INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION AGAINST DOPING IN SPORT
The General Conference of the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization, hereinafter referred to
as "UNESCO", meeting in Paris, from 3 to 21 October 2005, at
its 33rd session,
Considering that the aim of UNESCO is to contribute to
peace and security by promoting collaboration among nations
through education, science and culture,
Referring to existing international instruments relating
to human rights,
Aware of resolution 58/5 adopted by the General Assembly
of the United Nations on 3 November 2003, concerning sport as a
means to promote education, health, development and peace,
notably its paragraph 7,
Conscious that sport should play an important role in
the protection of health, in moral, cultural and physical
education and in promoting international understanding and
peace,
Noting the need to encourage and coordinate
international cooperation towards the elimination of doping in
sport,
Concerned by the use of doping by athletes in sport and
the consequences thereof for their health, the principle of
fair play, the elimination of cheating and the future of
sport,
Mindful that doping puts at risk the ethical principles
and educational values embodied in the International Charter of
Physical Education and Sport of UNESCO and in the Olympic
Charter,
Recalling that the Anti-Doping Convention and its
Additional Protocol adopted within the framework of the Council
of Europe are the public international law tools which are at
the origin of national anti-doping policies and of
intergovernmental cooperation,
Recalling the recommendations on doping adopted by the
second, third and fourth International Conferences of Ministers
and Senior Officials Responsible for Physical Education and
Sport organized by UNESCO at Moscow (1988), Punta del Este
(1999) and Athens (2004) and 32 C/Resolution 9 adopted by the
General Conference of UNESCO at its 32nd session (2003),
Bearing in mind the World Anti-Doping Code adopted by
the World Anti-Doping Agency at the World Conference on Doping
in Sport, Copenhagen, 5 March 2003, and the Copenhagen
Declaration on Anti-Doping in Sport,
Mindful also of the influence that elite athletes have
on youth,
Aware of the ongoing need to conduct and promote
research with the objectives of improving detection of doping
and better understanding of the factors affecting use in order
for prevention strategies to be most effective,
Aware also of the importance of ongoing education of
athletes, athlete support personnel and the community at large
in preventing doping,
Mindful of the need to build the capacity of States
Parties to implement anti-doping programmes,
Aware that public authorities and the organizations
responsible for sport have complementary responsibilities to
prevent and combat doping in sport, notably to ensure the
proper conduct, on the basis of the principle of fair play, of
sports events and to protect the health of those that take part
in them,
Recognizing that these authorities and organizations
must work together for these purposes, ensuring the highest
degree of independence and transparency at all appropriate
levels,
Determined to take further and stronger cooperative
action aimed at the elimination of doping in sport,
Recognizing that the elimination of doping in sport is
dependent in part upon progressive harmonization of anti-doping
standards and practices in sport and cooperation at the
national and global levels,
Adopts this Convention on this nineteenth day of October
2005.
I. Scope
Article 1 - Purpose of the Convention
The purpose of this Convention, within the framework of the
strategy and programme of activities of UNESCO in the area of
physical education and sport, is to promote the prevention of
and the fight against doping in sport, with a view to its
elimination.
Article 2 - Definitions
These definitions are to be understood within the context of
the World Anti-Doping Code. However, in case of conflict the
provisions of the Convention will prevail.
For the purposes of this Convention: BR />
1. "Accredited doping control laboratories" means laboratories
accredited by the World Anti Doping Agency.
2. "Anti-doping organization" means an entity that is
responsible for adopting rules for initiating, implementing or
enforcing any part of the doping control process. This
includes, for example, the International Olympic Committee, the
International Paralympic Committee, other major event
organizations that conduct testing at their events, the World
Anti-Doping Agency, international federations and national
anti-doping organizations.
3. "Anti-doping rule violation" in sport means one or more of
the following: (a) the presence of a prohibited substance or
its metabolites or markers in an athlete's bodily
specimen;
(b) use or attempted use of a prohibited substance or a
prohibited method;
(c) refusing, or failing without compelling justification, to
submit to sample collection after notification as authorized in
applicable anti-doping rules or otherwise evading sample
collection;
(d) violation of applicable requirements regarding athlete
availability for out-of-competition testing, including failure
to provide required whereabouts information and missed tests
which are declared based on reasonable rules;
(e) tampering, or attempting to tamper, with any part of doping
control;
(f) possession of prohibited substances or methods;
(g) trafficking in any prohibited substance or prohibited
method;
(h) administration or attempted administration of a prohibited
substance or prohibited method to any athlete, or assisting,
encouraging, aiding, abetting, covering up or any other type of
complicity involving an anti-doping rule violation or any
attempted violation.
4. "Athlete" means, for the purposes of doping control, any
person who participates in sport at the international or
national level as defined by each national anti-doping
organization and accepted by States Parties and any additional
person who participates in a sport or event at a lower level
accepted by States Parties. For the purposes of education and
training programmes, "athlete" means any person who
participates in sport under the authority of a sports
organization.
5. "Athlete support personnel" means any coach, trainer,
manager, agent, team staff, official, medical or paramedical
personnel working with or treating athletes participating in or
preparing for sports competition.
6. "Code" means the World Anti-Doping Code adopted by the World
Anti-Doping Agency on 5 March 2003 at Copenhagen which is
attached as Appendix 1 to this Convention.
7. "Competition" means a single race, match, game or singular
athletic contest.
8. "Doping control" means the process including test
distribution planning, sample collection and handling,
laboratory analysis, results management, hearings and
appeals.
9. "Doping in sport" means the occurrence of an anti-doping
rule violation.
10. "Duly authorized doping control teams" means doping control
teams operating under the authority of international or
national anti-doping organizations.
11. "In-competition" testing means, for purposes of
differentiating between in-competition and out-of-competition
testing, unless provided otherwise in the rules of an
international federation or other relevant anti-doping
organization, a test where an athlete is selected for testing
in connection with a specific competition.
12. "International Standard for Laboratories" means the
standard which is attached as Appendix 2 to this
Convention.
13. "International Standard for Testing" means the standard
which is attached as Appendix 3 to this Convention.
14. "No advance notice" means a doping control which takes
place with no advance warning to the athlete and where the
athlete is continuously chaperoned from the moment of
notification through sample provision.
15. "Olympic Movement" means all those who agree to be guided
by the Olympic Charter and who recognize the authority of the
International Olympic Committee, namely the international
federations of sports on the programme of the Olympic Games,
the National Olympic Committees, the Organizing Committees of
the Olympic Games, athletes, judges and referees, associations
and clubs, as well as all the organizations and institutions
recognized by the International Olympic Committee.
16. "Out-of-competition" doping control means any doping
control which is not conducted in competition.
17. "Prohibited List" means the list which appears in Annex I
to this Convention identifying the prohibited substances and
prohibited methods.
18. "Prohibited method" means any method so described on the
Prohibited List, which appears in Annex I to this
Convention.
19. "Prohibited substance" means any substance so described on
the Prohibited List, which appears in Annex I to this
Convention.
20. "Sports organization" means any organization that serves as
the ruling body for an event for one or several sports.
21. "Standards for Granting Therapeutic Use Exemptions" means
those standards that appear in Annex II to this
Convention.
22. "Testing" means the parts of the doping control process
involving test distribution planning, sample collection, sample
handling and sample transport to the laboratory.
23. "Therapeutic use exemption" means an exemption granted in
accordance with Standards for Granting Therapeutic Use
Exemptions.
24. "Use" means the application, ingestion, injection or
consumption by any means whatsoever of any prohibited substance
or prohibited method.
25. "World Anti-Doping Agency" (WADA) means the foundation so
named established under Swiss law on 10 November 1999.
Article 3 - Means to achieve the purpose of the
Convention
In order to achieve the purpose of the Convention, States
Parties undertake to:
(a) adopt appropriate measures at the national and
international levels which are consistent with the principles
of the Code;
(b) encourage all forms of international cooperation aimed at
protecting athletes and ethics in sport and at sharing the
results of research;
(c) foster international cooperation between States Parties and
leading organizations in the fight against doping in sport, in
particular with the World Anti-Doping Agency.
Article 4 - Relationship of the Convention to the
Code
1. In order to coordinate the implementation, at the national
and international levels, of the fight against doping in sport,
States Parties commit themselves to the principles of the Code
as the basis for the measures provided for in Article 5 of this
Convention. Nothing in this Convention prevents States Parties
from adopting additional measures complementary to the
Code.
2. The Code and the most current version of Appendices 2 and 3
are reproduced for information purposes and are not an integral
part of this Convention. The Appendices as such do not create
any binding obligations under international law for States
Parties.
3. The Annexes are an integral part of this Convention. BR
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Article 5 - Measures to achieve the objectives of the
Convention
In abiding by the obligations contained in this Convention,
each State Party undertakes to adopt appropriate measures. Such
measures may include legislation, regulation, policies or
administrative practices.
Article 6 - Relationship to other international
instruments
This Convention shall not alter the rights and obligations of
States Parties which arise from other agreements previously
concluded and consistent with the object and purpose of this
Convention. This does not affect the enjoyment by other States
Parties of their rights or the performance of their obligations
under this Convention.
II. Anti-doping activities at the national level
Article 7 - Domestic coordination
States Parties shall ensure the application of the present
Convention, notably through domestic coordination. To meet
their obligations under this Convention, States Parties may
rely on anti-doping organizations as well as sports authorities
and organizations.
Article 8 - Restricting the availability and use in sport of
prohibited substances and methods
1. States Parties shall, where appropriate, adopt measures to
restrict the availability of prohibited substances and methods
in order to restrict their use in sport by athletes, unless the
use is based upon a therapeutic use exemption. These include
measures against trafficking to athletes and, to this end,
measures to control production, movement, importation,
distribution and sale.
2. States Parties shall adopt, or encourage, where appropriate,
the relevant entities within their jurisdictions to adopt
measures to prevent and to restrict the use and possession of
prohibited substances and methods by athletes in sport, unless
the use is based upon a therapeutic use exemption.
3. No measures taken pursuant to this Convention will impede
the availability for legitimate purposes of substances and
methods otherwise prohibited or controlled in sport.
Article 9 - Measures against athlete support
personnel
States Parties shall themselves take measures or encourage
sports organizations and anti-doping organizations to adopt
measures, including sanctions or penalties, aimed at athlete
support personnel who commit an anti-doping rule violation or
other offence connected with doping in sport.
Article 10 - Nutritional supplements
States Parties, where appropriate, shall encourage producers
and distributors of nutritional supplements to establish best
practices in the marketing and distribution of nutritional
supplements, including information regarding their analytic
composition and quality assurance.
Article 11 - Financial measures
States Parties shall, where appropriate:
(a) provide funding within their respective budgets to support
a national testing programme across all sports or assist sports
organizations and anti-doping organizations in financing doping
controls either by direct subsidies or grants, or by
recognizing the costs of such controls when determining the
overall subsidies or grants to be awarded to those
organizations;
(b) take steps to withhold sport-related financial support to
individual athletes or athlete support personnel who have been
suspended following an anti-doping rule violation, during the
period of their suspension;
(c) withhold some or all financial or other sport-related
support from any sports organization or anti-doping
organization not in compliance with the Code or applicable
anti-doping rules adopted pursuant to the Code. BR />
Article 12 - Measures to facilitate doping control
States Parties shall, where appropriate:
(a) encourage and facilitate the implementation by sports
organizations and anti-doping organizations within their
jurisdiction of doping controls in a manner consistent with the
Code, including no-advance notice, out-of-competition and
in-competition testing;
(b) encourage and facilitate the negotiation by sports
organizations and anti-doping organizations of agreements
permitting their members to be tested by duly authorized doping
control teams from other countries;
(c) undertake to assist the sports organizations and
anti-doping organizations within their jurisdiction in gaining
access to an accredited doping control laboratory for the
purposes of doping control analysis.
III. International cooperation
Article 13 - Cooperation between anti-doping organizations and
sports organizations
States Parties shall encourage cooperation between anti-doping
organizations, public authorities and sports organizations
within their jurisdiction and those within the jurisdiction of
other States Parties in order to achieve, at the international
level, the purpose of this Convention.
Article 14 - Supporting the mission of the World Anti-Doping
Agency
States Parties undertake to support the important mission of
the World Anti-Doping Agency in the international fight against
doping.
Article 15 - Equal funding of the World Anti-Doping
Agency
States Parties support the principle of equal funding of the
World Anti-Doping Agency's approved annual core budget by
public authorities and the Olympic Movement.
Article 16 - International cooperation in doping
control
Recognizing that the fight against doping in sport can only be
effective when athletes can be tested with no advance notice
and samples can be transported in a timely manner to
laboratories for analysis, States Parties shall, where
appropriate and in accordance with domestic law and
procedures:
(a) facilitate the task of the World Anti-Doping Agency and
anti-doping organizations operating in compliance with the
Code, subject to relevant host countries' regulations, of
conducting in- or out-of-competition doping controls on their
athletes, whether on their territory or elsewhere;
(b) facilitate the timely movement of duly authorized doping
control teams across borders when conducting doping control
activities;
(c) cooperate to expedite the timely shipping or carrying
across borders of samples in such a way as to maintain their
security and integrity;
(d) assist in the international coordination of doping controls
by various anti-doping organizations, and cooperate to this end
with the World Anti-Doping Agency;
(e) promote cooperation between doping control laboratories
within their jurisdiction and those within the jurisdiction of
other States Parties. In particular, States Parties with
accredited doping control laboratories should encourage
laboratories within their jurisdiction to assist other States
Parties in enabling them to acquire the experience, skills and
techniques necessary to establish their own laboratories should
they wish to do so;
(f) encourage and support reciprocal testing arrangements
between designated anti-doping organizations, in conformity
with the Code; BR />
(g) mutually recognize the doping control procedures and test
results management, including the sport sanctions thereof, of
any anti-doping organization that are consistent with the
Code.
Article 17 - Voluntary Fund
1. A "Fund for the Elimination of Doping in Sport", hereinafter
referred to as "the Voluntary Fund", is hereby established. The
Voluntary Fund shall consist of funds-in-trust established in
accordance with the Financial Regulations of UNESCO. All
contributions by States Parties and other actors shall be
voluntary.
2. The resources of the Voluntary Fund shall consist of:
(a) contributions made by States Parties;
(b) contributions, gifts or bequests which may be made
by:
(i) other States;
(ii) organizations and programmes of the United Nations system,
particularly the United Nations Development Programme, as well
as other international organizations;
(iii) public or private bodies or individuals;
(c) any interest due on the resources of the Voluntary
Fund;
(d) funds raised through collections, and receipts from events
organized for the benefit of the Voluntary Fund;
(e) any other resources authorized by the Voluntary Fund's
regulations, to be drawn up by the Conference of Parties.
3. Contributions into the Voluntary Fund by States Parties
shall not be considered to be a replacement for States
Parties' commitment to pay their share of the World
Anti-Doping Agency's annual budget.
Article 18 - Use and governance of the Voluntary
Fund
Resources in the Voluntary Fund shall be allocated by the
Conference of Parties for the financing of activities approved
by it, notably to assist States Parties in developing and
implementing anti-doping programmes, in accordance with the
provisions of this Convention, taking into consideration the
goals of the World Anti-Doping Agency, and may serve to cover
functioning costs of this Convention. No political, economic or
other conditions may be attached to contributions made to the
Voluntary Fund.
IV. Education and training
Article 19 - General education and training
principles
1. States Parties shall undertake, within their means, to
support, devise or implement education and training programmes
on anti-doping. For the sporting community in general, these
programmes should aim to provide updated and accurate
information on:
(a) the harm of doping to the ethical values of sport;
(b) the health consequences of doping.
2. For athletes and athlete support personnel, in particular in
their initial training, education and training programmes
should, in addition to the above, aim to provide updated and
accurate information on:
(a) doping control procedures;
(b) athletes' rights and responsibilities in regard to
anti-doping, including information about the Code and the
anti-doping policies of the relevant sports and anti-doping
organizations. Such information shall include the consequences
of committing an anti-doping rule violation;
(c) the list of prohibited substances and methods and
therapeutic use exemptions;
(d) nutritional supplements.
Article 20 - Professional codes of conduct
States Parties shall encourage relevant competent professional
associations and institutions to develop and implement
appropriate codes of conduct, good practice and ethics related
to anti-doping in sport that are consistent with the
Code.
Article 21 - Involvement of athletes and athlete support
personnel
States Parties shall promote and, within their means, support
active participation by athletes and athlete support personnel
in all facets of the anti-doping work of sports and other
relevant organizations and encourage sports organizations
within their jurisdiction to do likewise.
Article 22 - Sports organizations and ongoing education and
training on anti-doping
States Parties shall encourage sports organizations and
anti-doping organizations to implement ongoing education and
training programmes for all athletes and athlete support
personnel on the subjects identified in Article 19.
Article 23 - Cooperation in education and training
States Parties shall cooperate mutually and with the relevant
organizations to share, where appropriate, information,
expertise and experience on effective anti-doping
programmes.
V. Research
Article 24 - Promotion of research in anti-doping
States Parties undertake, within their means, to encourage and
promote anti-doping research in cooperation with sports and
other relevant organizations on:
(a) prevention, detection methods, behavioural and social
aspects, and the health consequences of doping;
(b) ways and means of devising scientifically-based
physiological and psychological training programmes respectful
of the integrity of the person;
(c) the use of all emerging substances and methods resulting
from scientific developments.
Article 25 - Nature of anti-doping research
When promoting anti-doping research, as set out in Article 24,
States Parties shall ensure that such research will:
(a) comply with internationally recognized ethical
practices;
(b) avoid the administration to athletes of prohibited
substances and methods;
(c) be undertaken only with adequate precautions in place to
prevent the results of anti-doping research being misused and
applied for doping.
Article 26 - Sharing the results of anti-doping
research
Subject to compliance with applicable national and
international law, States Parties shall, where appropriate,
share the results of available anti-doping research with other
States Parties and the World Anti-Doping Agency.
Article 27 - Sport science research
States Parties shall encourage:
(a) members of the scientific and medical communities to carry
out sport science research in accordance with the principles of
the Code;
(b) sports organizations and athlete support personnel within
their jurisdiction to implement sport science research that is
consistent with the principles of the Code.
VI. Monitoring of the Convention
Article 28 - Conference of Parties
1. A Conference of Parties is hereby established. The
Conference of Parties shall be the sovereign body of this
Convention.
2. The Conference of Parties shall meet in ordinary session in
principle every two years. It may meet in extraordinary session
if it so decides or at the request of at least one third of the
States Parties.
3. Each State Party shall have one vote at the Conference of
Parties.
4. The Conference of Parties shall adopt its own Rules of
Procedure.
Article 29 - Advisory organization and observers to the
Conference of Parties
The World Anti-Doping Agency shall be invited as an advisory
organization to the Conference of Parties. The International
Olympic Committee, the International Paralympic Committee, the
Council of Europe and the Intergovernmental Committee for
Physical Education and Sport (CIGEPS) shall be invited as
observers. The Conference of Parties may decide to invite other
relevant organizations as observers.
Article 30 - Functions of the Conference of
Parties
1. Besides those set forth in other provisions of this
Convention, the functions of the Conference of Parties shall be
to:
(a) promote the purpose of this Convention;
(b) discuss the relationship with the World Anti-Doping Agency
and study the mechanisms of funding of the Agency's annual
core budget. States non-Parties may be invited to the
discussion;
(c) adopt a plan for the use of the resources of the Voluntary
Fund, in accordance with Article 18;
(d) examine the reports submitted by States Parties in
accordance with Article 31;
(e) examine, on an ongoing basis, the monitoring of compliance
with this Convention in response to the development of
anti-doping systems, in accordance with Article 31. Any
monitoring mechanism or measure that goes beyond Article 31
shall be funded through the Voluntary Fund established under
Article 17;
(f) examine draft amendments to this Convention for
adoption;
(g) examine for approval, in accordance with Article 34 of the
Convention, modifications to the Prohibited List and to the
Standards for Granting Therapeutic Use Exemptions adopted by
the World Anti-Doping Agency;
(h) define and implement cooperation between States Parties and
the World Anti-Doping Agency within the framework of this
Convention; BR />
(i) request a report from the World Anti-Doping Agency on the
implementation of the Code to each of its sessions for
examination.
2. The Conference of Parties, in fulfilling its functions, may
cooperate with other intergovernmental bodies.
Article 31 - National reports to the Conference of
Parties
States Parties shall forward every two years to the Conference
of Parties through the Secretariat, in one of the official
languages of UNESCO, all relevant information concerning
measures taken by them for the purpose of complying with the
provisions of this Convention.
Article 32 - Secretariat of the Conference of
Parties
1. The secretariat of the Conference of Parties shall be
provided by the Director-General of UNESCO.
2. At the request of the Conference of Parties, the
Director-General of UNESCO shall use to the fullest extent
possible the services of the World Anti-Doping Agency on terms
agreed upon by the Conference of Parties.
3. Functioning costs related to the Convention will be funded
from the regular budget of UNESCO within existing resources at
an appropriate level, the Voluntary Fund established under
Article 17 or an appropriate combination thereof as determined
every two years. The financing for the secretariat from the
regular budget shall be done on a strictly minimal basis, it
being understood that voluntary funding should also be provided
to support the Convention.
4. The secretariat shall prepare the documentation of the
Conference of Parties, as well as the draft agenda of its
meetings, and shall ensure the implementation of its
decisions.
Article 33 - Amendments
1. Each State Party may, by written communication addressed to
the Director-General of UNESCO, propose amendments to this
Convention. The Director-General shall circulate such
communication to all States Parties. If, within six months from
the date of the circulation of the communication, at least one
half of the States Parties give their consent, the
Director-General shall present such proposals to the following
session of the Conference of Parties.
2. Amendments shall be adopted by the Conference of Parties
with a two-thirds majority of States Parties present and
voting.
3. Once adopted, amendments to this Convention shall be
submitted for ratification, acceptance, approval or accession
to States Parties.
4. With respect to the States Parties that have ratified,
accepted, approved or acceded to them, amendments to this
Convention shall enter into force three months after the
deposit of the instruments referred to in paragraph 3 of this
Article by two thirds of the States Parties. Thereafter, for
each State Party that ratifies, accepts, approves or accedes to
an amendment, the said amendment shall enter into force three
months after the date of deposit by that State Party of its
instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or
accession.
5. A State that becomes a Party to this Convention after the
entry into force of amendments in conformity with paragraph 4
of this Article shall, failing an expression of different
intention, be considered:
(a) a Party to this Convention as so amended;
(b) a Party to the unamended Convention in relation to any
State Party not bound by the amendments.
Article 34 - Specific amendment procedure for the Annexes to
the Convention
1. If the World Anti-Doping Agency modifies the Prohibited List
or the Standards for Granting Therapeutic Use Exemptions, it
may, by written communication addressed to the Director-General
of UNESCO, inform her/him of those changes. The
Director-General shall notify such changes as proposed
amendments to the relevant Annexes to this Convention to all
States Parties expeditiously. Amendments to the Annexes shall
be approved by the Conference of Parties either at one of its
sessions or through a written consultation.
2. States Parties have 45 days from the Director-General's
notification within which to express their objection to the
proposed amendment either in writing, in case of written
consultation, to the Director-General or at a session of the
Conference of Parties. Unless two thirds of the States Parties
express their objection, the proposed amendment shall be deemed
to be approved by the Conference of Parties. BR />
3. Amendments approved by the Conference of Parties shall be
notified to States Parties by the Director-General. They shall
enter into force 45 days after that notification, except for
any State Party that has previously notified the
Director-General that it does not accept these
amendments.
4. A State Party having notified the Director-General that it
does not accept an amendment approved according to the
preceding paragraphs remains bound by the Annexes as not
amended.
VII. Final clauses
Article 35 - Federal or non-unitary constitutional
systems
The following provisions shall apply to States Parties that
have a federal or non-unitary constitutional system:
(a) with regard to the provisions of this Convention, the
implementation of which comes under the legal jurisdiction of
the federal or central legislative power, the obligations of
the federal or central government shall be the same as for
those States Parties which are not federal States;
(b) with regard to the provisions of this Convention, the
implementation of which comes under the jurisdiction of
individual constituent States, counties, provinces or cantons
which are not obliged by the constitutional system of the
federation to take legislative measures, the federal government
shall inform the competent authorities of such States,
counties, provinces or cantons of the said provisions, with its
recommendation for their adoption.
Article 36 - Ratification, acceptance, approval or
accession
This Convention shall be subject to ratification, acceptance,
approval or accession by Members States of UNESCO in accordance
with their respective constitutional procedures. The
instruments of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession
shall be deposited with the Director-General of UNESCO.
Article 37 - Entry into force
1. This Convention shall enter into force on the first day of
the month following the expiration of a period of one month
after the date of deposit of the thirtieth instrument of
ratification, acceptance, approval or accession.
2. For any State that subsequently expresses its consent to be
bound by it, the Convention shall enter into force on the first
day of the month following the expiration of a period of one
month after the date of deposit of its instrument of
ratification, acceptance, approval or accession.
Article 38 - Territorial extension of the
Convention
1. Any State may, when depositing its instrument of
ratification, acceptance, approval or accession, specify the
territory or territories for whose international relations it
is responsible and to which this Convention shall apply.
2. Any State Party may, at any later date, by a declaration
addressed to UNESCO, extend the application of this Convention
to any other territory specified in the declaration. In respect
of such territory the Convention shall enter into force on the
first day of the month following the expiration of a period of
one month after the date of receipt of such declaration by the
depositary.
3. Any declaration made under the two preceding paragraphs may,
in respect of any territory specified in such declaration, be
withdrawn by a notification addressed to UNESCO. Such
withdrawal shall become effective on the first day of the month
following the expiration of a period of one month after the
date of receipt of such a notification by the depositary.
Article 39 - Denunciation
Any State Party may denounce this Convention. The denunciation
shall be notified by an instrument in writing, deposited with
the Director-General of UNESCO. The denunciation shall take
effect on the first day of the month following the expiration
of a period of six months after the receipt of the instrument
of denunciation. It shall in no way affect the financial
obligations of the State Party concerned until the date on
which the withdrawal takes effect.
Article 40 - Depositary
The Director-General of UNESCO shall be the Depositary of this
Convention and amendments thereto. As the Depositary, the
Director-General of UNESCO shall inform the States Parties to
this Convention, as well as the other States Members of the
Organization of:
(a) the deposit of any instrument of ratification, acceptance,
approval or accession;
(b) the date of entry into force of this Convention in
accordance with Article 37;
(c) any report prepared in pursuance of the provisions of
Article 31;
(d) any amendment to the Convention or to the Annexes adopted
in accordance with Articles 33 and 34 and the date on which the
amendment comes into force;
(e) any declaration or notification made under the provisions
of Article 38;
(f) any notification made under the provisions of Article 39
and the date on which the denunciation takes effect;
(g) any other act, notification or communication relating to
this Convention.
Article 41 - Registration
In conformity with Article 102 of the Charter of the United
Nations, this Convention shall be registered with the
Secretariat of the United Nations at the request of the
Director-General of UNESCO.
Article 42 - Authoritative texts
1. This Convention, including its Annexes, has been drawn up in
Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish, the six
texts being equally authoritative.
2. The Appendices to this Convention are provided in Arabic,
Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish.
Article 43 - Reservations
No reservations that are incompatible with the object and
purpose of the present Convention shall be permitted.
1. pielikums - Aizliegtais saraksts - Starptautiskais
standarts. 2018. gada janvāris angļu valodā
2. pielikums - Terapeitiskās lietošanas izņēmumu noteikšanas
standarts. 2016. gada janvāris - angļu valodā
1. papildinājums - Pasaules Antidopinga kodekss. 2015 - angļu
valodā
2. papildinājums - Starptautiskais laboratoriju
standarts. 2016. gada jūnijs - angļu valodā
Konvencijas 3. papildinājums - Starptautiskais pārbaužu
standarts. 2017. gada janvāris - angļu valodā