General
Regulations of the Universal Postal Union
(Recast and adopted by the 2012
Doha Congress)
Table of contents
Chapter I
Organization, functions and operation of Congresses, the
Council of Administration, the Postal Operations Council and the
Consultative Committee
Section 1
Congress
Article
101 Organization and convening of Congresses and Extraordinary
Congresses
102 Right to vote at Congresses
103 Functions of Congress
104 Rules of Procedure of Congresses
105 Observers to the Union's bodies
Section 2
Council of Administration (CA)
106 Composition and functioning of the CA
107 Functions of the CA
108 Organization of CA sessions
109 Observers
110 Reimbursement of travel expenses
111 nformation on the activities of the CA
Section 3
Postal Operations Council (POC)
112 Composition and functioning of the POC
113 Functions of the POC
114 Organization of POC sessions
115 POC observers
116 Reimbursement of travel expenses
117 Information on the activities of the POC
Section 4
Consultative Committee (CC)
118 Aim of the CC
119 Composition of the CC
120 Membership of the CC
121 Functions of the CC
122 Organization of the CC
123 Representatives of the Consultative Committee at the
Council of Administration, the Postal Operations Council and
Congress
124 CC observers
125 Information on the activities of the CC
Chapter II
International Bureau
Section 1
Election and duties of the Director General and Deputy
Director General of the International Bureau
126 Election of the Director General and Deputy Director
General of the International Bureau
127 Duties of the Director General
128 Duties of the Deputy Director General
Section 2
Secretariat of the Union bodies and the Consultative
Committee
129 General remarks
130 Preparation and distribution of documents of the Union
bodies
131 List of member countries
132 Information. Opinions. Requests for explanation and
amendment of the Acts. Inquiries. Role in the settlement of
accounts
133 Technical cooperation
134 Forms supplied by the International Bureau
135 Acts of Restricted Unions and Special Agreements
136 Union periodical
137 Annual report on the work of the Union
Chapter III
Submission, consideration of proposals, notification of
decisions adopted and entry into force of the Regulations and
other decisions adopted
138 Procedure for submitting proposals to Congress
139 Procedure for submitting proposals amending the Convention
or the Agreements between Congresses
140 Consideration of proposals amending the Convention or the
Agreements between Congresses
141 Procedure for submitting proposals to the Postal
Operations Council concerning the preparation of new Regulations
in the light of decisions taken by Congress
142 Amendment of the Regulations by the Postal Operations
Council
143 Notification of decisions adopted between Congresses
144 Entry into force of the Regulations and of the other
decisions adopted between Congresses
Chapter IV
Finance
145 Fixing of the expenditure of the Union
146 Regulation of member countries' contributions
147 Shortfalls in financing
148 Supervision of book-keeping and accounting
149 Automatic sanctions
150 Contribution classes
151 Payment for supplies from the International Bureau
152 Organization of user-funded subsidiary bodies
Chapter V
Arbitration
153 Arbitration procedure
Chapter VI
Use of languages within the Union
154 Working languages of the International Bureau
155 Languages used for documentation, for debates and for
official correspondence
Chapter VII
Final provisions
156 Conditions for approval of proposals concerning the
General Regulations
157 Proposals concerning the Agreements with the United
Nations
158 Amendment, entry into force and duration of the General
Regulations
General
Regulations of the Universal Postal Union
(Recast and
adopted by the 2012 Doha Congress)
The undersigned plenipotentiaries of the Governments of member
countries of the Union, having regard to article 22.2 of the
Constitution of the Universal Postal Union, concluded at Vienna
on 10 July 1964, have, by common consent, and subject to article
25.4 of the Constitution, drawn up in these General Regulations
the following provisions securing the application of the
Constitution and the functioning of the Union.
Chapter I
Organization, functions and
operation of Congresses, the Council of Administration, the
Postal Operations Council and the Consultative Committee
Section 1
Congress
Article 101
Organization and convening of
Congresses and Extraordinary Congresses (Const. 14, 15)
1 The representatives of member countries shall meet in
Congress not later than four years after the end of the year
during which the preceding Congress took place.
2 Each member country shall arrange for its representation at
Congress by one or more plenipotentiaries furnished by their
Government with the necessary powers. It may, if need be, arrange
to be represented by the delegation of another member country.
Nevertheless it shall be understood that a delegation may
represent only one member country other than its own.
3 In principle, each Congress shall designate the country in
which the next Congress will be held. If that designation proves
inapplicable, the Council of Administration shall be authorized
to designate the country where Congress is to meet, after
consultation with the latter country.
4 After consultation with the International Bureau, the host
Government shall fix the definitive date and the precise locality
of Congress. In principle one year before that date, the host
Government shall send an invitation to the Government of each
member country of the Union. This invitation may be sent direct
or through the intermediary of another Government or through the
Director General of the International Bureau.
5 When a Congress has to be convened without a host
Government, the International Bureau, with the agreement of the
Council of Administration and after consultation with the
Government of the Swiss Confederation, shall take the necessary
steps to convene and organize the Congress in the country in
which the seat of the Union is situated. In this event, the
International Bureau shall perform the functions of the host
government.
6 The meeting place of an Extraordinary Congress shall be
fixed, after consultation with the International Bureau, by the
member countries which have initiated that Congress.
7 Paragraphs 2 to 5 and article 102 shall be applicable by
analogy to Extraordinary Congresses.
Article 102
Right to vote at Congress
1 Each member country shall be entitled to one vote, subject
to the sanctions provided for in article 149.
Article 103
Functions of Congress
1 On the basis of proposals by member countries, the Council
of Administration and the Postal Operations Council, Congress
shall:
1.1 determine the general principles for achieving the object
and purpose of the Union set out in the Preamble and article 1 of
the Constitution;
1.2 consider and adopt, where appropriate, proposals for
amendments to the Constitution, General Regulations, Convention
and Agreements submitted by member countries and the Councils, in
accordance with article 29 of the Constitution and article 138 of
the General Regulations;
1.3 set the date for the entry into force of the Acts;
1.4 adopt its Rules of Procedure and the amendments to those
Rules;
1.5 consider the comprehensive reports on the work of the
Council of Administration, the Postal Operations Council and the
Consultative Committee, covering the period from the previous
Congress, presented by these respective bodies in accordance with
articles 111, 117 and 125 of the General Regulations;
1.6 adopt the Union's strategy;
1.7 fix the maximum amount of the Union's expenditure, in
accordance with article 21 of the Constitution;
1.8 elect the member countries to sit on the Council of
Administration and the Postal Operations Council;
1.9 elect the Director General and Deputy Director
General;
1.10 set in a Congress resolution the ceiling of the costs to
be borne by the Union for the production of documents in Chinese,
German, Portuguese and Russian.
2 Congress, as the supreme body of the Union, shall deal with
such other questions concerning postal services.
Article 104
Rules of Procedure of Congresses
(Const. 14)
1 For the organization of its work and the conduct of its
debates, Congress shall apply its Rules of Procedure.
2 Each Congress may amend its Rules of Procedure under the
conditions laid down in those Rules of Procedure.
Article 105
Observers to the Union's
bodies
1 The following entities shall be invited to participate in
the plenary sessions and committee meetings of Congress, the
Council of Administration and the Postal Operations Council as
observers:
1.1 representatives of the United Nations;
1.2 Restricted Unions;
1.3 members of the Consultative Committee;
1.4 entities authorized to attend Union meetings as observers
by virtue of a resolution or decision of Congress.
2 The following entities, if duly designated by the Council of
Administration in accordance with article 107.1.12 shall be
invited to attend specific meetings of Congress as ad hoc
observers:
2.1 specialized agencies of the United Nations and other
intergovernmental organizations;
2.2 any international body, any association or enterprise, or
any qualified person.
3 In addition to the observers defined in paragraph 1 of this
article, the Council of Administration and the Postal Operations
Council may designate ad hoc observers to attend their meetings
in accordance with their Rules of Procedure, when this is in the
interests of the Union and its bodies.
Section 2
Council of Administration (CA)
Article 106
Composition and functioning of the
CA (Const. 17)
1 The Council of Administration shall consist of forty-one
members who shall exercise their functions during the period
between two successive Congresses.
2 The chairmanship shall devolve by right on the host member
country of Congress. If that member country waives this right, it
shall become a de jure member and, as a result, the geographical
group to which it belongs shall have at its disposal an
additional seat, to which the restrictive provisions of paragraph
3 shall not apply. In that case, the Council of Administration
shall elect to the chairmanship one of the members belonging to
the geographical group of the host member country.
3 The forty other members of the Council of Administration
shall be elected by Congress on the basis of an equitable
geographical distribution. At least a half of the membership is
renewed at each Congress; no member country may be chosen by
three successive Congresses.
4 Each member of the Council of Administration shall appoint
its representative, who shall be competent in postal matters. The
members of the Council of Administration shall take an active
part in its work.
5 The office of member of the Council of Administration shall
be unpaid. The operational expenses of this Council shall be
borne by the Union.
Article 107
Functions of the CA
1 The Council of Administration shall have the following
functions:
1.1 Supervises all the activities of the Union between
Congresses, ensuring compliance with the decisions of Congress,
studying questions with respect to governmental policies on
postal issues, and taking account of international regulatory
developments such as those relating to trade in services and to
competition.
1.2 Promotes, coordinates and supervises all forms of postal
technical assistance within the framework of international
technical cooperation.
1.3 Examines the draft quadrennial UPU business plan approved
by Congress, and finalizes it by bringing the activities set out
in the draft plan for the four-year period into line with the
actual resources available. The plan should also, if appropriate,
be in line with the results of the prioritization process carried
out by Congress. The finalized version of the quadrennial
business plan, completed and approved by the CA, will then form
the basis for the preparation of the annual UPU Programme and
Budget as well as for the annual operating plans to be drawn up
and implemented by the CA and POC.
1.4 Considers and approves the annual programme and budget and
the accounts of the Union, while taking into account the final
version of the UPU Business Plan, as described in article
107.1.3.
1.5 Authorizes the ceiling of expenditure to be exceeded, if
circumstances so require, in accordance with article 145.3 to
5.
1.6 Authorizes election of a lower contribution class, if it
is so requested, in accordance with the conditions set out in
article 150.6.
1.7 Authorizes a change of geographical group if it is so
requested by a member country, taking into account the views
expressed by the member countries which are members of the
geographical groups concerned.
1.8 Creates or abolishes International Bureau posts taking
into account the restrictions imposed by the expenditure ceiling
fixed.
1.9 Decides on the contacts to be established with member
countries in order to carry out its functions.
1.10 After consulting the Postal Operations Council, decides
on the relations to be established with the organizations which
are not observers within the meaning of article 105.1.
1.11 Considers and approves the reports by the International
Bureau on UPU relations with other international bodies and takes
the decisions which it considers appropriate on the conduct of
such relations and the action to be taken on them.
1.12 Designates in due course, after consulting the Postal
Operations Council and the Secretary General, the specialized
agencies of the United Nations, international organizations,
associations, enterprises and qualified persons to be invited as
ad hoc observers to specificē meetings of Congress and its
Committees when this is in the interest of the Union or the work
of the Congress and instructs the Director General of the
International Bureau to issue the necessary invitations.
1.13 Designates the member country where the next Congress is
to be held in the case provided for in article 101.3.
1.14 Determines in due course and after consulting the Postal
Operations Council the number of Committees required to carry out
the work of Congress, and specifies their functions.
1.15 Designates, after consulting the Postal Operations
Council and subject to the approval of Congress, the member
countries prepared:
1.15.1 to assume the vice-chairmanships of Congress and the
chairmanships and vice-chairmanships of the Committees, taking as
much account as possible of the equitable geographical
distribution of the member countries; and
1.15.2 to sit on the Restricted Committees of the
Congress.
1.16 Designates those of its members that will serve as
members of the Consultative Committee.
1.17 Considers and approves, within the framework of its
competence, any action considered necessary to safeguard and
enhance the quality of and to modernize the international postal
service.
1.18 Studies, at the request of Congress, the Postal
Operations Council or member countries, administrative,
legislative and legal problems concerning the Union or the
international postal service; it shall be for the Council of
Administration to decide, in the above-mentioned fields, whether
it is expedient to undertake the studies requested by member
countries between Congresses.
1.19 Formulates proposals which shall be submitted for the
approval either of Congress or of member countries in accordance
with article 140.
1.20 Submits subjects for study to the Postal Operations
Council for examination in accordance with article 113.1.6.
1.21 Reviews and approves, in consultation with the Postal
Operations Council, the draft Strategy for presentation to
Congress.
1.22 Receives and discusses reports and recommendations from
the Consultative Committee and considers recommendations from the
Consultative Committee for submission to Congress.
1.23 Provides control over the activities of the International
Bureau.
1.24 Approves the annual report on the work of the Union and
the annual Financial Operating Reports prepared by the
International Bureau and, where appropriate, furnishes
observations on them.
1.25 Establishes principles, as may be considered necessary,
for the Postal Operations Council to take into account in its
study of questions with major financial repercussions (charges,
terminal dues, transit charges, basic airmail conveyance rates
and the posting abroad of letter-post items), follows closely the
study of these questions, and reviews and approves, for
conformity with the aforementioned principles, Postal Operations
Council proposals relating to these questions.
1.26 Approves, within the framework of its competence, the
recommendations of the Postal Operations Council for the
adoption, if necessary, of regulations or of a new procedure
until such time as Congress takes a decision in the matter.
1.27 Considers the annual report prepared by the Postal
Operations Council and any proposals submitted by the
Council.
1.28 Approves the four-yearly report prepared by the
International Bureau in consultation with the Postal Operations
Council, on the performance of member countries in respect of the
execution of the Union Strategy approved by the preceding
Congress, for submission to the following Congress.
1.29 Establishes the framework for the organization of the
Consultative Committee and concurs in the organization of the
Consultative Committee, in accordance with the provisions of
article 122.
1.30 Establishes criteria for membership of the Consultative
Committee and approves or rejects applications for membership in
accordance with those criteria, ensuring that action on the
applications is accomplished through an expedited process between
meetings of the Council of Administration.
1.31 Lays down the Financial Regulations of the Union.
1.32 Lays down the rules governing the Reserve Fund.
1.33 Lays down the rules governing the Special Fund.
1.34 Lays down the rules governing the Special Activities
Fund.
1.35 Lays down the rules governing the Voluntary Fund.
1.36 Lays down the Staff Regulations and the conditions of
service of the elected officials.
1.37 Lays down the Regulations of the Social Fund.
1.38 Exercises, within the context of article 152, overall
supervision of the creation and activities of user-funded
subsidiary bodies.
Article 108
Organization of CA sessions
1 At its constituent meeting, which shall be convened and
opened by the Chairman of Congress, the Council of Administration
shall elect four Vice-Chairmen from among its members and draw up
its Rules of Procedure.
2 On convocation by its Chairman, the Council of
Administration shall meet in principle once a year, at Union
headquarters.
3 The Chairman and Vice-Chairmen and the Committee Chairmen
and Vice-Chairmen of the Council of Administration shall form the
Management Committee. This Committee shall prepare and direct the
work of each session of the Council of Administration. It shall
approve, on behalf of the Council of Administration, the annual
report prepared by the International Bureau on the work of the
Union and it shall take on any other task which the Council of
Administration decides to assign to it or the need for which
arises in the course of the strategic planning process.
4 The Chairman of the Postal Operations Council shall
represent that body at meetings of the Council of Administration
when the agenda contains questions of interest to the Postal
Operations Council.
5 The Chairman of the Consultative Committee shall represent
that organization at meetings of the Council of Administration
when the agenda contains questions of interest to the
Consultative Committee.
Article 109
Observers
1 Observers
1.1 To ensure effective liaison between the work of the two
bodies, the Postal Operations Council may designate
representatives to attend Council of Administration meetings as
observers.
1.2 Member countries of the Union which are not members of the
Council, as well as the observers and ad hoc observers referred
to in article 105, may participate in the plenary sessions and
Committee meetings of the Council of Administration, without the
right to vote:.
2 Principles
2.1 For logistical reasons, the Council of Administration may
limit the number of attendees per observer and ad hoc observer
participating. It may also limit their right to speak during the
debates.
2.2 Observers and ad hoc observers may, at their request, be
allowed to cooperate in the studies undertaken, subject to such
conditions as the Council may establish to ensure the efficiency
and effectiveness of its work. They may also be invited to chair
Working Parties and Project Teams when their experience or
expertise justifies it. The participation of observers and ad hoc
observers shall be carried out without additional expense for the
Union.
2.3 In exceptional circumstances, members of the Consultative
Committee and ad hoc observers may be excluded from a meeting or
a portion of a meeting or may have their right to receive
documents restricted if the confidentiality of the subject of the
meeting or document so requires. This restriction may be decided
on a case-by-case basis by any body concerned or its Chair. The
case-by-case situations shall be reported to the Council of
Administration and to the Postal Operations Council when matters
of interest to the Postal Operations Council are concerned. If it
considers this necessary, the Council of Administration may
subsequently review restrictions, in consultation with the Postal
Operations Council where appropriate.
Article 110
Reimbursement of travel expenses
1 The travel expenses of the representative of each of the
members of the Council of Administration participating in its
meetings shall be borne by his member country. However, the
representative of each of the member countries classified as
developing or least developed countries according to the lists
established by the United Nations shall, except for meetings
which take place during Congress, be entitled to reimbursement of
the price of an economy class return air ticket or first class
return rail ticket, or expenses incurred for travel by any other
means, subject to the condition that the amount does not exceed
the price of the economy class return air ticket. The same
entitlement shall be granted to each member of its Committees,
Working Parties or other bodies when these meet outside Congress
and the sessions of the Council.
Article 111
Information on the activities of the
CA
1 After each session, the Council of Administration shall
inform the member countries and their designated operators, the
Restricted Unions and the members of the Consultative Committee
about its activities by sending them, inter alia, a summary
record and its resolutions and decisions.
2 The Council of Administration shall make to Congress a
comprehensive report on its work and send it to the member
countries of the Union, their designated operators and the
members of the Consultative Committee at least two months before
the opening of Congress.
Section 3
Postal Operations Council (POC)
Article 112
Composition and functioning of the
POC
1 The Postal Operations Council shall consist of forty members
who shall exercise their functions during the period between
successive Congresses.
2 The members of the Postal Operations Council shall be
elected by Congress on the basis of qualified geographical
distribution. Twenty-four seats shall be reserved for developing
member countries and sixteen seats for developed member
countries. At least one third of the members shall be renewed at
each Congress.
3 Each member of the Postal Operations Council shall appoint
its representative, who shall have responsibilities for
delivering services mentioned in the Acts of the Union. The
members of the Postal Operations Council shall take an active
part in its work.
4 The operational expenses of the Postal Operations Council
shall be borne by the Union. Its members shall not receive any
payment.
Article 113
Functions of the POC
1 The Postal Operations Council shall have the following
functions:
1.1 Coordinates practical measures for the development and
improvement of international postal services.
1.2 Takes, subject to Council of Administration approval
within the framework of the latter's competence, any action
considered necessary to safeguard and enhance the quality of and
to modernizē the international postal service.
1.3 Decides on the contacts to be established with member
countries and their designated operators in order to carry out
its functions.
1.4 Takes the necessary steps to study and publicize the
experiments and progress made by certain member countries and
their designated operators in the technical, operational,
economic and vocational training fields of interest to the postal
services.
1.5 Takes, in consultation with the Council of Administration,
appropriate steps in the sphere of technical cooperation with all
member countries of the Union and their designated operators and
in particular with the new and developing countries and their
designated operators.
1.6 Examines any other questions submitted to it by a member
of the Postal Operations Council, by the Council of
Administration or by any member country or designated
operator.
1.7 Receives and discusses reports as well as recommendations
from the Consultative Committee and, when matters of interest to
the Postal Operations Council are involved, to examines and
comments on recommendations from the Consultative Committee for
submission to Congress.
1.8 Designates those of its members that will serve as members
of the Consultative Committee.
1.9 Conducts the study of the most important operational,
commercial, technical, economic and technical cooperation
problems which are of interest to all member countries or their
designated operators, including questions with major financial
repercussions (charges, terminal dues, transit charges, airmail
conveyance rates, parcel-post rates, and the posting abroad of
letter-post items), and prepares information, opinions and
recommendations for action on them.
1.10 Provides input to the Council of Administration for the
development of the draft Strategy to be submitted to
Congress.
1.11 Studies teaching and vocational training problems of
interest to member countries and their designated operators, as
well as to the new and developing countries.
1.12 Studies the present position and needs of the postal
services in the new and developing countries and prepares
appropriate recommendations on ways and means of improving the
postal services in those countries.
1.13 Revises the Regulations of the Union within six months
following the end of the Congress unless the latter decides
otherwise; in case of urgent necessity, the Postal Operations
Council may also amend the said Regulations at other sessions; in
both cases, the Postal Operations Council shall be subject to
Council of Administration guidance on matters of fundamental
policy and principle.
1.14 Formulates proposals which shall be submitted for the
approval either of Congress or of member countries in accordance
with article 140; the approval of the Council of Administration
is required when these proposals concern questions within the
latter's competence.
1.15 Examines, at the request of a member country, any
proposal which that member country forwards to the International
Bureau under article 139, prepares observations on it and
instructs the International Bureau to annex these observations to
the proposal before submitting it for approval to the member
countries.
1.16 Recommends, if necessary, and where appropriate after
approval by the Council of Administration and consultation of all
the member countries, the adoption of regulations or of a new
procedure until such time as Congress takes a decision in the
matter.
1.17 Prepares and issues, in the form of recommendations to
member countries and designated operators, standards for
technological, operational and other processes within its
competence where uniformity of practice is essential; it shall
similarly issue, as required, amendments to standards it has
already set.
1.18 Establishes the framework for the organization of
user-funded subsidiary bodies and concurs in the organization of
these bodies in accordance with the provisions of article
152.
1.19 Receives and discusses reports from the user-funded
subsidiary bodies on an annual basis.
Article 114
Organization of POC sessions
1 At its first meeting, which shall be convened and opened by
the Chairman of Congress, the Postal Operations Council shall
choose from among its members a Chairman, a Vice-Chairman, and
the Committee Chairmen and draw up its Rules of Procedure.
2 In principle, the Postal Operations Council shall meet every
year at Union headquarters. The date and place of the meeting
shall be fixed by its Chairman in agreement with the Chairman of
the Council of Administration and the Director General of the
International Bureau.
3 The Chairman and Vice-Chairman and the Committee Chairmen
and Vice-Chairmen of the Postal Operations Council shall form the
Management Committee. This Committee shall prepare and direct the
work of each meeting of the Postal Operations Council and take on
all the tasks which the latter decides to assign to it or the
need for which arises in the course of the strategic planning
process.
4 On the basis of the Union Strategy adopted by Congress and,
in particular, the part relating to the strategies of the
permanent bodies of the Union, the Postal Operations Council
shall, at its session following Congress, prepare a basic work
programme containing a number of tactics aimed at implementing
the strategies. This basic work programme, which shall include a
limited number of projects on topical subjects of common
interest, shall be revised annually in the light of new realities
and priorities.
5 The Chairman of the Consultative Committee shall represent
that organization at meetings of the Postal Operations Council
when the agenda contains questions of interest to the
Consultative Committee.
Article 115
Observers
1 Observers
1.1 In order to ensure effective liaison between the work of
the two bodies, the Council of Administration may designate
representatives to attend Postal Operations Council meetings as
observers.
1.2 Member countries of the Union which are not members of the
Council, as well as the observers and ad hoc observers referred
to in article 105, may participate in the plenary sessions and
Committee meetings of the Postal Operations Council, without the
right to vote:.
2 Principles
2.1 For logistical reasons, the Postal Operations Council may
limit the number of attendees per observer and ad hoc observer
participating. It may also limit their right to speak during the
debates.
2.2 Observers and ad hoc observers may, at their request, be
allowed to cooperate in the studies undertaken, subject to such
conditions as the Council may establish to ensure the efficiency
and effectiveness of its work. They may also be invited to chair
Working Parties and Project Teams when their experience or
expertise justifies it. The participation of observers and ad hoc
observers shall be carried out without additional expense for the
Union.
2.3 In exceptional circumstances, members of the Consultative
Committee and ad hoc observers may be excluded from a meeting or
a portion of a meeting or may have their right to receive
documents restricted if the confidentiality of the subject of the
meeting or document so requires. This restriction may be decided
on a case-by-case basis by any body concerned or its Chair. The
case-by-case situations shall be reported to the Council of
Administration and to the Postal Operations Council when matters
of interest to the Postal Operations Council are concerned. If it
considers this necessary, the Council of Administration may
subsequently review restrictions, in consultation with the Postal
Operations Council where appropriate.
Article 116
Reimbursement of travel expenses
1 Travelling and living expenses incurred by representatives
of member countries participating in the Postal Operations
Council shall be borne by these member countries. However, the
representative of each of the member countries considered to be
disadvantaged according to the lists established by the United
Nations shall, except for meetings which take place during
Congress, be entitled to reimbursement of the price of an economy
class return air ticket or first class return rail ticket, or
expenses incurred for travel by any other means, subject to the
condition that the amount does not exceed the price of the
economy class return air ticket.
Article 117
Information on the activities of the
POC
1 After each session, the Postal Operations Council shall
inform the member countries and their designated operators, the
Restricted Unions and the members of the Consultative Committee
about its activities by sending them, inter alia, a summary
record and its resolutions and decisions.
2 The Postal Operations Council shall prepare for the Council
of Administration an annual report on its work.
3 The Postal Operations Council shall make to Congress a
comprehensive report on its work, including reports on
user-funded subsidiary bodies as provided for in article 152, and
send it to member countries of the Union, their designated
operators and members of the Consultative Committee at least two
months before the opening of Congress.
Section 4
Consultative Committee (CC)
Article 118
Aim of the CC
1 The aim of the Consultative Committee is to represent the
interests of the wider international postal sector, and to
provide a framework for effective dialogue between
stakeholders.
Article 119
Composition of the CC
1 The Consultative Committee shall consist of:
1.1 non-governmental organizations representing customers,
delivery service providers, organizations of workers, suppliers
of goods and services to the postal services sector and like
organizations of individuals and companies which have an interest
in supporting the mission and objectives of the Union. Where such
organizations are registered, they must be registered in a member
country of the Union;
1.2 members designated by the Council of Administration from
among its members;
1.3 members designated by the Postal Operations Council from
among its members.
2 The operational costs of the Consultative Committee shall be
shared by the Union and members of the Committee as determined by
the Council of Administration.
3 The members of the Consultative Committee shall not receive
remuneration or any other compensation.
Article 120
Membership of the CC
1 Apart from members designated by the Council of
Administration and the Postal Operations Council, membership of
the Consultative Committee shall be determined through a process
of application and acceptance established by the Council of
Administration, carried out in accordance with article
107.1.30.
2 Each member of the Consultative Committee shall appoint its
own representative.
Article 121
Functions of the CC
1 The Consultative Committee shall have the following
functions:
1.1 Examines documents and reports of the Council of
Administration and the Postal Operations Council. In exceptional
circumstances, the right to receive certain texts and documents
may be restricted if the confidentiality of the subject of the
meeting or document so requires. This restriction may be decided
on a case-by-case basis by any body concerned or its Chairman.
The case-bycase situations shall be reported to the Council of
Administration, and to the Postal Operations Council when matters
of interest to the Postal Operations Council are concerned. If it
considers this necessary, the Council of Administration may
subsequently review restrictions, in consultation with the Postal
Operations Council, where appropriate.
1.2 Conducts and contributes to studies of issues of
importance to the Consultative Committee's members.
1.3 Considers issues affecting the postal services sector and
issues reports on such issues.
1.4 Provides input to the work of the Council of
Administration and the Postal Operations Council, including
submitting reports and recommendations and giving opinions at the
request of the two Councils.
1.5 Makes recommendations to Congress, subject to the approval
of the Council of Administration and, when matters of interest to
the Postal Operations Council are involved, subject to
examination and comment by the Postal Operations Council.
Article 122
Organization of the CC
1 The Consultative Committee shall reorganize itself after
each Congress in accordance with the framework established by the
Council of Administration. The Chairman of the Council of
Administration shall preside at the organizational meeting of the
Consultative Committee, which shall elect its Chairman at that
meeting.
2 The Consultative Committee shall determine its internal
organization and shall draw up its own rules of procedure, taking
into account the general principles of the Union and subject to
the concurrence of the Council of Administration after having
consulted the Postal Operations Council.
3 The Consultative Committee shall meet once a year. In
principle, the meetings will be held at Union headquarters at the
same time as meetings of the Postal Operations Council. The date
and location of each meeting shall be fixed by the Chairman of
the Consultative Committee, in agreement with the Chairmen of the
Council of Administration and the Postal Operations Council and
the Director General of the International Bureau.
Article 123
Representatives of the Consultative
Committee at the Council of Administration, the Postal Operations
Council and Congress
1 In order to ensure effective liaison with the bodies of the
Union, the Consultative Committee may designate representatives
to attend meetings of Congress, the Council of Administration,
and the Postal Operations Council, and their respective
Committees, as observers without the right to vote.
2 Members of the Consultative Committee are invited to plenary
sessions and Committee meetings of the Council of Administration
and the Postal Operations Council in accordance with article 105.
They may also participate in the work of project teams and
working groups under terms established in articles 109.2.2 and
115.2.2.
3 The Chairman of the Council of Administration and the
Chairman of the Postal Operations Council shall represent those
bodies at meetings of the Consultative Committee when the agenda
of such meetings contains questions of interest to those
bodies.
Article 124
CC observers
1 Other member countries of the Union and the observers and ad
hoc observers referred to in article 105 may participate in the
sessions of the Consultative Committee, without the right to
vote.
2 For logistical reasons, the Consultative Committee may limit
the number of attendees per observer and ad hoc observer
participating. It may also limit their right to speak during the
debates.
3 In exceptional circumstances, observers and ad hoc observers
may be excluded from a meeting or a portion of a meeting or may
have their right to receive documents restricted if the
confidentiality of the subject of the meeting or document so
requires. This restriction may be decided on a case-by-case basis
by any body concerned or its Chair. The case-by-case situations
shall be reported to the Council of Administration and to the
Postal Operations Council when matters of interest to the Postal
Operations Council are concerned. If it considers this necessary,
the Council of Administration may subsequently review
restrictions, in consultation with the Postal Operations Council
where appropriate.
Article 125
Information on the activities of the
CC
1 After each session, the Consultative Committee shall inform
the Council of Administration and the Postal Operations Council
of its activities by sending to the Chairmen of those bodies,
inter alia, a summary record of its meetings and its
recommendations and views.
2 The Consultative Committee shall make to the Council of
Administration an annual activity report, with a copy to the
Postal Operations Council. This report shall be included in the
documentation of the Council of Administration provided to member
countries of the Union, to their designated operators and to the
Restricted Unions, in accordance with article 111.
3 The Consultative Committee shall make to Congress a
comprehensive report on its work and send it to the member
countries and their designated operators at least two months
before the opening of Congress.
Chapter II
International Bureau
Section 1
Election and duties of the Director
General and Deputy Director General of the International
Bureau
Article 126
Election of the Director General and
Deputy Director General of the International Bureau
1 The Director General and the Deputy Director General of the
International Bureau shall be elected by Congress for the period
between two successive Congresses, the minimum duration of their
term of Office being four years. Their term of office shall be
renewable once only. Unless Congress decides otherwise, the date
on which they take up their duties shall be fixed at 1 January of
the year following that in which Congress is held.
2 At least seven months before the opening of Congress, the
Director General of the International Bureau shall send a
memorandum to the Governments of member countries inviting them
to submit their applications, if any, for the posts of Director
General and Deputy Director General and indicating at the same
time whether the Director General and Deputy Director General in
office are interested in a renewal of their initial term of
office. The applications, accompanied by a curriculum vitae, must
reach the International Bureau at least two months before the
opening of Congress. The candidates must be nationals of the
member countries which put them forward. The International Bureau
shall prepare the election documents for Congress. The election
of the Director General and that of the Deputy Director General
shall take place by secret ballot, the first election being for
the post of Director General.
3 If the post of Director General falls vacant, the Deputy
Director General shall take over the functions of Director
General until the expiry of the latter's term of office; he
shall be eligible for election to that post and shall
automatically be accepted as a candidate, provided that his
initial term of office as Deputy Director General has not already
been renewed once by the preceding Congress and that he declares
his interest in being considered as a candidate for the post of
Director General.
4 If the posts of Director General and Deputy Director General
fall vacant at the same time, the Council of Administration shall
elect, on the basis of the applications received following
notification of the vacancies, a Deputy Director General for the
period extending up to the next Congress. With regard to the
submission of applications, paragraph 2 shall apply by
analogy.
5 If the post of Deputy Director General falls vacant, the
Council of Administration shall, on the proposal of the Director
General, instruct one of the grade D 2 Directors at the
International Bureau to take over the functions of Deputy
Director General until the following Congress.
Article 127
Duties of the Director General
1 The Director General shall organize, administer and direct
the International Bureau, of which he is the legal
representative.
2 Regarding the classification of posts, appointments and
promotions:
2.1 the Director General shall be empowered to classify posts
in grades G 1 to D 2 and to appoint and promote officials in
those grades.
2.2 for appointments in grades P 1 to D 2, he shall consider
the professional qualifications of the candidates recommended by
the member countries of which the candidates are nationals or in
which they exercise their professional activities, taking into
account equitable geographical distribution with respect to
continents and languages. D 2 posts shall as far as possible be
filled by candidates from different regions and from regions
other than those from which the Director General and Deputy
Director General originate, bearing in mind the paramount
consideration of the efficiency of the International Bureau. In
the case of posts requiring special qualifications, the Director
General may seek applications from outside;
2.3 he shall also consider, for the appointment of a new
official, that, in principle, persons occupying grade D 2, D 1
and P 5 posts must be nationals of different member countries of
the Union;
2.4 for the promotion of an official of the International
Bureau to grades D 2, D 1 and P 5, he shall not be bound to apply
the same principle as under 2.3;
2.5 the requirements of equitable geographical and language
distribution shall rank behind merit in the recruitment
process;
2.6 the Director General shall inform the Council of
Administration once a year of appointments and promotions in
grades P 4 to D 2.
3 Furthermore, the Director General shall have the following
duties:
3.1 acts as depositary of the Acts of the Union and as
intermediary in the procedure of accession and admission to and
withdrawal from the Union;
3.2 notifies the decisions taken by Congress to all the
Governments of member countries;
3.3 notifies all member countries and their designated
operators of the Regulations drawn up or revised by the Postal
Operations Council;
3.4 prepares the draft annual budget of the Union at the
lowest possible level consistent with the requirements of the
Union and submits it in due course to the Council of
Administration for consideration; communicates the budget to the
member countries of the Union after approval by the Council of
Administration and executes it;
3.5 executes the specific activities requested by the bodies
of the Union and those assigned to him by the Acts;
3.6 takes action to achieve the objectives set by the bodies
of the Union, within the framework of the established policy and
the funds available;
3.7 submits suggestions and proposals to the Council of
Administration or to the Postal Operations Council;
3.8 following the close of Congress, submits proposals to the
Postal Operations Council concerning changes to the Regulations
required as a result of Congress decisions, in accordance with
the Rules of Procedure of the Postal Operations Council;
3.9 prepares, for the Council of Administration and on the
basis of directives issued by the Councils, the draft Union
Strategy to be submitted to Congress;
3.10 prepares, for approval by the Council of Administration,
a four-yearly report on the member countries' performance in
respect of the Union Strategy approved by the preceding Congress,
which will be submitted to the following Congress;
3.11 ensures the representation of the Union;
3.12 acts as an intermediary in relations between:
3.12.1 the UPU and the Restricted Unions;
3.12.2 the UPU and the United Nations;
3.12.3 the UPU and the international organizations whose
activities are of interest to the Union;
3.12.4 the UPU and the international organizations or the
associations or enterprises that the bodies of the Union wish to
consult or associate with their work;
3.13 assumes the duties of Secretary General of the bodies of
the Union and supervises in this capacity, taking into account
the special provisions of these General Regulations, in
particular:
3.13.1 the preparation and organization of the work of the
Union's bodies;
3.13.2 the preparation, production and distribution of
documents, reports and minutes;
3.13.3 the functioning of the secretariat at meetings of the
Union's bodies;
3.14 attends the meetings of the bodies of the Union and takes
part in the discussions without the right to vote, with the
possibility of being represented.
Article 128
Duties of the Deputy Director
General
1 The Deputy Director General shall assist the Director
General and shall be responsible to him.
2 If the Director General is absent or prevented from
discharging his duties, the Deputy Director General shall
exercise his functions. The same shall apply in the case of a
vacancy in the post of Director General as mentioned in article
126.3.
Section 2
Secretariat of the Union bodies and
the Consultative Committee
Article 129
General remarks
1 The secretariat of the Union's bodies and the
Consultative Committee shall be provided by the International
Bureau under the responsibility of the Director General.
Article 130
Preparation and distribution of
documents of the Union bodies
1 The International Bureau shall prepare and make available
through the UPU website all the documents published on the
occasion of each session. The International Bureau shall also
indicate new e-document publications on the UPU website by means
of an efficient web-signalling system.
Article 131
List of member countries (Const.
2)
1 The International Bureau shall prepare and keep up to date
the list of member countries of the Union showing therein their
contribution class, their geographical group and their position
with respect to the Acts of the Union.
Article 132
Information. Opinions. Requests for
explanation and amendment of the Acts. Inquiries.
Role in the settlement of accounts
(Const. 20; Gen. Regs 139, 140, 143)
1 The International Bureau shall be at all times at the
disposal of the Council of Administration, the Postal Operations
Council and member countries and their designated operators for
the purpose of supplying them with any necessary information on
questions relating to the service.
2 In particular it shall collect, collate, publish and
distribute all kinds of information of interest to the
international postal service, give an opinion, at the request of
the parties involved, on questions in dispute, act on requests
for explanation and amendment of the Acts of the Union and, in
general, carry out such studies and editorial or documentary work
as are assigned to it by those Acts or as may be referred to it
in the interest of the Union. 3 It shall also conduct inquiries
requested by member countries and their designated operators to
obtain the views of other member countries and designated
operators on a particular question. The result of an inquiry
shall not have the status of a vote and shall not be formally
binding.
4 It may act as a clearing house in the settlement of accounts
of all kinds relating to the postal service.
5 The International Bureau shall ensure the confidentiality
and security of commercial data provided by member countries
and/or their designated operators for the performance of its
duties arising from the Acts or decisions of the Union.
Article 133
Technical cooperation (Const. 1)
1 The International Bureau shall develop postal technical
assistance in all its forms within the framework of international
technical cooperation.
Article 134
Forms supplied by the International
Bureau (Const. 20)
1 The International Bureau shall be responsible for arranging
the manufacture of international reply coupons and for supplying
them, at cost, to member countries or their designated operators
ordering them.
Article 135
Acts of Restricted Unions and
Special Agreements (Const. 8)
1 Two copies of the Acts of Restricted Unions and of Special
Agreements concluded under article 8 of the Constitution shall be
sent to the International Bureau by the offices of such Unions,
or failing that, by one of the contracting parties.
2 The International Bureau shall see that the Acts of
Restricted Unions and Special Agreements do not include
conditions less favourable to the public than those which are
provided for in the Acts of the Union.
It shall notify the Council of Administration of any
irregularity discovered through applying this provision.
3 The International Bureau shall inform member countries and
their designated operators of the existence of the Restricted
Unions and the Special Agreements mentioned above.
Article 136
Union periodical
1 The International Bureau shall publish, with the aid of the
documents made available to it, a periodical in Arabic, Chinese,
English, French, German, Russian and Spanish.
Article 137
Annual report on the work of the
Union (Const. 20; Gen. Regs 107.1.24)
1 The International Bureau shall make an annual report on the
work of the Union, which shall be sent, after approval by the
Management Committee of the Council of Administration, to member
countries and/or designated operators, the Restricted Unions and
the United Nations.
Chapter III
Submission, consideration of
proposals, notification of decisions adopted and entry into force
of the Regulations and other decisions adopted
Article 138
Procedure for submitting proposals
to Congress (Const. 29)
1 Subject to the exceptions provided for in paragraphs 2 and
5, the following procedure shall govern the submission of
proposals of all kinds to Congress by member countries:
1.1 proposals which reach the International Bureau at least
six months before the date fixed for Congress shall be
accepted;
1.2 no drafting proposal shall be accepted during the period
of six months preceding the date fixed for Congress;
1.3 proposals of substance which reach the International
Bureau in the interval between six and four months before the
date fixed for Congress shall not be accepted unless they are
supported by at least two member countries;
1.4 proposals of substance which reach the International
Bureau in the interval between four and two months preceding the
date fixed for Congress shall not be accepted unless they are
supported by at least eight member countries; proposals which
arrive after that time shall no longer be accepted;
1.5 declarations of support must reach the International
Bureau within the same period of time as the proposals to which
they refer.
2 Proposals concerning the Constitution or the General
Regulations shall reach the International Bureau not later than
six months before the opening of Congress; any received after
that date but before the opening of Congress shall not be
considered unless Congress so decides by a majority of two thirds
of the member countries represented at Congress and unless the
conditions laid down in paragraph 1 are fulfilled.
3 Every proposal must, as a rule, have only one aim and
contain only the changes justified by that aim. Similarly, each
proposal liable to lead to significant costs for the Union shall
be accompanied by an indication of its financial impact, prepared
by the member country submitting the proposal, in consultation
with the International Bureau, so that the financial resources
needed for its implementation can be determined.
4 Drafting proposals shall be headed "Drafting
proposal" by the member countries which submit them and
shall be published by the International Bureau under a number
followed by the letter R. Proposals which do not bear this
indication but which, in the opinion of the International Bureau,
deal only with drafting points shall be published with an
appropriate annotation; the International Bureau shall draw up a
list of these proposals for Congress.
5 The procedure prescribed in paragraphs 1 and 4 shall not
apply either to proposals concerning the Rules of Procedure of
Congresses or to amendments to proposals already made.
Article 139
Procedure for submitting proposals
amending the Convention or the Agreements between Congresses
1 To be eligible for consideration, every proposal concerning
the Convention or the Agreements submitted by a member country
between Congresses shall be supported by at least two other
member countries. Such proposals shall lapse if the International
Bureau does not receive, at the same time, the necessary number
of declarations of support.
2 These proposals shall be sent to other member countries
through the intermediary of the International Bureau.
Article 140
Consideration of proposals amending
the Convention or the Agreements between Congresses
1 Every proposal concerning the Convention, the Agreements and
their Final Protocols shall be subject to the following
procedure: where a member country has sent a proposal to the
International Bureau, the latter shall forward it to all member
countries for examination. They shall be allowed a period of two
months in which to examine the proposal and forward any
observations to the International Bureau. Amendments shall not be
admissible. Once these two months have elapsed, the International
Bureau shall forward to member countries all the observations it
has received and invite each member country to vote for or
against the proposal. Member countries that have not sent in
their vote within a period of two months shall be considered to
have abstained. The aforementioned periods shall be reckoned from
the dates of the International Bureau circulars.
2 If the proposal relates to an Agreement or its Final
Protocol, only the member countries which are parties to that
Agreement may take part in the procedure described in paragraph
1.
Article 141
Procedure for submitting proposals
to the Postal Operations Council concerning the preparation of
new Regulations in the light of decisions taken by Congress
1 The Regulations of the Universal Postal Convention and the
Postal Payment Services Agreement shall be drawn up by the Postal
Operations Council in the light of the decisions taken by
Congress.
2 Proposals that are consequential on proposed amendments to
the Convention or Postal Payment Services Agreement should be
submitted to the International Bureau simultaneously with the
Congress proposals to which they relate. They may be submitted by
a single member country without the support of other member
countries. Such proposals shall be distributed to all member
countries no later than one month prior to Congress.
3 Other proposals concerning the Regulations for consideration
by the Postal Operations Council in its preparation of the new
Regulations within the six months following Congress shall be
submitted to the International Bureau at least two months before
Congress.
4 Proposals concerning changes to the Regulations required as
a result of Congress decisions that are submitted by member
countries must reach the International Bureau no later than two
months before the opening of the Postal Operations Council. Such
proposals shall be distributed to all member countries and their
designated operators no later than one month prior to the opening
of the Postal Operations Council.
Article 142
Amendment of the Regulations by the
Postal Operations Council
1 Proposals for amending the Regulations shall be dealt with
by the Postal Operations Council.
2 No support by a member country shall be required for
submitting any proposal to amend the Regulations.
3 Such a proposal shall not be considered unless the Postal
Operations Council agrees to its urgent necessity.
Article 143
Notification of decisions adopted
between Congresses (Const. 29; Gen. Regs 139, 140, 142)
1 Amendments made to the Convention, the Agreements and the
Final Protocols to those Acts shall be sanctioned by notification
thereof to the Governments of member countries by the Director
General of the International Bureau.
2 Amendments made to the Regulations and their Final Protocols
by the Postal Operations Council shall be communicated to member
countries and their designated operators by the International
Bureau. The same shall apply to the interpretations referred to
in article 38.3.2 of the Convention and in the corresponding
provisions of the Agreements.
Article 144
Entry into force of the Regulations
and of the other decisions adopted between Congresses
1 The Regulations shall come into force on the same date and
shall have the same duration as the Acts laid down by
Congress.
2 Subject to the provisions of paragraph 1, decisions on
amending the Acts of the Union which are adopted between
Congresses shall not take effect until at least three months
after their notification.
Chapter IV
Finance
Article 145
Fixing of the expenditure of the
Union (Const. 21)
1 Subject to the provisions of paragraphs 2 to 6, the annual
expenditure relating to the activities of bodies of the Union may
not exceed 37,235,000 Swiss francs for the years 2013 to
2016.
2 The expenditure relating to the convening of the next
Congress (travelling expenses of the secretariat, transport
charges, cost of installing simultaneous interpretation
equipment, cost of reproducing documents during the Congress,
etc.) shall not exceed the limit of 2,900,000 Swiss francs.
3 The Council of Administration shall be authorized to exceed
the limits laid down in paragraphs 1 and 2 to take account of
increases in salary scales, pension contributions or allowances,
including post adjustments, approved by the United Nations for
application to its staff working in Geneva.
4 The Council of Administration shall also be authorized to
adjust, each year, the amount of expenditure other than that
relating to staff on the basis of the Swiss consumer price
index.
5 Notwithstanding paragraph 1, the Council of Administration,
or in case of extreme urgency, the Director General, may
authorize the prescribed limits to be exceeded to meet the cost
of major and unforeseen repairs to the International Bureau
building, provided however that the amount of the increase does
not exceed 125,000 Swiss francs per annum.
6 If the credits authorized in paragraphs 1 and 2 prove
inadequate to ensure the smooth running of the Union, these
limits may only be exceeded with the approval of the majority of
the member countries of the Union. Any consultation shall include
a complete description of the facts justifying such a
request.
Article 146
Regulation of member countries'
contributions
1 Countries which accede to the Union or are admitted to the
status of members of the Union as well as those which leave the
Union shall pay their contributions for the whole of the year
during which their admission or withdrawal becomes effective.
2 Member countries shall pay their contributions to the
Union's annual expenditure in advance on the basis of the
budget laid down by the Council of Administration. These
contributions shall be paid not later than the first day of the
financial year to which the budget refers. After that date, the
sums due shall be chargeable with interest in favour of the Union
at the rate of 6% per annum from the fourth month.
3 Where the arrears of mandatory contributions, not including
interest, owed to the Union by a member country are equal to or
more than the amount of the contributions of that member country
for the preceding two financial years, such member country may
irrevocably assign to the Union all or part of the credits owed
it by other member countries, in accordance with the arrangements
laid down by the Council of Administration. The conditions of
this assignment of credit shall be determined by agreement
reached between the member country, its debtors/creditors and the
Union.
4 A member country which, for legal or other reasons, cannot
make such an assignment must undertake to conclude a schedule for
the amortization of its arrears.
5 Other than in exceptional circumstances, recovery of arrears
of mandatory contributions owed to the Union may not extend over
more than ten years.
6 In exceptional circumstances, the Council of Administration
may release a member country from all or part of the interest
owed if that country has paid the full capital amount of its
debts in arrears.
7 A member country may also be released, within the framework
of an amortization Schedule approved by the Council of
Administration for its accounts in arrears, from all or part of
the interest accumulated or to accrue; such release shall,
however, be subject to the full and punctual execution of the
amortization schedule within an agreed period of ten years at
most.
8 The provisions under paragraphs 3 to 7 apply by analogy to
the translation costs billed by the International Bureau to
member countries belonging to the language groups.
Article 147
Shortfalls in financing
1 A Reserve Fund shall be established with the Union to cover
shortfalls in financing. Its amount shall be fixed by the Council
of Administration. The Fund shall be maintained primarily from
budget surpluses, and may also be used to balance the budget or
reduce the amount of member countries' contributions.
2 In case of temporary shortfalls in Union financing, the
Government of the Swiss Confederation shall make the necessary
short-term advances to the Union, on conditions fixed by mutual
agreement.
Article 148
Supervision of book-keeping and
accounting
1 The Government of the Swiss Confederation shall supervise,
without charge, the book-keeping and accounting of the
International Bureau within the limits of the credits fixed by
Congress.
Article 149
Automatic sanctions
1 Any member country unable to make the assignment provided
for in article 146.3 and which does not agree to submit to an
amortization schedule proposed by the International Bureau in
accordance with article 146.4, or which does not comply with such
a schedule shall automatically lose its right to vote at Congress
and at meetings of the Council of Administration and the Postal
Operations Council and shall no longer be eligible for membership
of these two Councils.
2 Automatic sanctions shall be lifted as a matter of course
and with immediate effect as soon as the member country concerned
has paid its arrears of mandatory contributions owed to the
Union, in capital and interest, or has agreed to submit to a
schedule for the amortization of the arrears.
Article 150
Contribution classes (Const. 21;
Gen. Regs 131, 145, 146, 147 and 148)
1 Member countries shall contribute to defraying Union
expenses according to the contribution class to which they
belong. These classes shall be the following:
- class of 50 units;
- class of 45 units;
- class of 40 units;
- class of 35 units;
- class of 30 units;
- class of 25 units;
- class of 20 units;
- class of 15 units;
- class of 10 units;
- class of 5 units;
- class of 3 units;
- class of 1 unit;
- class of 0.5 unit, reserved for the least advanced countries
as listed by the United Nations and for other countries
designated by the Council of Administration.
2 Notwithstanding the contribution classes listed in paragraph
1, any member country may elect to contribute a higher number of
units than that corresponding to the contribution class to which
it belongs, for a minimum term equivalent to the period between
Congresses. The announcement of a change shall be made at the
latest at Congress. At the end of the period between Congresses,
the member country shall return automatically to its original
number of contribution units unless it decides to maintain its
contribution of a higher number of units. The payment of
additional contributions will increase the expenditure
accordingly.
3 Member countries shall be included in one of the
above-mentioned contribution classes upon their admission or
accession to the Union, in accordance with the procedure laid
down in article 21.4 of the Constitution.
4 Member countries may subsequently be placed in a lower
contribution class, on condition that the request for this change
is sent the International Bureau at least two months before the
opening of Congress. Congress shall give a non-binding opinion on
these requests for a change in contribution class. The member
country shall be free to decide whether to follow the opinion of
Congress. The final decision of the member country shall be
transmitted to the International Bureau Secretariat before the
end of Congress. This change request shall take effect on the
date of the entry into force of the financial provisions drawn up
by Congress. Member countries that have not made known their wish
to change contribution class within the required time shall
remain in the class to which they belonged up to that time.
5 Member countries may not insist on being lowered more than
one class at a time.
6 Nevertheless, in exceptional circumstances such as natural
disasters necessitating international aid programmes, the Council
of Administration may authorize a temporary reduction in
contribution class once between two Congresses when so requested
by a member country if the said member establishes that it can no
longer maintain its contribution at the class originally chosen.
In the same circumstances, the Council of Administration may also
authorize a temporary reduction for the non-least developed
countries already in the class of 1 unit by placing them in the
class of 0.5 unit.
7 The temporary reduction in contribution class in application
of paragraph 6 may be authorized by the Council of Administration
for a maximum period of two years or up to the next Congress,
whichever is earlier. On expiry of the specified period, the
country concerned shall automatically revert to its original
contribution class.
8 Notwithstanding paragraphs 4 and 5, changes to a higher
class shall not be subject to any restriction.
Article 151
Payment for supplies from the
International Bureau (Gen. Regs 134)
1 Supplies provided by the International Bureau to member
countries and their designated operators against payment shall be
paid for in the shortest possible time and at the latest within
six months from the first day of the month following that in
which the account is sent by the Bureau. After that period the
sums due shall be chargeable with interest in favour of the Union
at the rate of 5% per annum reckoned from the date of expiry of
that period.
Article 152
Organization of user-funded
subsidiary bodies
1 Subject to the approval of the Council of Administration,
the POC may establish a number of user-funded subsidiary bodies,
funded by voluntary means, in order to organize operational,
commercial, technical and economic activities which fall within
its competence under article 18 of the Constitution, but which
may not be financed by the regular budget.
2 Upon the creation of such a body under the POC, the POC
shall decide on the basic framework of the statutes of the body,
taking due consideration of the fundamental rules and principles
of the UPU as an intergovernmental organization, and shall submit
it to the CA for approval. The basic framework shall include the
following elements:
2.1 the mandate;
2.2 the constituency, including the categories of members
participating;
2.3 decision-making rules, including its internal structure
and its relationship with other UPU bodies;
2.4 voting and representation principles;
2.5 financing (subscription, usage fees, etc.);
2.6 composition of secretariat and management structure.
3 Each user-funded subsidiary body shall organize its
activities in an autonomous manner within the basic framework
decided by the POC and approved by the CA, and shall prepare an
annual report on its activities for approval by the POC.
4 The Council of Administration shall establish the rules
concerning support costs that userfunded subsidiary bodies should
contribute to the regular budget, and shall publish them in the
UPU Financial Regulations.
5 The Director General of the International Bureau shall
administer the secretariat of the userfunded subsidiary bodies in
accordance with the Staff Rules and Regulations, approved by the
CA, applicable to the staff recruited for the user-funded
subsidiary bodies. The secretariat of the subsidiary bodies shall
be an integral part of the International Bureau.
6 Information concerning user-funded subsidiary bodies
established in accordance with this article shall be reported to
Congress following their establishment.
Chapter V
Arbitration
Article 153
Arbitration procedure (Const. 32)
1 If a dispute has to be settled by arbitration between member
countries, each member country must advise the other party in
writing of the subject of the dispute and inform it, by means of
a notice to initiate arbitration, that it wishes to initiate
arbitration.
2 If the dispute concerns questions of an operational or
technical nature, each member country may ask its designated
operator to act in accordance with the procedure provided for in
the following paragraphs and delegate such power to its operator.
The member country concerned shall be informed of the progress of
the proceedings and of the result. The respective member
countries or designated operators shall hereafter be referred to
as "parties to the arbitration".
3 The parties to the arbitration shall appoint either one or
three arbitrators.
4 Where the parties to the arbitration choose to appoint three
arbitrators, each party shall, in accordance with paragraph 2,
select a member country or designated operator not directly
involved in the dispute, to act as an arbitrator. When several
member countries and/or designated operators make common cause,
they shall count only as a single party for the purposes of these
provisions.
5 Where the parties agree to the appointment of three
arbitrators, the third arbitrator shall be jointly agreed upon by
the parties and shall not need to be from a member country or
designated operator.
6 If the dispute concerns one of the Agreements, the
arbitrators may be appointed only from among the member countries
that are parties to that Agreement.
7 The parties to the arbitration may jointly agree to appoint
a single arbitrator, who shall not need to be from a member
country or designated operator.
8 If one or both parties to the arbitration do not, within a
period of three months from the date of the notice to initiate
arbitration, appoint an arbitrator or arbitrators the
International Bureau shall, if so requested, itself call upon the
defaulting member country to appoint an arbitrator, or shall
itself appoint one automatically. The International Bureau will
not be involved in the deliberations unless otherwise mutually
requested by the parties.
9 The parties to the arbitration may mutually agree to
reconcile the dispute at any time before a ruling is delivered by
the arbitrator or arbitrators. Notice of any withdrawal must be
submitted in writing to the International Bureau within 10 days
of the parties reaching such agreement. Where the parties agree
to withdraw from the arbitration process, the arbitrator or
arbitrators shall lose their authority to decide the matter.
10 The arbitrator or arbitrators shall be required to make a
decision on the dispute based on the facts and evidence before
them. All information regarding the dispute must be notified to
both parties and the arbitrator or arbitrators.
11 The decision of the arbitrator or arbitrators shall be
taken by a majority of votes, and notified to the International
Bureau and the parties within six months of the date of the
notice to initiate arbitration.
12 The arbitration proceedings shall be confidential, and only
a brief description of the dispute and the decision shall be
advised in writing to the International Bureau within 10 days of
the decision being delivered to the parties.
13 The decision of the arbitrator or arbitrators shall be
final and binding on the parties and not subject to appeal.
14 The parties to the arbitration shall implement the decision
of the arbitrator or arbitrators without delay. Where a
designated operator is delegated power by its member country to
initiate and adhere to the arbitration procedure, the member
country shall be responsible for ensuring that the designated
operator implements the decision of the arbitrator or
arbitrators.
Chapter VI
Use of languages within the
Union
Article 154
Working languages of the
International Bureau
1 The working languages of the International Bureau shall be
French and English.
Article 155
Languages used for documentation,
for debates and for official correspondence
1 In the documentation published by the Union, the French,
English, Arabic and Spanish languages shall be used. The Chinese,
German, Portuguese and Russian languages shall also be used,
provided that only the most important basic documentation is
produced in these languages. Other languages may also be used on
condition that the member countries which have made the request
bear all of the costs involved.
2 The member country or countries which have requested the use
of a language other than the official language constitute a
language group.
3 Documentation shall be published by the International Bureau
in the official language and in the languages of the other duly
constituted language groups, either directly or through the
intermediary of the regional offices of those groups in
conformity with the procedures agreed with the International
Bureau.
Publication in the different languages shall be effected in
accordance with a common standard.
4 Documentation published directly by the International Bureau
shall, as far as possible, be distributed simultaneously in the
different languages requested.
5 Correspondence between the member countries or their
designated operators of member countries and the International
Bureau and between the latter and outside entities may be
exchanged in any language for which the International Bureau has
available a translation service.
6 The costs of translation into any language, including those
resulting from the application of paragraph 5, shall be borne by
the language group which has asked for that language. The member
countries using the official language shall pay, in respect of
the translation of non-official documents, a lump-sum
contribution, the amount of which per contribution unit shall be
the same as that borne by the member countries using the other
International Bureau working language. All other costs involved
in the supply of documents shall be borne by the Union. The
ceiling of the costs to be borne by the Union for the production
of documents in Chinese, German, Portuguese and Russian shall be
fixed by a Congress resolution.
7 The costs to be borne by a language group shall be divided
among the members of that group in proportion to their
contributions to the expenses of the Union. These costs may be
divided among the members of the language group according to
another system, provided that the member countries concerned
agree to it and inform the International Bureau of their decision
through the intermediary of the spokesman of the group.
8 The International Bureau shall give effect to any change in
the choice of language requested by a member country after a
period which shall not exceed two years.
9 For the discussions at meetings of the Union's bodies,
the French, English, Spanish, Russian and Arabic languages shall
be admissible, by means of a system of interpretation - with or
without electronic equipment - the choice being left to the
judgment of the organizers of the meeting after consultation with
the Director General of the International Bureau and the member
countries concerned.
10 Other languages shall likewise be admissible for the
discussions and meetings mentioned in paragraph 9.
11 Delegations using other languages shall arrange for
simultaneous interpretation into one of the languages mentioned
in paragraph 9, either by the system indicated in the same
paragraph, when the necessary technical modifications can be
made, or by individual interpreters.
12 The costs of the interpretation services shall be shared
among the member countries using the same language in proportion
to their contributions to the expenses of the Union. However, the
costs of installing and maintaining the technical equipment shall
be borne by the Union.
13 Member countries and/or their designated operators may come
to an understanding about the language to be used for official
correspondence in their relations with one another. In the
absence of such an understanding, the language to be used shall
be French.
Chapter VII
Final provisions
Article 156
Conditions for approval of proposals
concerning the General Regulations
1 To become effective, proposals submitted to Congress
relating to these General Regulations shall be approved by a
majority of the member countries represented at Congress and
having the right to vote. At least two thirds of the member
countries of the Union having the right to vote shall be present
at the time of voting.
Article 157
Proposals concerning the Agreements
with the United Nations (Const 9)
1 The conditions of approval referred to in article 156 shall
apply equally to proposals designed to amend the Agreements
concluded between the Universal Postal Union and the United
Nations, in so far as those Agreements do not lay down conditions
for the amendment of the provisions they contain.
Article 158
Amendment, entry into force and
duration of the General Regulations
1 Amendments adopted by a Congress shall form the subject of
an additional protocol and, unless that Congress decides
otherwise, shall enter into force at the same time as the Acts
renewed in the course of the same Congress.
2 These General Regulations shall come into force on 1 January
2014 and shall remain in force for an indefinite period.
In witness whereof the plenipotentiaries of the Governments of
the member countries have signed these General Regulations in a
single original which shall be deposited with the Director
General of the International Bureau. A copy thereof shall be
delivered to each party by the International Bureau of the
Universal Postal Union.
Done at Doha, 11 October 2012