UNIDROIT CONVENTION ON STOLEN OR
ILLEGALLY EXPORTED CULTURAL OBJECTS
(Rome, 24 June 1995)
THE STATES PARTIES TO THIS CONVENTION,
ASSEMBLED in Rome at the invitation of the Government of the
Italian Republic from 7 to 24 June 1995 for a Diplomatic
Conference for the adoption of the draft UNIDROIT Convention on
the International Return of Stolen or Illegally Exported Cultural
Objects,
CONVINCED of the fundamental importance of the protection of
cultural heritage and of cultural exchanges for promoting
understanding between peoples, and the dissemination of culture
for the well-being of humanity and the progress of
civilisation,
DEEPLY CONCERNED by the illicit trade in cultural objects and
the irreparable damage frequently caused by it, both to these
objects themselves and to the cultural heritage of national,
tribal, indigenous or other communities, and also to the heritage
of all peoples, and in particular by the pillage of
archaeological sites and the resulting loss of irreplaceable
archaeological, historical and scientific information,
DETERMINED to contribute effectively to the fight against
illicit trade in cultural objects by taking the important step of
establishing common, minimal legal rules for the restitution and
return of cultural objects between Contracting States, with the
objective of improving the preservation and protection of the
cultural heritage in the interest of all,
EMPHASISING that this Convention is intended to facilitate the
restitution and return of cultural objects, and that the
provision of any remedies, such as compensation, needed to effect
restitution and return in some States, does not imply that such
remedies should be adopted in other States,
AFFIRMING that the adoption of the provisions of this
Convention for the future in no way confers any approval or
legitimacy upon illegal transactions of whatever kind which may
have taken place before the entry into force of the
Convention,
CONSCIOUS that this Convention will not by itself provide a
solution to the problems raised by illicit trade, but that it
initiates a process that will enhance international cultural
co-operation and maintain a proper role for legal trading and
inter-State agreements for cultural exchanges,
ACKNOWLEDGING that implementation of this Convention should be
accompanied by other effective measures for protecting cultural
objects, such as the development and use of registers, the
physical protection of archaeological sites and technical
co-operation,
RECOGNISING the work of various bodies to protect cultural
property, particularly the 1970 UNESCO Convention on illicit
traffic and the development of codes of conduct in the private
sector,
HAVE AGREED as follows:
CHAPTER I -
SCOPE OF APPLICATION AND DEFINITION
Article 1
This Convention applies to claims of an international
character for:
(a) the restitution of stolen cultural objects;
(b) the return of cultural objects removed from the territory
of a Contracting State contrary to its law regulating the export
of cultural objects for the purpose of protecting its cultural
heritage (hereinafter "illegally exported cultural
objects").
Article 2
For the purposes of this Convention, cultural objects are
those which, on religious or secular grounds, are of importance
for archaeology, prehistory, history, literature, art or science
and belong to one of the categories listed in the Annex to this
Convention.
CHAPTER II -
RESTITUTION OF STOLEN CULTURAL OBJECTS
Article 3
(1) The possessor of a cultural object which has been stolen
shall return it.
(2) For the purposes of this Convention, a cultural object
which has been unlawfully excavated or lawfully excavated but
unlawfully retained shall be considered stolen, when consistent
with the law of the State where the excavation took place.
(3) Any claim for restitution shall be brought within a period
of three years from the time when the claimant knew the location
of the cultural object and the identity of its possessor, and in
any case within a period of fifty years from the time of the
theft.
(4) However, a claim for restitution of a cultural object
forming an integral part of an identified monument or
archaeological site, or belonging to a public collection, shall
not be subject to time limitations other than a period of three
years from the time when the claimant knew the location of the
cultural object and the identity of its possessor.
(5) Notwithstanding the provisions of the preceding paragraph,
any Contracting State may declare that a claim is subject to a
time limitation of 75 years or such longer period as is provided
in its law. A claim made in another Contracting State for
restitution of a cultural object displaced from a monument,
archaeological site or public collection in a Contracting State
making such a declaration shall also be subject to that time
limitation.
(6) A declaration referred to in the preceding paragraph shall
be made at the time of signature, ratification, acceptance,
approval or accession.
(7) For the purposes of this Convention, a "public
collection" consists of a group of inventoried or otherwise
identified cultural objects owned by:
(a) a Contracting State
(b) a regional or local authority of a Contracting State;
(c) a religious institution in a Contracting State; or
(d) an institution that is established for an essentially
cultural, educational or scientific purpose in a Contracting
State and is recognised in that State as serving the public
interest.
(8) In addition, a claim for restitution of a sacred or
communally important cultural object belonging to and used by a
tribal or indigenous community in a Contracting State as part of
that community's traditional or ritual use, shall be subject
to the time limitation applicable to public collections.
Article 4
(1) The possessor of a stolen cultural object required to
return it shall be entitled, at the time of its restitution, to
payment of fair and reasonable compensation provided that the
possessor neither knew nor ought reasonably to have known that
the object was stolen and can prove that it exercised due
diligence when acquiring the object.
(2) Without prejudice to the right of the possessor to
compensation referred to in the preceding paragraph, reasonable
efforts shall be made to have the person who transferred the
cultural object to the possessor, or any prior transferor, pay
the compensation where to do so would be consistent with the law
of the State in which the claim is brought.
(3) Payment of compensation to the possessor by the claimant,
when this is required, shall be without prejudice to the right of
the claimant to recover it from any other person.
(4) In determining whether the possessor exercised due
diligence, regard shall be had to all the circumstances of the
acquisition, including the character of the parties, the price
paid, whether the possessor consulted any reasonably accessible
register of stolen cultural objects, and any other relevant
information and documentation which it could reasonably have
obtained, and whether the possessor consulted accessible agencies
or took any other step that a reasonable person would have taken
in the circumstances.
(5) The possessor shall not be in a more favourable position
than the person from whom it acquired the cultural object by
inheritance or otherwise gratuitously.
CHAPTER III -
RETURN OF ILLEGALLY EXPORTED CULTURAL OBJECTS
Article 5
(1) A Contracting State may request the court or other
competent authority of another Contracting State to order the
return of a cultural object illegally exported from the territory
of the requesting State.
(2) A cultural object which has been temporarily exported from
the territory of the requesting State, for purposes such as
exhibition, research or restoration, under a permit issued
according to its law regulating its export for the purpose of
protecting its cultural heritage and not returned in accordance
with the terms of that permit shall be deemed to have been
illegally exported.
(3) The court or other competent authority of the State
addressed shall order the return of an illegally exported
cultural object if the requesting State establishes that the
removal of the object from its territory significantly impairs
one or more of the following interests:
(a) the physical preservation of the object or of its
context;
(b) the integrity of a complex object;
(c) the preservation of information of, for example, a
scientific or historical character;
(d) the traditional or ritual use of the object by a tribal or
indigenous community, or establishes that the object is of
significant cultural importance for the requesting State.
(4) Any request made under paragraph 1 of this article shall
contain or be accompanied by such information of a factual or
legal nature as may assist the court or other competent authority
of the State addressed in determining whether the requirements of
paragraphs 1 to 3 have been met.
(5) Any request for return shall be brought within a period of
three years from the time when the requesting State knew the
location of the cultural object and the identity of its
possessor, and in any case within a period of fifty years from
the date of the export or from the date on which the object
should have been returned under a permit referred to in paragraph
2 of this article.
Article 6
(1) The possessor of a cultural object who acquired the object
after it was illegally exported shall be entitled, at the time of
its return, to payment by the requesting State of fair and
reasonable compensation, provided that the possessor neither knew
nor ought reasonably to have known at the time of acquisition
that the object had been illegally exported.
(2) In determining whether the possessor knew or ought
reasonably to have known that the cultural object had been
illegally exported, regard shall be had to the circumstances of
the acquisition, including the absence of an export certificate
required under the law of the requesting State.
(3) Instead of compensation, and in agreement with the
requesting State, the possessor required to return the cultural
object to that State, may decide:
(a) to retain ownership of the object; or
(b) to transfer ownership against payment or gratuitously to a
person of its choice residing in the requesting State who
provides the necessary guarantees.
(4) The cost of returning the cultural object in accordance
with this article shall be borne by the requesting State, without
prejudice to the right of that State to recover costs from any
other person.
(5) The possessor shall not be in a more favourable position
than the person from whom it acquired the cultural object by
inheritance or otherwise gratuitously.
Article 7
(1) The provisions of this Chapter shall not apply where:
(a) the export of a cultural object is no longer illegal at
the time at which the return is requested; or
(b) the object was exported during the lifetime of the person
who created it or within a period of fifty years following the
death of that person.
(2) Notwithstanding the provisions of sub-paragraph (b) of the
preceding paragraph, the provisions of this Chapter shall apply
where a cultural object was made by a member or members of a
tribal or indigenous community for traditional or ritual use by
that community and the object will be returned to that
community.
CHAPTER IV -
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Article 8
(1) A claim under Chapter II and a request under Chapter III
may be brought before the courts or other competent authorities
of the Contracting State where the cultural object is located, in
addition to the courts or other competent authorities otherwise
having jurisdiction under the rules in force in Contracting
States.
(2) The parties may agree to submit the dispute to any court
or other competent authority or to arbitration.
(3) Resort may be had to the provisional, including
protective, measures available under the law of the Contracting
State where the object is located even when the claim for
restitution or request for return of the object is brought before
the courts or other competent authorities of another Contracting
State.
Article 9
(1) Nothing in this Convention shall prevent a Contracting
State from applying any rules more favourable to the restitution
or the return of stolen or illegally exported cultural objects
than provided for by this Convention.
(2) This article shall not be interpreted as creating an
obligation to recognise or enforce a decision of a court or other
competent authority of another Contracting State that departs
from the provisions of this Convention.
Article 10
(1) The provisions of Chapter II shall apply only in respect
of a cultural object that is stolen after this Convention enters
into force in respect of the State where the claim is brought,
provided that:
(a) the object was stolen from the territory of a Contracting
State after the entry into force of this Convention for that
State; or
(b) the object is located in a Contracting State after the
entry into force of the Convention for that State.
(2) The provisions of Chapter III shall apply only in respect
of a cultural object that is illegally exported after this
Convention enters into force for the requesting State as well as
the State where the request is brought.
(3) This Convention does not in any way legitimise any illegal
transaction of whatever nature which has taken place before the
entry into force of this Convention or which is excluded under
paragraphs (1) or (2) of this article, nor limit any right of a
State or other person to make a claim under remedies available
outside the framework of this Convention for the restitution or
return of a cultural object stolen or illegally exported before
the entry into force of this Convention.
CHAPTER V -
FINAL PROVISIONS
Article 11
(1) This Convention is open for signature at the concluding
meeting of the Diplomatic Conference for the adoption of the
draft UNIDROIT Convention on the International Return of Stolen
or Illegally Exported Cultural Objects and will remain open for
signature by all States at Rome until 30 June 1996.
(2) This Convention is subject to ratification, acceptance or
approval by States which have signed it.
(3) This Convention is open for accession by all States which
are not signatory States as from the date it is open for
signature.
(4) Ratification, acceptance, approval or accession is subject
to the deposit of a formal instrument to that effect with the
depositary.
Article 12
(1) This Convention shall enter into force on the first day of
the sixth month following the date of deposit of the fifth
instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or
accession.
(2) For each State that ratifies, accepts, approves or accedes
to this Convention after the deposit of the fifth instrument of
ratification, acceptance, approval or accession, this Convention
shall enter into force in respect of that State on the first day
of the sixth month following the date of deposit of its
instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or
accession.
Article 13
(1) This Convention does not affect any international
instrument by which any Contracting State is legally bound and
which contains provisions on matters governed by this Convention,
unless a contrary declaration is made by the States bound by such
instrument.
(2) Any Contracting State may enter into agreements with one
or more Contracting States, with a view to improving the
application of this Convention in their mutual relations. The
States which have concluded such an agreement shall transmit a
copy to the depositary.
(3) In their relations with each other, Contracting States
which are Members of organisations of economic integration or
regional bodies may declare that they will apply the internal
rules of these organisations or bodies and will not therefore
apply as between these States the provisions of this Convention
the scope of application of which coincides with that of those
rules.
Article 14
(1) If a Contracting State has two or more territorial units,
whether or not possessing different systems of law applicable in
relation to the matters dealt with in this Convention, it may, at
the time of signature or of the deposit of its instrument of
ratification, acceptance, approval or accession, declare that
this Convention is to extend to all its territorial units or only
to one or more of them, and may substitute for its declaration
another declaration at any time.
(2) These declarations are to be notified to the depositary
and are to state expressly the territorial units to which
the Convention extends.
(3) If, by virtue of a declaration under this article, this
Convention extends to one or more but not all of the territorial
units of a Contracting State, the reference to:
(a) the territory of a Contracting State in Article 1 shall be
construed as referring to the territory of a territorial unit of
that State;
(b) a court or other competent authority of the Contracting
State or of the State addressed shall be construed as referring
to the court or other competent authority of a territorial unit
of that State;
(c) the Contracting State where the cultural object is located
in Article 8 (1) shall be construed as referring to the
territorial unit of that State where the object is located;
(d) the law of the Contracting State where the object is
located in Article 8 (3) shall be construed as referring to the
law of the territorial unit of that State where the object is
located; and
(e) a Contracting State in Article 9 shall be construed as
referring to a territorial unit of that State.
(4) If a Contracting State makes no declaration under
paragraph 1 of this article, this Convention is to extend to all
territorial units of that State.
Article 15
(1) Declarations made under this Convention at the time of
signature are subject to confirmation upon ratification,
acceptance or approval.
(2) Declarations and confirmations of declarations are to be
in writing and to be formally notified to the depositary.
(3) A declaration shall take effect simultaneously with the
entry into force of this Convention in respect of the State
concerned. However, a declaration of which the depositary
receives formal notification after such entry into force shall
take effect on the first day of the sixth month following the
date of its deposit with the depositary.
(4) Any State which makes a declaration under this Convention
may withdraw it at any time by a formal notification in writing
addressed to the depositary. Such withdrawal shall take effect on
the first day of the sixth month following the date of the
deposit of the notification.
Article 16
(1) Each Contracting State shall at the time of signature,
ratification, acceptance, approval or accession, declare that
claims for the restitution, or requests for the return, of
cultural objects brought by a State under Article 8 may be
submitted to it under one or more of the following
procedures:
(a) directly to the courts or other competent authorities of
the declaring State;
(b) through an authority or authorities designated by that
State to receive such claims or requests and to forward them to
the courts or other competent authorities of that State;
(c) through diplomatic or consular channels.
(2) Each Contracting State may also designate the courts or
other authorities competent to order the restitution or return of
cultural objects under the provisions of Chapters II and III.
(3) Declarations made under paragraphs 1 and 2 of this article
may be modified at any time by a new declaration.
(4) The provisions of paragraphs 1 to 3 of this article do not
affect bilateral or multilateral agreements on judicial
assistance in respect of civil and commercial matters that may
exist between Contracting States.
Article 17
Each Contracting State shall, no later than six months
following the date of deposit of its instrument of ratification,
acceptance, approval or accession, provide the depositary with
written information in one of the official languages of the
Convention concerning the legislation regulating the export of
its cultural objects. This information shall be updated from time
to time as appropriate.
Article 18
No reservations are permitted except those expressly
authorised in this Convention.
Article 19
(1) This Convention may be denounced by any State Party, at
any time after the date on which it enters into force for that
State, by the deposit of an instrument to that effect with the
depositary.
(2) A denunciation shall take effect on the first day of the
sixth month following the deposit of the instrument of
denunciation with the depositary. Where a longer period for the
denunciation to take effect is specified in the instrument of
denunciation it shall take effect upon the expiration of such
longer period after its deposit with the depositary.
(3) Notwithstanding such a denunciation, this Convention shall
nevertheless apply to a claim for restitution or a request for
return of a cultural object submitted prior to the date on which
the denunciation takes effect.
Article 20
The President of the International Institute for the
Unification of Private Law (UNIDROIT) may at regular intervals,
or at any time at the request of five Contracting States, convene
a special committee in order to review the practical operation of
this Convention.
Article 21
(1) This Convention shall be deposited with the Government of
the Italian Republic.
(2) The Government of the Italian Republic shall:
(a) inform all States which have signed or acceded to this
Convention and the President of the International Institute for
the Unification of Private Law (UNIDROIT) of:
(i) each new signature or deposit of an instrument of
ratification, acceptance, approval or accession, together with
the date thereof;
(ii) each declaration made in accordance with this
Convention;
(iii) the withdrawal of any declaration;
(iv) the date of entry into force of this Convention;
(v) the agreements referred to in Article 13;
(vi) the deposit of an instrument of denunciation of this
Convention together with the date of its deposit and the date on
which it takes effect;
(b) transmit certified true copies of this Convention to all
signatory States, to all States acceding to the Convention and to
the President of the International Institute for the Unification
of Private Law (UNIDROIT);
(c) perform such other functions customary for
depositaries.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF the undersigned plenipotentiaries, being
duly authorised, have signed this Convention.
DONE at Rome, this twenty-fourth day of June, one thousand
nine hundred and ninety-five, in a single original, in the
English and French languages, both texts being equally
authentic.
Annex
(a) Rare collections and specimens of fauna, flora, minerals
and anatomy, and objects of palaeontological interest;
(b) property relating to history, including the history of
science and technology and military and social history, to the
life of national leaders, thinkers, scientists and artists and to
events of national importance;
(c) products of archaeological excavations (including regular
and clandestine) or of archaeological discoveries;
(d) elements of artistic or historical monuments or
archaeological sites which have been dismembered;
(e) antiquities more than one hundred years old, such as
inscriptions, coins and engraved seals;
(f) objects of ethnological interest;
(g) property of artistic interest, such as:
(i) pictures, paintings and drawings produced entirely by hand
on any support and in any material (excluding industrial designs
and manufactured articles decorated by hand);
(ii) original works of statuary art and sculpture in any
material;
(iii) original engravings, prints and lithographs;
(iv) original artistic assemblages and montages in any
material;
(h) rare manuscripts and incunabula, old books, documents and
publications of special interest
(historical, artistic, scientific, literary, etc.) singly or
in collections;
(i) postage, revenue and similar stamps, singly or in
collections;
(j) archives, including sound, photographic and
cinematographic archives;
(k) articles of furniture more than one hundred years old and
old musical instruments.