Convention
On Conciliation And Arbitration Within The CSCE
The States parties to this Convention, being States
participating in the Conference on Security and Co-operation in
Europe,
Conscious of their obligation, as provided for in Article 2,
paragraph 3, and Article 33 of the Charter of the United
Nations, to settle their disputes peacefully;
Emphasizing that they do not in any way intend to impair
other existing institutions or mechanisms, including the
International Court of Justice, the European Court of Human
Rights, the Court of Justice of the European Communities and
the Permanent Court of Arbitration;
Reaffirming their solemn commitment to settle their disputes
through peaceful means and their decision to develop mechanisms
to settle disputes between participating States;
Recalling that full implementation of all CSCE principles
and commitments constitutes in itself an essential element in
preventing disputes between the CSCE participating States;
Concerned to further and strengthen the commitments stated,
in particular, in the Report of the Meeting of Experts on
Peaceful Settlement of Disputes adopted at Valletta and
endorsed by the CSCE Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs at
its meeting in Berlin on 19 and 20 June 1991,
Have agreed as follows:
CHAPTER I -
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Article 1
Establishment of the Court
A Court of Conciliation and Arbitration shall be established
to settle, by means of conciliation and, where appropriate,
arbitration, disputes which are submitted to it in accordance
with the provisions of this Convention.
Article 2
Conciliation Commissions and
Arbitral Tribunals
1. Conciliation shall be undertaken by a Conciliation
Commission constituted for each dispute. The Commission shall
be made up of conciliators drawn from a list established in
accordance with the provisions of Article 3.
2. Arbitration shall be undertaken by an Arbitral Tribunal
constituted for each dispute. The Tribunal shall be made up of
arbitrators drawn from a list established in accordance with
the provisions of Article 4.
3. Together, the conciliators and arbitrators shall
constitute the Court of Conciliation and Arbitration within the
CSCE, hereinafter referred to as "the Court".
Article 3
Appointment of Conciliators
1. Each State party to this Convention shall appoint, within
two months following its entry into force, two conciliators of
whom at least one is a national of that State. The other may be
a national of another CSCE participating State. A State which
becomes party to this Convention after its entry into force
shall appoint its conciliators within two months following the
entry into force of this Convention for the State
concerned.
2. The conciliators must be persons holding or having held
senior national or international positions and possessing
recognized qualifications in international law, international
relations, or the settlement of disputes.
3. Conciliators shall be appointed for a renewable period of
six years. Their functions may not be terminated by the
appointing State during their term of office. In the event of
death, resignation or inability to attend recognized by the
Bureau, the State concerned shall appoint a new conciliator;
the term of office of the new conciliator shall be the
remainder of the term of office of the predecessor.
4. Upon termination of their period of office, conciliators
shall continue to hear any cases that they are already dealing
with.
5. The names of the conciliators shall be notified to the
Registrar, who shall enter them into a list, which shall be
communicated to the CSCE Secretariat for transmission to the
CSCE participating States.
Article 4
Appointment of Arbitrators
1. Each State party to this Convention shall appoint, within
two months following its entry into force, one arbitrator and
one alternate, who may be its nationals or nationals of any
other CSCE participating State. A State which becomes Party to
this Convention after its entry into force shall appoint its
arbitrator and the alternate within two months of the entry
into force of this Convention for that State.
2. Arbitrators and their alternates must possess the
qualifications required in their respective countries for
appointment to the highest judicial offices or must be
jurisconsults of recognized competence in international
law.
3. Arbitrators and their alternates are appointed for a
period of six years, which may be renewed once. Their functions
may not be terminated by the appointing State party during
their term of office. In the event of death, resignation or
inability to attend, recognized by the Bureau, the arbitrator
shall be replaced by his or her alternate.
4. If an arbitrator and his or her alternate die, resign or
are both unable to attend, the fact being recognized by the
Bureau, new appointments will be made in accordance with
paragraph 1. The new arbitrator and his or her alternate shall
complete the term of office of their predecessors.
5. The Rules of the Court may provide for a partial renewal
of the arbitrators and their alternates.
6. Upon expiry of their term of office, arbitrators shall
continue to hear any cases that they are already dealing
with.
7. The names of the arbitrators shall be notified to the
Registrar, who shall enter them into a list, which shall be
communicated to the CSCE Secretariat for transmission to the
CSCE participating States.
Article 5
Independence of the Members of the
Court and of the Registrar
The conciliators, the arbitrators and the Registrar shall
perform their functions in full independence. Before taking up
their duties, they shall make a declaration that they will
exercise their powers impartially and conscientiously.
Article 6
Privileges and Immunities
The conciliators, the arbitrators, the Registrar and the
agents and counsel of the parties to a dispute shall enjoy,
while performing their functions in the territory of the States
parties to this Convention, the privileges and immunities
accorded to persons connected with the International Court of
Justice.
Article 7
Bureau of the Court
1. The Bureau of the Court shall consist of a President, a
Vice-President and three other members.
2. The President of the Court shall be elected by the
members of the Court from among their number. The President
presides over the Bureau.
3. The conciliators and the arbitrators shall each elect
from among their number two members of the Bureau and their
alternates.
4. The Bureau shall elect its Vice-President from among its
members. The Vice-President shall be a conciliator if the
President is an arbitrator, and an arbitrator if the President
is a conciliator.
5. The Rules of the Court shall establish the procedures for
the election of the President as well as of the other members
of the Bureau and their alternates.
Article 8
Decision-Making Procedure
1. The decisions of the Court shall be taken by a majority
of the members participating in the vote. Those abstaining
shall not be considered participating in the vote.
2. The decisions of the Bureau shall be taken by a majority
of its members.
3. The decisions of the Conciliation Commissions and the
Arbitral Tribunals shall be taken by a majority of their
members, who may not abstain from voting.
4. In the event of a tied vote, the vote of the presiding
officer shall prevail.
Article 9
Registrar
The Court shall appoint its Registrar and may provide for
the appointment of such other officers as may be necessary. The
staff regulations of the Registry shall be drawn up by the
Bureau and adopted by the States parties to this
Convention.
Article 10
Seat
1. The seat of the Court shall be established in Geneva.
2. At the request of the parties to the dispute and in
agreement with the Bureau, a Conciliation Commission or an
Arbitral Tribunal may meet at another location.
Article 11
Rules of the Court
1. The Court shall adopt its own Rules, which shall be
subject to approval by States parties to this Convention.
2. The Rules of the Court shall establish, in particular,
the rules of procedure to be followed by the Conciliation
Commissions and Arbitral Tribunals constituted pursuant to this
Convention. They shall state which of these rules may not be
waived by agreement between the parties to the dispute.
Article 12
Working Languages
The Rules of the Court shall establish rules on the use of
languages.
Article 13
Financial Protocol
Subject to the provisions of Article 17, all the costs of
the Court shall be met by the States parties to this
Convention. The provisions for the calculation of the costs;
for the drawing up and approval of the annual budget of the
Court; for the distribution of the costs among the States
parties to this Convention; for the audit of the accounts of
the Court; and for related matters, shall be contained in a
Financial Protocol to be adopted by the Committee of Senior
Officials. A State becomes bound by the Protocol on becoming a
party to this Convention.
Article 14
Periodic Report
The Bureau shall annually present to the CSCE Council
through the Committee of Senior Officials a report on the
activities under this Convention.
Article 15
Notice of Requests for
Conciliation or Arbitration
The Registrar of the Court shall give notice to the CSCE
Secretariat of all requests for conciliation or arbitration,
for immediate transmission to the CSCE participating
States.
Article 16
Conduct of Parties - Interim
Measures
1. During the proceedings, the parties to the dispute shall
refrain from any action which may aggravate the situation or
further impede or prevent the settlement of the dispute.
2. The Conciliation Commission may draw the attention of the
parties to the dispute submitted to it to the measures the
parties could take in order to prevent the dispute from being
aggravated or its settlement made more difficult.
3. The Arbitral Tribunal constituted for a dispute may
indicate the interim measures that ought to be taken by the
parties to the dispute in accordance with the provisions of
Article 26, paragraph 4.
Article 17
Procedural Costs
The parties to a dispute and any intervening party shall
each bear their own costs.
CHAPTER II -
COMPETENCE
Article 18
Competence of the Commission and
of the Tribunal
1. Any State party to this Convention may submit to a
Conciliation Commission any dispute with another State party
which has not been settled within a reasonable period of time
through negotiation.
2. Disputes may be submitted to an Arbitral Tribunal under
the conditions stipulated in Article 26.
Article 19
Safeguarding the Existing Means of
Settlement
1. A Conciliation Commission or an Arbitral Tribunal
constituted for a dispute shall take no further action in the
case:
(a) If, prior to being submitted to the Commission or the
Tribunal, the dispute has been submitted to a court or tribunal
whose jurisdiction in respect of the dispute the parties
thereto are under a legal obligation to accept, or if such a
body has already given a decision on the merits of the
dispute;
(b) If the parties to the dispute have accepted in advance
the exclusive jurisdiction of a jurisdictional body other than
a Tribunal in accordance with this Convention which has
jurisdiction to decide, with binding force, on the dispute
submitted to it, or if the parties thereto have agreed to seek
to settle the dispute exclusively by other means.
2. A Conciliation Commission constituted for a dispute shall
take no further action if, even after the dispute has been
submitted to it, one or all of the parties refer the dispute to
a court or tribunal whose jurisdiction in respect of the
dispute the parties thereto are under a legal obligation to
accept.
3. A Conciliation Commission shall postpone examining a
dispute if this dispute has been submitted to another body
which has competence to formulate proposals with respect to
this dispute. If those prior efforts do not lead to a
settlement of the dispute, the Commission shall resume its work
at the request of the parties or one of the parties to the
dispute, subject to the provisions of Article 26, paragraph
1.
4. A State may, at the time of signing, ratifying or
acceding to this Convention, make a reservation in order to
ensure the compatibility of the mechanism of dispute settlement
that this Convention establishes with other means of dispute
settlement resulting from international undertakings applicable
to that State.
5. If, at any time, the parties arrive at a settlement of
their dispute, the Commission or Tribunal shall remove the
dispute from its list, on receiving written confirmation from
all the parties thereto that they have reached a settlement of
the dispute.
6. In the event of disagreement between the parties to the
dispute with regard to the competence of the Commission or the
Tribunal, the decision in the matter shall rest with the
Commission or the Tribunal.
CHAPTER III -
CONCILIATION
Article 20
Request for the Constitution of a
Conciliation Commission
1. Any State party to this Convention may lodge an
application with the Registrar requesting the constitution of a
Conciliation Commission for a dispute between it and one or
more other States parties. Two or more States parties may also
jointly lodge an application with the Registrar.
2. The constitution of a Conciliation Commission may also be
requested by agreement between two or more States parties or
between one or more States parties and one or more other CSCE
participating States. The agreement shall be notified to the
Registrar.
Article 21
Constitution of the Conciliation
Commission
1. Each party to the dispute shall appoint, from the list of
conciliators established in accordance with Article 3, one
conciliator to sit on the Commission.
2. When more than two States are parties to the same
dispute, the States asserting the same interest may agree to
appoint one single conciliator. If they do not so agree, each
of the two sides to the dispute shall appoint the same number
of conciliators up to a maximum decided by the Bureau.
3. Any State which is a party to a dispute submitted to a
Conciliation Commission and which is not a party to this
Convention, may appoint a person to sit on the Commission,
either from the list of conciliators established in accordance
with Article 3, or from among other persons who are nationals
of a CSCE participating State. In this event, for the purpose
of examining the dispute, such persons shall have the same
rights and the same obligations as the other members of the
Commission. They shall perform their functions in full
independence and shall make the declaration required by Article
5 before taking their seats on the Commission.
4. As soon as the application or the agreement whereby the
parties to a dispute have requested the constitution of a
Conciliation Commission is received, the President of the Court
shall consult the parties to the dispute as to the composition
of the rest of the Commission.
5. The Bureau shall appoint three further conciliators to
sit on the Commission. This number can be increased or
decreased by the Bureau, provided it is uneven. Members of the
Bureau and their alternates, who are on the list of
conciliators, shall be eligible for appointment to the
Commission.
6. The Commission shall elect its Chairman from among the
members appointed by the Bureau.
7. The Rules of the Court shall stipulate the procedures
applicable if an objection is raised to one of the members
appointed to sit on the Commission or if that member is unable
to or refuses to sit at the commencement or in the course of
the proceedings.
8. Any question as to the application of this article shall
be decided by the Bureau as a preliminary matter.
Article 22
Procedure for the Constitution of
a Conciliation Commission
1. If the constitution of a Conciliation Commission is
requested by means of an application, the application shall
state the subject of the dispute, the name of the party or
parties against which the application is directed, and the name
of the conciliator or conciliators appointed by the requesting
party or parties to the dispute. The application shall also
briefly indicate the means of settlement previously resorted
to.
2. As soon as an application has been received, the
Registrar shall notify the other party or parties to the
dispute mentioned in the application. Within a period of
fifteen days from the notification, the other party or parties
to the dispute shall appoint the conciliator or conciliators of
their choice to sit on the Commission. If, within this period,
one or more parties to the dispute have not appointed the
member or members of the Commission whom they are entitled to
appoint, the Bureau shall appoint the appropriate number of
conciliators. Such appointment shall be made from among the
conciliators appointed in accordance with Article 3 by the
party or each of the parties involved or, if those parties have
not yet appointed conciliators, from among the other
conciliators not appointed by the other party or parties to the
dispute.
3. If the constitution of a Conciliation Commission is
requested by means of an agreement, the agreement shall state
the subject of the dispute. If there is no agreement, in whole
or in part, concerning the subject of the dispute, each party
thereto may formulate its own position in respect of such
subject.
4. At the same time as the parties request the constitution
of a Conciliation Commission by agreement, each party shall
notify the Registrar of the name of the conciliator or
conciliators whom it has appointed to sit on the
Commission.
Article 23
Conciliation Procedure
1. The conciliation proceedings shall be confidential and
all parties to the dispute shall have the right to be heard.
Subject to the provisions of Articles 10 and 11 and the Rules
of the Court, the Conciliation Commission shall, after
consultation with the parties to the dispute, determine the
procedure.
2. If the parties to the dispute agree thereon, the
Conciliation Commission may invite any State party to this
Convention which has an interest in the settlement of the
dispute to participate in the proceedings.
Article 24
Objective of Conciliation
The Conciliation Commission shall assist the parties to the
dispute in finding a settlement in accordance with
international law and their CSCE commitments.
Article 25
Result of the Conciliation
1. If, during the proceedings, the parties to the dispute,
with the help of the Conciliation Commission, reach a mutually
acceptable settlement, they shall record the terms of this
settlement in a summary of conclusions signed by their
representatives and by the members of the Commission. The
signing of the document shall conclude the proceedings. The
CSCE Council shall be informed through the Committee of Senior
Officials of the success of the conciliation.
2. When the Conciliation Commission considers that all the
aspects of the dispute and all the possibilities of finding a
solution have been explored, it shall draw up a final report.
The report shall contain the proposals of the Commission for
the peaceful settlement of the dispute.
3. The report of the Conciliation Commission shall be
notified to the parties to the dispute, which shall have a
period of thirty days in which to examine it and inform the
Chairman of the Commission whether they are willing to accept
the proposed settlement.
4. If a party to the dispute does not accept the proposed
settlement, the other party or parties are no longer bound by
their own acceptance thereof.
5. If, within the period prescribed in paragraph 3, the
parties to the dispute have not accepted the proposed
settlement, the report shall be forwarded to the CSCE Council
through the Committee of Senior Officials.
6. A report shall also be drawn up which provides immediate
notification to the CSCE Council through the Committee of
Senior Officials of circumstances where a party fails to appear
for conciliation or leaves a procedure after it has begun.
CHAPTER IV -
ARBITRATION
Article 26
Request for the Constitution of an
Arbitral Tribunal
1. A request for arbitration may be made at any time by
agreement between two or more States parties to this Convention
or between one or more States parties to this Convention and
one or more other CSCE participating States.
2. The States parties to this Convention may at any time by
a notice addressed to the Depositary declare that they
recognize as compulsory, ipso facto and without special
agreement, the jurisdiction of an Arbitral Tribunal, subject to
reciprocity. Such a declaration may be made for an unlimited
period or for a specified time. It may cover all disputes or
exclude disputes concerning a State's territorial integrity,
national defence, title to sovereignty over land territory, or
competing claims with regard to jurisdiction over other
areas.
3. A request for arbitration against a State party to this
Convention which has made the declaration specified in
paragraph 2 may be made by means of an application to the
Registrar only after a period of thirty days after the report
of the Conciliation Commission which has dealt with the dispute
has been transmitted to the CSCE Council in accordance with the
provisions of Article 25, paragraph 5.
4. When a dispute is submitted to an Arbitral Tribunal in
accordance with this article, the Tribunal may, on its own
authority or at the request of one or all of the parties to the
dispute, indicate interim measures that ought to be taken by
the parties to the dispute to avoid an aggravation of the
dispute, greater difficulty in reaching a solution, or the
possibility of a future award of the Tribunal becoming
unenforceable owing to the conduct of one or more of the
parties to the dispute.
Article 27
Cases Brought before an Arbitral
Tribunal
1. If a request for arbitration is made by means of an
agreement, it shall indicate the subject of the dispute. If
there is no agreement, in whole or in part, concerning the
subject of the dispute, each party thereto may formulate its
own position in respect of such subject.
2. If a request for arbitration is made by means of an
application, it shall indicate the subject of the dispute, the
States party or parties to this Convention against which it is
directed, and the main elements of fact and law on which it is
grounded. As soon as the application is received, the Registrar
shall notify the other States party or parties mentioned in the
application.
Article 28
Constitution of the Arbitral
Tribunal
1. When a request for arbitration is submitted, an Arbitral
Tribunal shall be constituted.
2. The arbitrators appointed by the parties to the dispute
in accordance with Article 4 are ex officio members of the
Tribunal. When more than two States are parties to the same
dispute, the States asserting the same interest may agree to
appoint one single arbitrator.
3. The Bureau shall appoint, from among the arbitrators, a
number of members to sit on the Tribunal so that the members
appointed by the Bureau total at least one more than the ex
officio members. Members of the Bureau and their
alternates, who are on the list of arbitrators, shall be
eligible for appointment to the Tribunal.
4. If an ex officio member is unable to attend or has
previously taken part in any capacity in the hearings of the
case arising from the dispute submitted to the Tribunal, that
member shall be replaced by his or her alternate. If the
alternate is in the same situation, the State involved shall
appoint a member to examine the dispute pursuant to the terms
and conditions specified in paragraph 5. In the event of a
question arising as to the capacity of a member or of his or
her alternate to sit on the Tribunal, the matter shall be
decided by the Bureau.
5. Any State, which is a party to a dispute submitted to an
Arbitral Tribunal and which is not party to this Convention,
may appoint a person of its choice to sit on the Tribunal,
either from the list of arbitrators established in accordance
with Article 4 or from among other persons who are nationals of
a CSCE participating State. Any person thus appointed must meet
the conditions specified in Article 4, paragraph 2, and for the
purpose of examining the dispute, shall have the same rights
and obligations as the other members of the Tribunal. The
person shall perform his or her functions in full independence
and shall make the declaration required by Article 5 before
sitting on the Tribunal.
6. The Tribunal shall appoint its Chairman from among the
members appointed by the Bureau.
7. In the event that one of the members of the Tribunal
appointed by the Bureau is unable to attend the proceedings,
that member shall not be replaced unless the number of members
appointed by the Bureau falls below the number of ex officio
members, or members appointed by the parties to the dispute in
accordance with paragraph 5. In this event, one or more new
members shall be appointed by the Bureau pursuant to paragraphs
3 and 4 of this article. A new Chairman will not be elected if
one or more new members are appointed, unless the member unable
to attend is the Chairman of the Tribunal.
Article 29
Arbitration Procedure
1. All the parties to the dispute shall have the right to be
heard during the arbitration proceedings, which shall conform
to the principles of a fair trial. The proceedings shall
consist of a written part and an oral part.
2. The Arbitral Tribunal shall have, in relation to the
parties to the dispute, the necessary fact-finding and
investigative powers to carry out its tasks.
3. Any CSCE participating State which considers that it has
a particular interest of a legal nature likely to be affected
by the ruling of the Tribunal may, within fifteen days of the
transmission of the notification by the CSCE Secretariat as
specified in Article 15, address to the Registrar a request to
intervene. This request shall be immediately transmitted to the
parties to the dispute and to the Tribunal constituted for the
dispute.
4. If the intervening State establishes that it has such an
interest, it shall be authorized to participate in the
proceedings in so far as may be required for the protection of
this interest. The relevant part of the ruling of the Tribunal
is binding upon the intervening State.
5. The parties to the dispute have a period of thirty days
in which to address their observations regarding the request
for intervention to the Tribunal. The Tribunal shall render its
decision on the admissibility of the request.
6. The hearings in the Tribunal shall be held in camera,
unless the Tribunal decides otherwise at the request of the
parties to the dispute.
7. In the event that one or more parties to the dispute fail
to appear, the other party or parties thereto may request the
Tribunal to decide in favour of its or their claims. Before
doing so, the Tribunal must satisfy itself that it is competent
and that the claims of the party or parties taking part in the
proceedings are well-founded.
Article 30
Function of the Arbitral
Tribunal
The function of the Arbitral Tribunal shall be to decide, in
accordance with international law, such disputes as are
submitted to it. This provision shall not prejudice the power
of the Tribunal to decide a case ex aequo et bono , if
the parties to the dispute so agree.
Article 31
Arbitral Award
1. The award of the Arbitral Tribunal shall state the
reasons on which it is based. If it does not represent in whole
or in part the unanimous opinion of the members of the Arbitral
Tribunal, any member shall be entitled to deliver a separate or
dissenting opinion.
2. Subject to Article 29, paragraph 4, the award of the
Tribunal shall have binding force only between the parties to
the dispute and in respect of the case to which it relates.
3. The award shall be final and not subject to appeal.
However, the parties to the dispute or one of them may request
that the Tribunal interpret its award as to the meaning or
scope. Unless the parties to the dispute agree otherwise, such
request shall be made at the latest within six months after the
communication of the award. After receiving the observations of
the parties to the dispute, the Tribunal shall render its
interpretation as soon as possible.
4. An application for revision of the award may be made only
when it is based upon the discovery of some fact which is of
such a nature as to be a decisive factor and which, when the
award was rendered, was unknown to the Tribunal and to the
party or parties to the dispute claiming revision. The
application for revision must be made at the latest within six
months of the discovery of the new fact. No application for
revision may be made after the lapse of ten years from the date
of the award.
5. As far as possible, the examination of a request for
interpretation or an application for revision should be carried
out by the Tribunal which made the award in question. If the
Bureau should find this to be impossible, another Tribunal
shall be constituted in accordance with the provisions of
Article 28.
Article 32
Publication of the Arbitral
Award
The award shall be published by the Registrar. A certified
copy shall be communicated to the parties to the dispute and to
the CSCE Council through the Committee of Senior Officials.
CHAPTER V -
FINAL PROVISIONS
Article 33
Signature and Entry into Force
1. This Convention shall be open for signature with the
Government of Sweden by the CSCE participating States until 31
March 1993. It shall be subject to ratification.
2. The CSCE participating States which have not signed this
Convention may subsequently accede thereto.
3. This Convention shall enter into force two months after
the date of deposit of the twelfth instrument of ratification
or accession.
4. For every State which ratifies or accedes to this
Convention after the deposit of the twelfth instrument of
ratification or accession, the Convention shall enter into
force two months after its instrument of ratification or
accession has been deposited.
5. The Government of Sweden shall serve as depositary of
this Convention.
Article 34
Reservations
This Convention may not be the subject of any reservation
that it does not expressly authorize.
Article 35
Amendments
1. Amendments to this Convention must be adopted in
accordance with the following paragraphs.
2. Amendments to this Convention may be proposed by any
State party thereto, and shall be communicated by the
Depositary to the CSCE Secretariat for transmission to the CSCE
participating States.
3. If the CSCE Council adopts the proposed text of the
amendment, the text shall be forwarded by the Depositary to
States parties to this Convention for acceptance in accordance
with their respective constitutional requirements.
4. Any such amendment shall come into force on the thirtieth
day after all States parties to this Convention have informed
the Depositary of their acceptance thereof.
Article 36
Denunciation
1. Any State party to this Convention may, at any time,
denounce this Convention by means of a notification addressed
to the Depositary.
2. Such denunciation shall become effective one year after
the date of receipt of the notification by the Depositary.
3. This Convention shall, however, continue to apply for the
denouncing party with respect to proceedings which are under
way at the time the denunciation enters into force. Such
proceedings shall be pursued to their conclusion.
Article 37
Notifications and
Communications
The notifications and communications to be made by the
Depositary shall be transmitted to the Registrar and to the
CSCE Secretariat for further transmission to the CSCE
participating States.
Article 38
Non-Parties
In conformity with international law, it is confirmed that
nothing in this Convention shall be interpreted to establish
any obligations or commitments for CSCE participating States
that are not parties to this Convention if not expressly
provided for and expressly accepted by such States in
writing.
Article 39
Transitional Provisions
1. The Court shall proceed, within four months of the entry
into force of this Convention, to elect the Bureau, to adopt
its rules and to appoint the Registrar in accordance with the
provisions of Articles 7, 9 and 11. The host Government of the
Court shall, in co-operation with the Depositary, make the
arrangements required.
2. Until a Registrar is appointed, the duties of the
Registrar under Article 3, paragraph 5, and Article 4,
paragraph 7 shall be performed by the Depositary.
Done at in the English, French, German, Italian, Russian and
Spanish languages, all six language versions being equally
authentic, on
Financial
Protocol
Established
In Accordance With Article 13 Of the Convention On Conciliation
And Arbitration Within The CSCE
Article 1
Costs of the Court
1. All the costs of the Court established by the Convention
on Conciliation and Arbitration within the CSCE (hereinafter
referred to as "the Convention") shall be met by the States
parties to the Convention. Costs of conciliators and
arbitrators shall be costs of the Court.
2. The obligations of the host State with respect to
expenditures in connection with the premises and furniture for
use by the Court, their maintence, insurance and security, as
well as utilities, shall be set out in an exchange of letters
between the Court acting with the consent of and on behalf of
the States parties to the Convention, and the host State.
Article 2
Contributions to the budget of the
Court
1. Contributions to the budget of the Court shall be divided
among the States parties to the Convention according to the
scale of distribution applicable within the CSCE, adjusted to
take into account the difference in number between the CSCE
participating States and the States parties to the
Convention.
2. If a State ratifies or accedes to the Convention after
its entry into force, its contribution shall be equal, for the
current financial year, to one-twelfth of its portion of the
adjusted scale, as established according to paragraph 1 of this
Article, for each full month of that financial year which
remains after the date on which the Convention enters into
force in respect of it.
3. If a State which is not a party to the Convention submits
a dispute to the Court pursuant to the provisions of Article
20, paragraph 2, or Article 26, paragraph 1 of the Convention,
it shall contribute to the financing of the budget of the
Court, for the duration of the proceedings, as if it were a
party to the Convention.
For the application of this paragraph, the conciliation
shall be presumed to commence on the day the Registrar receives
notice of the agreement of the parties to set up a Commission
and to end on the day the Commission notifies its report to the
parties. If a party withdraws from the poceedings, these
proceedings shall be considered as ended on the day of notice
of the report specified in Article 25, paragraph 6 of the
Convention. The arbitration proceedings shall be presumed to
start on the day the Registrar receives notice of the agreement
of the parties to establish a Tribunal and to end on the day
the Tribunal renders its award.
Article 3
Financial Year and Budget
1. The financial year shall be from 1 January to 31
December.
2. The Registrar, acting with the concurrence of the Bureau
of the Court, shall establish each year a budget proposal for
the Court. The budget proposal for the ensuing financial year
shall be submitted to the States parties to the Convention
before 15 September.
3. The budget shall be approved by the representatives of
the States parties to the Convention. Consideration and
approval of the budget shall take place in Vienna unless the
States parties to the Convention otherwise agree. On approval
of the budget for the financial year the Registrar shall
request the States parties to the Convention to remit their
contributions.
If the budget is not approved by 31 December the Court will
operate on the basis of the preceding budget and, without
prejudice to later adjustments, the Registrar shall request the
States parties to the Convention to remit their contributions
in accordance with this budget. The Registrar shall request
States parties to the Convention to make fifty per cent of
their contributions available on 1 January and the remaining
fifty per cent on 1 April.
4. Barring a decision to the contrary by the representatives
of the States parties to the Convention, the budget shall be
established in Swiss francs and the contributions of the States
shall be paid in this currency.
5. A State which ratifies or accedes to the Convention after
its entry into force shall pay its first contribution to the
budget within two months after the request by the
Registrar.
6. States which, without being parties to the Convention,
have submitted a dispute to the Court, shall pay their
contribution within two months after the request by the
Registrar.
7. The year the Convention enters into force, the States
parties to the Convention shall pay their contribution to the
budget within two months following the date of deposit of the
twelfth instrument of ratification of the Convention. This
budget is preliminarily fixed at 250,000 Swiss francs.
Article 4
Obligations. Payments and Revised
Budget
1. The approved budget shall constitute authorization to the
Registrar, acting under the responsibility of the Bureau of the
Court, to incur obligations and make payments up to the amounts
and for the purposes approved.
2. The Registrar, acting under the responsibility of the
Bureau of the Court, is authorized to make transfers between
items and sub-items of up to 15 per cent of items/sub-items.
All such transfers must be reported by thie Registrar in
connection with the financial statement mentioned in Article 9
of this Protocol.
3. Obligations remaining undischarged at the end of the
financial year shall be carried over to the next financial
year.
4. If so obliged by circumstances and following careful
examination of available ressources with a view to identifying
savings, the Registrar is authorized to submit a revised
budget, which may entail requests for supplementary
appropriations, for the approval of the representatives of the
States parties to the Conventions.
5. Any surplus for a given financial year shall be deducted
from the assessed contributions for the financial year
following the one in which the accounts have heen approved by
the representatives of the States parties to the Convention.
Any deficit shall be charged to the ensuing financial year
unless the representatives of the States parties to the
Convention decide on supplementary contributions.
Article 5
Working Capital Fund
A working capital fund may be established in case the States
parties to the Convention deem it necessery. It will be funded
by the States parties to the Convention.
Article 6
Allowances and Nominal
Retainers
1. Members of the Bureau of the Court, of the Conciliation
Commission and of the Arbitral Tribunals shall receive, for
each day on which they exercise their functions, a daily
allowance.
2. Members of the Bureau of the Court shall additionally
receive a nominal annual retainer.
3. The daily allowance and the nominal annual retainer shall
be determined by the representatives of the States parties to
the Convention.
Article 7
Salaries, Social Security and
Pensions
1. The Registrar and any other registry staff appointed in
accordance with Article 9 of the Convention Shall receive a
salary to be determined by the representatives of the States
parties to the Convention.
2. The registry staff shall be limited to the strict minimum
needed to ensure the operation of the Court.
3. The representatives of the States parties to the
Convention shall ensure that the Registrar and the registry
staff are afforded an adequate social security scheme and
retirement pension.
Article 8
Travel Expenses
1. Travel expenses which are absolutely necessary for
exercising their functions shall be paid to the members of the
Bureau of the Court, of the Conciliation Commissions and of the
Arbitral Tribunals and to the Registrar and the registry
staff.
2. Travel expenses shall comprese actual transportation
costs, including expenses normally incidental to
transportation, and a daily subsistense allowance to oover all
charges of meals, lodging, fees and gratuities and other
personal expenses. The daily subsistence allowance shall be
determined by the representatives of the States parties to the
Convention.
Article 9
Records and Accounts
1. The Registrar, acting under the authority of the Bureau
of the Court, shall ensure that appropriate records and
accounts are kept of the transactions and that all payments are
properly authorized.
2. The Registrar, acting under the authority of the Bureau
of the Court, shall submit to the States parties to the
Convention, not later than 1 March, an annual financial
statement showing, for the preceding financial year:
(a) the income and expenditures relating to all
accounts;
(b) the situation with regard to budget provisions;
(c) the financial assets and liabilities at the end of the
financial year.
Article 10
Audit
1. The accounts of the Court shall be audited by two
auditors, of different nationalities, appointed for renewable
periods of three years by the representatives of the States
parties to the Convention.
Persons appearing or having appeared on the lists of
conciliators or arbitrators or having received payment by the
Court pursuant to Article 7 of this Protocol may not be
auditors.
2. Auditors shall annually conduct audits. They shall, in
particular, check the accuracy of the books, the statement of
assets and liabilities, and the accounts. The accounts shall be
available for the annual auditing and inspection not later than
1 March.
3. Auditors shall perform such audits as they deem necessary
to certify:
(a) that the annual finansial statement submitted to them is
correct and in accordance with the books and records of the
Court,
(b) that the financial transactions recorded in this
statement have been affected in accordance with the relevant
rules, the budgetary provisions and other directives which may
be applicable, and
(c) that the funds on deposit and on hand have been verified
by certificates received directly from the depositories or by
actual count.
4. The Registrar shall give auditors such assistance and
facilities as may be needed for the proper discharge of their
duties. Auditors shall, in particular, have free access to the
books of account, records and documents which, in their
opinion, are necessary for the audit.
5. Auditors shall annually draw up a report certifying the
accounts and setting forth the comments warranted by the audit.
They may, in this context, also make such observations as they
deem necessary regarding the efficiency of financial
procedures, the accounting system and the internal financial
control.
6. The report shall be submitted to the representatives of
the States parties to the Convention not later than four months
after the end of the financial year to which the accounts
refer. The report shall be transmitted to the Registrar before
hand, so that he will have at least 15 days in which to furnish
such explanations and justifications as he may consider
necessary.
7. In addition to the annual auditing, auditors will at any
time have free access to check the books, the statement of
assets and liabilities, and accounts.
8. On the basis of the audit report, the representatives of
the States parties to the Convention shall signify their
acceptance of the annual financial statement or take such other
action as may be considered appropriate.
Article 11
Special Disbursement Account
1. A special disbursement account may be established by the
States parties to the Convention aimed at lowering the
procedural costs for the States parties to disputes submitted
to the Court which have difficulties paying these costs. It
will be funded by voluntary contributions from States parties
to the Convention.
2. A State party to a dispute submitted to the Court that
wishes to receive funds from the special disbursement account
shall file a request to the Registrar, with a detailed
statement estimating procedural costs.
The Bureau of the Court shall examine the request and
forward its recomendation to the representatives of the States
parties to the Convention which shall decide whether to grant
this request and to what extent.
After the case has been heard, the State having received
funds from the special disbursement account shall address to
the Registrar, for study by the Bureau, a detailed statement of
procedural costs actually expended and shall proceed, if need
be, with reimbursing the sums in excess of the actual
costs.
Article 12
Decision Making
All decisions by the States parties to the Convention or
their representatives under this Prctocol shall be taken by
consensus.
Article 13
Amendments
Amendments to this Protocol shall be adopted in accordance
with the provisions of Article 35 of the Convention. The Bureau
of the Court may address its opinion on the proposed amendments
to the CSCE Secretariat for transmission to the CSCE
participating States.
This Protocol, established in the English, French, German,
Italian, Russian and Spanish languages, all six-language
versions being equally authentic, having been adopted by the
Committee of Senior Officials at Prague, on 28 April 1993 in
accordance with Article 13 of the Convention on Conciliation
and Arbitration within the CSCE is deposited with the
Government of Sweden.