Examples of using Bustamante code in English and their translations into Russian
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Article 13 of the Bustamante Code, for example, stipulates that.
Convention on Private International Law(Bustamante Code), Title III.
Bustamante Code, Convention on Private International Law.
Convention on Private International Law(Bustamante Code) Pan American Union.
The Montevideo Treaty(1984), the Bustamante Code(1928) and the Caracas Extradition Agreement(1911) are also in force at the multilateral level.
Cuba is also a party to the Convention on Private International Law(Bustamante Code) signed in Havana on 13 February 1928.
The Bustamante Code(also known in Spanish as Código de Derecho Internacional Privado) is a treaty intended to establish common rules for Private International Law in the Americas.
Moreover, the Convention on Private International Law(Bustamante Code) establishes mechanisms for extradition.
Venezuela and other Latin American States(Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama andPeru). Convention on Private International Law Bustamante Code.
Article 13 of the Bustamante Code, for example, stipulates that.
In addition to the extradition agreements,Cuba is a party to the Convention on Private International Law(Bustamante Code), signed in Havana on 13 February 1928.
What is involved is the phenomenon often termed"collective naturalizations". See,e.g.,"Code of Private International Law"(Bustamante Code), League of Nations, Treaty Series, vol.
He authored of the Code of Private International Law, Bustamante Code, approved by most Latin American states in the VI International Conference of Havana(1928).
In the absence of a treaty, the Supreme Court applies in this matter, as principles of international law,the provisions of the Convention on International Private Law(the Bustamante Code) adopted at Havana on 20 February 1928.
The Convention on Private International Law, also known as the"Bustamante Code", under Book IV(International Law of Procedure), Title III(Extradition), contains two provisions which read as follows.
The Bustamante Code was adopted at the 1928 Sixth International Conference of American States, from a draft prepared by the Rio de Janeiro International Commission of Jurists in 1927, which itself relied on the preparatory work conducted by Antonio Sánchez de Bustamante y Sirven.
Cuba is also a signatory to the Convention on Private International Law(Bustamante Code), articles 388 to 393 of which regulate the transmittal of letters rogatory between the authorities of the States parties.
This is without prejudice to the obligations that States concerned may have under the terms of any relevant treaty.The principle that“the contractual stipulations between the two[States concerned]… shall always have preference” over the legislation of States involved in the succession is also embodied in article 13 of the Bustamante Code.
As illustrated by the preparatory works of the Bustamante Code and the 1929 Counterfeiting Convention, this discussion is what originally led to the elaboration of a mechanism that would combine the possibility of extradition with that of prosecution.
Consequently, in order to determine whether any of these offences is within the competence of the Chilean courts,the abovementioned internal provisions, the Bustamante Code when appropriate and the relevant provisions of the Convention itself would have to be applied.
In addition, in conformity with the Bustamante Code(art. 345), Chile is obliged to try a national who commits an offence abroad if, when this person is in Chile, an extradition request by the State in which he committed the offence is refused.
In compliance with the provisions on extradition contained in article 2508, section 8 of theJudicial Code of the Republic of Panama, and in article 378 of the Bustamante Code, the Government of the Republic of Cuba undertook not to apply the death penalty for any of the offences for which extradition was being requested.
Those include the European Union Convention on Insolvency Proceedings, the European Convention on Certain International Aspects of Bankruptcy(“Istanbul Convention”, 1990), the Montevideo Private International Law Treaties of 1889 and 1940, the Convention regarding Bankruptcy between Nordic States(1933)as well as the Havana Convention of 1928“Bustamante Code”.
In extradition cases, Venezuela is guided by the relevant international treaties(the Bustamante Code and the InterAmerican Convention on Extradition), by extradition treaties concluded with other countries, and by the Constitution and other relevant domestic legislation.
In the absence of an extradition treaty, the relevant general requirements of international law are applied, those requirements being cited in previous decisions of the Chilean courts as being set out in two multilateral treaties signed by Chile, namely the Inter-American Convention on Extradition of 1933 and the Convention on Private International Law of 1928 the Havana Convention,which contains the"Bustamante Code" or Code of Private International Law.
In extradition cases, Venezuela is guided by the relevant international treaties(the Bustamante Code and the Inter-American Convention on Extradition), by extradition treaties concluded with other countries(see list below), and by the Constitution and other relevant domestic legislation.
However, since the Inter-American Convention on Extradition had been ratified by only four States- Costa Rica, Ecuador, Panama and Venezuela- andboth the Inter-American Convention and the Bustamante Code required the acts in question to be characterized as an offence in the legislation of both the requesting State and the requested State, Venezuela's provisions on extradition were rather limited in scope.
This extradition request was based on the 1928 Bustamante Code, which was adopted without reservations as a rule of international law by the Republics of Cuba and Panama, and on the Judicial Code of the Republic of Panama. The competent authorities were provided with documentary evidence of the offences committed by the aforementioned individuals, which appears in the dossiers for the preparatory and investigation stages in connection with each and every one of these acts.
The international texts on extradition which El Salvador has signed, including the American Convention on Human Rights(Pact of San José),the Convention on Private International Law(Bustamante Code) and the Inter-American Convention on Extradition, embody modern principles which give form to the definition and make it possible to participate in useful international assistance.