Excellency, Nick Perry, President of Mercury

desire for a diplomatic relationship and good understanding between them, underpinning further friendship between their respective countries, have agreed to the following articles of agreement:

Article I – Peace and friendship
There shall be a firm and perpetual state of peace and friendly relations between His Majesty, the Sultan of Çakaristan and His Excellency, the President of Mercury, between Their Heirs or Successors, and between the Ultimate Çakar Sultanate and the Republic of Mercury, in this treaty the High Contracting Parties, and between their Citizens, without discrimination.

Article II - Sovereignty and territorial integrity
Each High Contracting Party shall respect the independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity of the other party. The High Contracting Parties shall continue to develop and consolidate the relations of sincere friendship, good neighbourliness and comprehensive cooperation existing between them on the basis of the aforesaid principles as well as those of equality and mutual benefit.

Territorial integrity includes the territory of a High Contracting Party to the extent acknowledged and published by the Micronational Cartography Society. The territory extends 24 kilometres from the baseline coast of the High Contracting Party. Including the localities where the coastline is deeply indented and cut into, or if there is a fringe of islands along the coast in its immediate vicinity, the method of straight baselines joining appropriate points may be employed in drawing the baseline from which the breadth of the territorial sea is measured.

The reserve zone of a High Contracting Party extends 360 kilometres from the baseline coast. The economic and environmental resources within this zone belong fully to that High Contracting Party. In special situations where the territorial waters or the reserve zone of the High Contracting Parties would overlap, the line of separation will be drawn along the midpoint between the baseline of each High Contracting Party.

Article III - Airspace
Each High Contracting Party commits that any overflight of its airspace by aircraft registered upon the territory of the Other High Contracting Party, whose source and destination are outside the jurisdiction of the Overflown High Contracting Party and which make no intermediate landing upon the territory of the Overflown High Contracting Party, shall be considered to fall outside the remit of customs or immigration regulations and wholly outside the jurisdiction of any Third Parties, without prejudice to the exclusive right of the Overflown High Contracting Party to approve or deny such overflight as it sees fit.

The High Contracting Party can set up a Prohibited airspace, an overflight is strictly prohibited. The High Contracting Party informs about Prohibited airspace and appropriate punitive measures follow an overflight of an aircraft registered with the other High Contracting Party.

Article IV – Diplomatic mission
The High Contracting Parties will maintain regular contacts with each other on major international problems affecting the interests of both of their countries and governments by means of meetings, and exchanges of views between their leading statesmen, visits by official delegations and special envoys of the governments, and through diplomatic channels.

The High Contracting Party will make an embassy available for each other.

For the embassy, associated grounds, associated vehicles, leading statesmen, visits by official delegations, special envoys of the governments and ambassadors, diplomatic immunity applies.

Each High Contracting party recognizes and respects the procedures of acceptance by the ambassador, by handing over a letter of credence, which is addressed from one head of state to the other asking to give credence.

Article V - Recognition of bureaucracy
Each High Contracting Party gives to the other full faith and credit to all public acts, records, contracts and judicial proceedings in the field of civil law, including records and documents on marriage, property, titles, death and inheritance, in as much as any act, record, document, contract, proceeding is done according to the law.

Article VI - Visa-free access
The High Contracting Parties agree to grant each other's citizens visa-free access to their nation. Persons can be refused entry or deported after a court ruling.

Article VII - Interpretation
Any difference of interpretation of any Article or Articles of this Treaty which may arise between the High Contracting Parties will be settled bilaterally by peaceful means in a spirit of mutual respect and understanding.

Article VIII - Ratification
This Treaty enters into force upon its signature and ratification by Both High Contracting Parties in accordance with their respective domestic procedures.


Signed on 16.VIII.1693 AN:

For the Ultimate Çakar Sultanate:
Akbar Çakar
Sultan of Çakaristan


For the Republic of Mercury:
Nick Perry
President of Mercury

See also