1978
United Nations
Geneva Protocol I
PROTOCOL ADDITIONAL TO THE GENEVA CONVENTIONS OF 12
AUGUST 1949, AND RELATING TO THE PROTECTION OF VICTIMS
OF INTERNATIONAL ARMED CONFLICTS
(PROTOCOL I)
CONTENTS
PREAMBLE
PART I: GENERAL PROVISIONS
Article 1 - General principles and scope of application
Article 2 - Definitions
Article 3 - Beginning and end of application
Article 4 - Legal status of the Parties to the conflict
Article 5 - Appointment of Protecting Powers and of
their substitute
Article 6 - Qualified persons
Article 7 - Meetings
PART II: WOUNDED, SICK AND SHIPWRECKED
SECTION I: GENERAL PROTECTION
Article 8 - Terminology
Article 9 - Field of application
Article 10 - Protection and care
Article 11 - Protection of persons
Article 12 - Protection of medical units
Article 13 - Discontinuance of protection of civilian
medical units
Article 14 - Limitations on requisition of civilian
medical units
Article 15 - Protection of civilian medical and
religious personnel
Article 16 - General protection of medical duties
Article 17 - Role of the civilian population and of aid
societies
Article 18 - Identification
Article 19 - Neutral and other States not Parties to the
Conflict
Article 20 - Prohibition of reprisals
SECTION II: MEDICAL TRANSPORTATION
Article 21 - Medical vehicles
Article 22 - Hospital ships and coastal rescue craft
Article 23 - Other medical ships and craft
Article 24 - Protection of medical aircraft
Article 25 - Medical aircraft in areas not controlled by
an adverse Party
Article 26 - Medical aircraft in contact or similat
zones
Article 27 - Medical aircraft in areas controlled by an
adverse Party
Article 28 - Restrictions on operations of medical
aircraft
Article 29 - Notifications and agreements concerning
medical aircraft
Article 30 - Landing and inspection of medical aircraft
Article 31 - Neutral or other States not Parties to the
conflict
SECTION III: MISSING AND DEAD PERSONS
Article 32 - General principle
Article 33 - Missing persons
Article 34 - Remains of deceased
PART III: METHODS AND MEANS OF WARFARE
COMBATANT AND PRISONER-OF-WAR STATUS
SECTION I: METHODS AND MEANS OF WARFARE
Article 35 - Basic rules
Article 36 - New weapons
Article 37 - Prohibition of perfidy
Article 38 - Recognized emblems
Article 39 - Emblems of nationality
Article 40 - Quarter
Article 41 - Safeguard of an enemy hors de combat
Article 42 - Occupants of aircraft
SECTION II: COMBATENT AND PRISONER-OF-WAR STATUS
Article 43 - Armed forces
Article 44 - Combatents and prisoners of war
Article 45 - Protection of persons who have taken part
in hostilities
Article 46 - Spies
Article 47 - Mercenaries
PART IV: CIVILIAN POPULATION
SECTION I: GENERAL PROTECTION AGAINST EFFECTS OF
HOSTILITIES Basic rule and field of application
Article 48 - Basic rule
Article 49 - Definition of attacks and scope of
application
Civilians and civilian population
Article 50 - Definition of civilians and civilian
population
Article 51 - Protection of the civilian population
Civilian objects
Article 52 - General protection of civilian objects
Article 53 - Protection of cultural objects and places
of worship
Article 54 - Protection of objects indispensible to the
survivial of the civilian population
Article 55 - Protection of the natural environment
Article 56 - Protection of works and installations
containing dangerous forces
Precautionary measures
Article 57 - Precautions in attack
Article 58 - Precautions against the effects of attacks
Localities and zones under special protection
Article 59 - Non-defined localities
Article 60 - Demilitarized zones
Civil defence
Article 61 - Definitions and scope
Article 62 - General protection
Article 63 - Civil defence in occupied territories
Article 64 - Civilian civil defence organizations of
neutral or other States not Parties to the conflict and
international co-ordinating organizations
Article 65 - Cessation of protection
Article 66 - Identification
Article 67 - Members of the armed forces and military
units assigned to civil defence organizations
SECTION II: RELIEF IN FAVOR OF THE CIVILIAN
POPULATION
Article 68 - Field of application
Article 69 - Basic needs in occupied territories
Article 70 - Relief actions
Article 71 - Personnel participating in relief actions
SECTION III: TREATMENT OF PERSONS IN THE POWER OF A
PARTY TO THE CONFLICT
Field of application and protection of persons and
objects
Article 72 - Field of application
Article 73 - Refugees and stateless persons
Article 74 - Reunion of dispersed families
Article 75 - Fundamental guarantees
Measures in favour of women and children
Article 76 - Protection of women
Article 77 - Protection of children
Article 78 - Evacuation of children
Journalists
Article 79 - Measures of protection for journalists
PART V: EXECUTION OF THE CONVENTIONS AND OF THIS
PROTOCOL
SECTION I: GENERAL PROVISIONS
Article 80 - Measures for execution
Article 81 - Activities of the Red Cross and other
humanitarian organizations
Article 82 - Legal advisers in armed forces
Article 83 - Dissemination
Article 84 - Rules of application
SECTION II: REPRESSION OF BREACHES OF THE CONVENTION
AND OF THIS PROTOCOL
Article 85 - Repression of breaches of this Protocol
Article 86 - Failure to act
Article 87 - Duty of commanders
Article 88 - Mutual assistance in criminal matters
Article 89 - Co-operation
Article 90 - International Fact-Finding Commission
Article 91 - Responsibility
PART VI: FINAL PROVISIONS
Article 92 - Signature
Article 93 - Ratification
Article 94 - Accession
Article 95 - Entry into force
Article 96 - Treaty relations upon entry into force of
this Protocol
Article 97 - Amendment
Article 98 - Revision of Annex I
Article 99 - Denunciation
Article 100 - Notification
Article 101 - Registration
Article 102 - Authentic texts
ANNEX I TO PROTOCOL I
REGULATIONS CONCERNING IDENTIFICATION
Identity Cards
Article 1 - Identity card for permanent civilian medical
and religious personnel
Article 2 - Identity card for temporary civilian medical
and religious personnel
The distinctive emblem
Article 3 - Shape and nature
Article 4 - Use
Distinctive signals
Article 5 - Optional use
Article 6 - Light signal
Article 7 - Radio signal
Article 8 - Electronic signal
Communications
Article 9 - Radiocommunication
Article 10 - Use of international codes
Article 11 - Other means of communication
Article 12 - Flight plans
Article 13 - Signals and procedures for the interception
of medical aircraft
Civil defence
Article 14 - Identity card
Article 15 - International distinctive sign
Works and installations containing dangerous forces
Article 16 - International special sign
ANNEX II TO PROTOCOL I
IDENTITY CARD FOR JOURNALISTS ON DANGEROUS PROFESSIONAL
MISSIONS
PREAMBLE
The High Contracting Parties, Proclaiming their
earnest wish to see peace prevail among peoples,
Recalling that every State has the duty, in conformity
with the Charter of the United Nations, to refrain in
its internationaL relations from the threat or use of
force against the sovereignty, territorial integrity or
political independence of any State, or in any other
manner incongistent with the purposes of the United
Nations, Believing it necessary nevertheless to reaffirm
and develop the provisions protecting the victims of
armed conflicts and to supplement measures intended to
reinforce their application, Expressing their conviction
that nothing in this Protocol or in the Geneva
Conventions of 12 August 1949 can be construed as
legitimizing or authorizing any act of aggression or any
other use of force inconsistent with the Charter of the
United Nations, Reaffirming further that the provisions
of the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949 and of this
Protocol must be fully applied in all circumstances to
all persons who are protected by those instruments,
without any adverse distinction based on the nature or
origin of the armed conrlict or on the causes espoused
by or attributed to the Parties to the conflict, Have
agreed on the following:
PART I
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Article 1 - General principles and scope of
application
1. The High Contracting Parties undertake to respect
and to ensure respect for this Protocol in all
circumstances.
2. In cases not covered by this Protocol or by other
international agreements, civilians and combatants
remain under the protection and authority of the
principles of international law derived from established
custom, from the principles of humanity and from
dictates of public conscience.
3. This Protocol, which supplements the Geneva
Conventions of 12 August 1949 for the protection of war
victims, shall apply in the situations referred to in
Article 2 common to those Conventions.
4. The situations referred to in the preceding
paragraph include armed conflicts which peoples are
fighting against colonial domination and alien
occupation and against racist regimes in the exercise of
their right of self-determination, as enshrined in the
Charter of the United Nations and the Declaration on
Principles of International Law concerning Friendly
Relations and Co-operation among States in accordance
with the Charter of the United Nations.
Article 2 - Definitions For the purposes of this
Protocol:
(a) "First Convention", "Second Conventionn", "Third
Convention" and "Fourth Convention" mean, respectively,
the Geneva Convention for the Amelioration of the
Condition of the Wounded and Sick in Armed Forces in the
Field of 12 August 1949; the Geneva Convention for the
Amelioration of the Condition of Wounded, Sick and
Ship-wrecked Members of Armed Forces at Sea of 12 August
1949; the Geneva Convention relative to the Treatment of
Prisoners of War of 12 August 1949; the Geneva
Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian
Persons in Time of War of 12 August 1949; "the
Conventions" means the four Geneva Conventions of 12
August 1949 for the protection of war victims;
(b) "Rules of international law applicable in armed
conflict" means the rules applicable in armed conflict
set forth in international agreements to which the
Parties to the conflict are Parties and the generally
recognized principles and rules of international law
which are applicable to armed conflict;
(c) "Protecting Power" means a neutral or other State
not a Party to the conflict which has been designated by
a Party to the conflict and accepted by the adverse
Party and has agreed to carry out the functions assigned
to a Protecting Power under the Conventions and this
Protocol;
(d) "Substitute" means an organization acting in
place of a Protecting Power in accordance with Article
5.
Article 3 - Beginning and end of application Without
prejudice to the provisions which are applicable at all
times:
(a) the Conventions and this Protocol shall apply
from the beginning of any situation referred to in
Article 1 of this Protocol.
(b) the application of the Conventions and of this
Protocol shall cease, in the territory of Parties to the
conflict, on the general close of military operations
and, in the case of occupied territories, on the
termination of the occupation, except, in either
circumstance, for those persons whose final release,
repatriation or re-establishment takes place thereafter.
These persons shall continue to benefit from the
relevant provisions of the Conventions and of this
Protocol until their final release repatriation or
re-establishment.
ArticIe 4 - Legal status of the Parties to the
conflict The application of the Conventions and of this
Protocol, as well as the conclusion of the agreements
provided for therein, shall not affect the legal status
of the Parties to the conflict. Neither the occupation
of a territory nor the application of the Conventions
and this Protocol shall affect the legal status of the
territory in question.
Article 5 - Appointment of Protecting Powers and of
their substitute
1. It is the duty of the Parties to a conflict from
the beginning of that conflict to secure the supervision
and implementation of the Conventions and of this
Protocol by the application of the system of Protecting
Powers, including inter alia the designation and
acceptance of those Powers, in accordance with the
following paragraphs. Protecting Powers shall have the
duty of safeguarding the interests of the Parties to the
conflict.
2. From the beginning of a situation referred to in
Article 1, each Party to the conflict shall without
delay designate a Protecting Power for the purpose of
applying the Conventions and this Protocol and shall,
likewise without delay and for the same purpose, permit
the activities or a Protecting Power which has been
accepted by it as such after designation by the adverse
Party.
3. If a Protecting Power has not been designated or
accepted from the beginning of a situation referred to
in Article 1, the International Committee of the Red
Cross, without prejudice to the right of any other
impartial humanitarian organization to do likewise,
shall offer its good offices to the Parties to the
conflict with a view to the designation without delay of
a Protecting Power to which the Parties to the conflict
consent. For that purpose it may inter alia ask each
Party to provide it with a list of at least five States
which that Party considers acceptable to act as
Protecting Power on its behalf in relation to an adverse
Party and ask each adverse Party to provide a list or at
least five States which it would accept as the
Protecting Power of the first Party; these lists shall
be communicated to the Committee within two weeks after
the receipt or the request; it shall compare them and
seek the agreement of any proposed State named on both
lists.
4. If, despite the foregoing, there is no Protecting
Power, the Parties to the conflict shall accept without
delay an offer which may be made by the International
Committee of the Red Cross or by any other organization
which offers all guarantees of impartiality and
efficacy, after due consultations with the said Parties
and taking into account the result of these
consultations, to act as a substitute. The functioning
of such a substitute is subject to the consent of the
Parties to the conflict; every effort shall be made by
the Parties to the conflict to facilitate the operations
of the substitute in the performance of its tasks under
the Conventions and this Protocol.
5. In accordance with Article 4, the designation and
acceptance of Protecting Powers for the purpose of
applying the Conventions and this Protocol shall not
affect the legal status of the Parties to the conflict
or of any territory, including occupied territory.
6. The maintenance of diplomatic relations between
Parties to the conflict or the entrusting of the
protection of a Party's interests and those of its
nationals to a third State in accordance with the rules
of international law relating to diplomatic relations is
no obstacle to the designation of Protecting Powers for
the purpose of applying the Conventions and this
Protocol.
7. Any subsequent mention in this Protocol of a
Protecting Power includes also a substitute.
Article 6 - Qualified persons
1. The High Contracting Parties shall, also in
peacetime, endeavour, with the assistance of the
national Red Cross (Red Crescent, Red Lion and Sun)
Societies, to train qualified personnel to facilitate
the application of the Conventions and of this Protocol,
and in particular the activities of the Protecting
Powers.
2. The recruitment and training of such personnel are
within domestic jurisdiction.
3. The International Committee of the Red Cross shall
hold at the disposal of the High Contracting Parties the
lists of persons so trained which the High Contracting
Parties may have established and may have transmitted to
it for that purpose.
4. The conditions governing the employment of such
personnel outside the national territory shall, in each
case, be the subject of special agreements between the
Parties concerned.
Article 7 - Meetings
The depositary of this Protocol shall convene a
meeting of the High Contracting Parties, at the request
of one or more of the said Parties and upon, the
approval of the majority of the said Parties, to
consider general problems concerning the application of
the Conventions and of the Protocol.
PART II
WOUNDED, SICK AND SHIPWRECKED
SECTION I : GENERAL PROTECTION
Article 8 - Terminology
For the purposes of this Protocol:
(1) "Wounded" and "sick" mean persons, whether
military or civilian, who, because of trauma, disease or
other physical or mental disorder or disability, are in
need of medical assistance or care and who refrain from
any act of hostility. These terms also cover maternity
cases, new-born babies and other persons who may be in
need of immediate medical assistance or care, such as
the infirm or expectant mothers, and who refrain from
any act of hostility;
(2) "Shipwrecked" means persons, whether military or
civilian, who are in peril at sea or in other waters as
a result of misfortune affecting them or the vessel or
aircraft carrying them and who refrain from any act of
hostility. These persons, provided that they continue to
refrain from any act of hostility, shall continue to be
considered shipwrecked during their rescue until they
acquire another status under the Conventions or this
Protocol;
(3) "Medical personnel" means those persons assigned,
by a Party to the conflict, exclusively to the medical
purposes enumerated under (5) or to the administration
of medical units or to the operation or administration
of medical transports. Such assignments may be either
permanent or temporary. The term includes:
(a) medical personnel of a Party to the conflict,
whether military or civilian, including those described
in the First and Second Conventions, and those assigned
to civil defence organizations;
(b) medical personnel of national Red Cross (Red
Crescent, Red Lion and Sun) Societies and other national
voluntary aid societies duly recognized and authorized
by a Party to the conflict;
(c) medical personnel or medical units or medical
transports described in Article 9, paragraph 2.
(4) "Religious personnel" means military or civilian
persons, such as chaplains, who are exclusively engaged
in the work of their ministry and attached:
(a) to the armed forces of a Party to the conflict;
(b) to medical units or medical transports of a Party
to the conflict;
(c) to medical units or medical transports described
in Article 9, Paragraph 2; or
(d) to civil defence organizations of a Party to the
conflict.
The attachment of religious personnel may be either
permanent or temporary, and the relevant provisions
mentioned under (11) apply to them;
(5) "Medical units" means establishments and other
units, whether military or civilian, organized for
medical purposes, namely the search for, collection,
transportation, diagnosis or treatment - including
first-aid treatment - of the wounded, sick and
shipwrecked, or for the prevention of disease. The term
includes for example, hospitals and other similar units,
blood transfusion centres, preventive medicine centres
and institutes, medical depots and the medical and
pharmaceutical stores of such units. Medical units may
be fixed or mobile, permanent or temporary;
(6) "Medical transportation" means the conveyance by
land, water or air of the wounded, sick, shipwrecked,
medical personnel, religious personnel, medical
equipment or medical supplies protected by the
Conventions and by this Protocol;
(7) "Medical transports" means any means of
transportation, whether military or civilian, permanent
or temporary, assigned exclusively to medical
transportation and under the control of a competent
authority of a Party to the conflict;
(8) "Medical vehicles" means any medical transports
by land;
(9) "Medical ships and craft" means any medical
transports by water;
(10) "Medical aircraft" means any medical transports
by air;
(11) "Permanent medical personnel", "permanent
medical units" and "permanent medical transports" mean
those assigned exclusively to medical purposes for an
indeterminate period. "Temporary medical personnel"
"temporary medical-units" and "temporary medical
transports" mean those devoted exclusively to medical
purposes for limited periods during the whole of such
periods. Unless otherwise specified, the terms "medical
personnel", "medical units" and "medical transports"
cover both permanent and temporary categories;
(12) "Distinctive emblem" means the distinctive
emblem of the red cross, red crescent or red lion and
sun on a white ground when used for the protection of
medical units and transports, or medical ana religious
personnel, equipment or supplies;
(13) "Distinctive signal" means any signal or message
specified for the identification exclusively of medical
units or transports in Chapter III of Annex I to this
Protocol. Article 9 - Field of application
1. This Part, the provisions of which are intended to
ameliorate the condition of the wounded, sick and
shipwrecked, shall apply to all those affected by a
situation referred to in Article 1, without any adverse
distinction founded on race, colour, sex, language,
religion or belief political or other opinion, national
or social origin, wealth, birth or other status, or on
any other similar criteria.
2. The relevant provisions of Articles 27 and 32 of
the First Convention shall apply to permanent medical
units and transports (other than hospital ships, to
which Article 25 of the Second Convention applies) and
their personnel made available to a Party to the
conflict for humanitarian purposes:
(a) by a neutral or other State which is not a Party
to that conflict;
(b) by a recognized and authorized aid society of
such a State;
(c) by an impartial international humanitarian
organization.
Article 10 - Protection and care
1. All the wounded, sick and shipwrecked, to
whichever Party they belong, shall be respected and
protected.
2. In all circumstances they shall be treated
humanely and shall receive, to the fullest extent
practicable and with the least possible delay, the
medical care and attention required by their condition.
There shall be no distinction among them founded on any
grounds other than medical ones.
Article 11 - Protection of persons
1. The physical or mental health and integrity of
persons who are in the power of the adverse Party or who
are interned, detained or otherwise deprived of liberty
as a result of a situation referred to in Article 1
shall not be endangered by any unjustified act or
omission. Accordingly, it is prohibited to subject the
persons described in this Article to any medical
procedure which is not indicated by the state of health
of the person concerned and which is not consistent with
generally accepted medical standards which would be
applied under similar medical circumstances to persons
who are nationals of the Party conducting the procedure
and who are in no way deprived of liberty.
2. It is, in particular, prohibited to carry out on
such persons, even with their consent:
(a) physical mutilations;
(b) medical or scientific experiments;
(c) removal of tissue or organs for transplantation,
except where these acts are justified in conformity with
the conditions provided for in paragraph 1.
3. Exceptions to the prohibition in paragraph 2 (c)
may be made only in the case of donations of blood for
transfusion or of skin for grafting, provided that they
are given voluntarily and without any coercion or
inducement, and then only for therapeutic purposes,
under conditions consistent with generally accepted
medical standards and controls designed for the benefit
of both the donor and the recipient.
4. Any wilful act or omission which seriously
endangers the physical or mental health or integrity of
any person who is in the power of a Party other than the
one on which he depends and which either violates any of
the prohibitions in paragraphs 1 and 2 or fails to
comply with the requirements of paragraph 3 shall be a
grave breach of this Protocol.
5. The persons described in paragraph 1 have the
right to refuse any surgical operation. In case of
refusal, medical personnel shall endeavour to obtain a
written statement to that effect, signed or acknowledged
by the patient.
6. Each Party to the conflict shall keep a medical
record for every donation of blood for transfusion or
skin for grafting by persons referred to in paragraph 1,
if that donation is made under the responsibility of
that Party. In addition, each Party to the conflict
shall endeavour to keep a record of all medical
procedures undertaken with respect to any person who is
interned, detained or otherwise deprived of liberty as a
result of a situation referred to in Article 1. These
records shall be available at all times for inspection
by the Protecting Power.
Article 12 - Protection of medical units
1. Medical units shall be respected and protected at
all times and shall not be the object of attack.
2. Paragraph 1 shall apply to civilian medical units,
provided that they:
(a) belong to one of the Parties to the conflict;
(b) are recognized and authorized by the competent
authority of one of the Parties to the conflict; or
(c) are authorized in conformity with Article 9,
paragraph 2, of this Protocol or Article 27 of the First
Convention.
3. The Parties to the conflict are invited to notify
each other of the location of their fixed medical units.
The absence of such notification shall not exempt any of
the Parties from the obligation to comply with the
provisions of paragraph 1.
4. Under no circumstances shall medical units be used
in an attempt to shield military objectives from attack.
Whenever possible, the Parties to the conflict shall
ensure that medical units are so sited that attacks
against military objectives do not imperil their safety.
Article 13 - Discontinuance of protection of civilian
medical units
1. The protection to which civilian medical units are
entitled shall not cease unless they are used to commit,
outside their humanitarian function, acts harmful to the
enemy. Protection may, however, cease only after a
warning has been given setting, whenever appropriate, a
reasonable time-limit, and after such warning has
remained unheeded.
2. The following shall not be considered as acts
harmful to the enemy:
(a) that the personnel of the unit are equipped with
light individual weapons for their own defence or for
that of the wounded and sick in their charge;
(b) that the unit is guarded by a picket or by
sentries or by an escort;
(c) that small arms and ammunition taken from the
wounded and sick, and not yet handed to the proper
service, are found in the units;
(d) that members of the armed forces or other
combatants are in the unit for medical reasons. Article
14 - Limitations on requisition of civilian medical
units
1. The Occupying Power has the duty to ensure that
the medical needs of the civilian population in occupied
territory continue to be satisfied.
2. The Occupying Power shall not, therefore,
requisition civilian medical units, their equipment,
their matĒriel or the services of their personnel, so
long as these resources are necessary for the provision
of adequate medical services for the civilian population
and for the continuing medical care of any wounded and
sick already under treatment.
3. Provided that the general rule in paragraph 2
continues to be observed, the Occupying Power may
requisition the said resources, subject to the following
particular conditions:
(a) that the resources are necessary for the adequate
and immediate medical treatment of the wounded and sick
members of the armed forces of the Occupying Power or of
prisoners of war;
(b) that the requisition continues only while such
necessity exists; and
(c) that immediate arrangements are made to ensure
that the medical needs of the civilian population, as
well as those of any wounded and sick under treatment
who are affected by the requisition, continue to be
satisfied.
Article 15 - Protection of civilian medical and
religious personnel
1. Civilian medical personnel shall be respected and
protected.
2. If needed, all available help shall be afforded to
civilian medical personnel in an area where civilian
medical services are disrupted by reason of combat
activity.
3. The Occupying Power shall afford civilian medical
personnel in occupied territories every assistance to
enable them to perform, to the best of their ability,
their humanitarian functions. The Occupying Power may
not require that, in the performance of those functions,
such personnel shall give priority to the treatment of
any person except on medical grounds. They shall not be
compelled to carry out tasks which are not compatible
with their humanitarian mission.
4. Civilian medical personnel shall have access to
any place where their services are essential, subject to
such supervisory and safety measures as the relevant
Party to the conflict may deem necessary.
5. Civilian religious personnel shall be respected
and protected. The provisions of the Conventions and of
this Protocol concerning the protection and
identification of medical personnel shall apply equally
to such persons.
Article 16 - General protection of medical duties
1. Under no circumstances shall any person be
punished for carrying out medical activities compatible
with medical ethics, regardless of the person benefiting
therefrom.
2. Persons engaged in medical activities shall not be
compelled to perform acts or to carry out work contrary
to the rules of medical ethics or to other medical rules
designed for the benefit of the wounded and sick or to
the provisions of the Conventions or of this Protocol,
or to refrain from performing acts or from carrying out
work required by those rules and provisions.
3. No person engaged in medical activities shall be
compelled to give to anyone belonging either to an
adverse Party, or to his own Party except as required by
the law of the latter Party, any information concerning
the wounded and sick who are, or who have been, under
his care, if such information would, in his opinion,
prove harmful to the patients concerned or to their
families. Regulations for the compulsory notification of
communicable diseases shall, however, be respected.
Article 17 - Role of the civilian population and of
aid societies
1. The civilian population shall respect the wounded,
sick and shipwrecked, even if they belong to the adverse
Party, and shall commit no act of violence against them.
The civilian population and aid societies, such as
national Red Cross (Red Crescent, Red Lion and Sun)
Societies, shall be permitted, even on their own
initiative, to collect and care for the wounded, sick
and shipwrecked, even in invaded or occupied areas. No
one shall be harmed, prosecuted, convicted or punished
for such humanitarian acts.
2. The Parties to the conflict may appeal to the
civilian population and the aid societies referred to in
paragraph 1 to collect and care for the wounded, sick
and shipwrecked, and to search for the dead and report
their location; they shall grant both protection and the
necessary facilities to those who respond to this
appeal. If the adverse Party gains or regains control of
the area, that Party also shall afford the same
protection and facilities for as long as they are
needed.
Article 18 - Identification
1. Each Party to the conflict shall endeavour to
ensure that medical and religious personnel and medical
units and transports are identifiable.
2. Each Party to the conflict shall also endeavour to
adopt and to implement methods and procedures which will
make it possible to recognize medical units and
transports which use the distinctive emblem and
distinctive signals.
3. In occupied territory and in areas where fighting
is taking place or is likely to take place, civilian
medical personnel and civilian religious personnel
should be recognizable by the distinctive emblem and an
identity card certifying their status.
4. With the consent of the competent authority,
medical units and transports shall be marked by the
distinctive emblem. The ships and craft referred to in
Article 22 of this Protocol shall be marked in
accordance with the provisions of the Second Convention.
5. In addition to the distinctive emblem, a Party to
the conflict may, as provided in Chapter III of Annex I
to this Protocol, authorize the use of distinctive
signals to identify medical units and transports.
Exceptionally, in the special cases covered in that
Chapter, medical transports may use distinctive signals
without displaying the distinctive emblem.
6. The application of the provisions of paragraphs 1
to 5 of this article is governed by Chapters I to III of
Annex I to this Protocol. Signals designated in Chapter
III of the Annex for the exclusive use of medical units
and transports shall not, except as provided therein, be
used for any purpose other than to identify the medical
units and transports specified in that Chapter.
7. This article does not authorize any wider use of
the distinctive emblem in peacetime than is prescribed
in Article 44 of the First Convention.
8. The provisions of the Conventions and of this
Protocol relating to supervision of the use of the
distinctive emblem and to the prevention and repression
of any misuse thereof shall be applicable to distinctive
signals.
Article 19 - Neutral and other States not Parties to
the conflict
Neutral and other States not Parties to the conflict
shall apply the relevant provisions of this Protocol to
persons protected by this Part who may be received or
interned within their territory, and to any dead of the
Parties to that conflict whom they may find.
Article 20 - Prohibition of reprisals
Reprisals against the persons and objects protected
by this Part are prohibited.
SECTION II
MEDICAL TRANSPORTATION
Article 21 - Medical vehicles
Medical vehicles shall be respected and protected in
the same way as mobile medical units under the
Conventions and this Protocol.
Article 22 - Hospital ships and coastal rescue craft
1. The provisions of the Conventions relating to:
(a) vessels described in Articles 22, 24, 25 and 27
of the Second Convention,
(b) their lifeboats and small craft,
(c) their personnel and crews, and
(d) the wounded; sick and shipwrecked on board.
shall also apply where these vessels carry civilian
wounded, sick and shipwrecked who do not belong to any
of the categories mentioned in Article 13 of the Second
Convention. Such civilians shall not, however, be
subject to surrender to any Party which is not their
own, or to capture at sea. If they find themselves in
the power of a Party to the conflict other than their
own they shall be covered by the Fourth Convention and
by this Protocol.
2. The protection provided by the Conventions to
vessels described in Article 25 of the Second Convention
shall extend to hospital ships made available for
humanitarian purposes to a Party to the conflict:
(a) by a neutral or other State which is not a Party
to that conflict; or
(b) by an impartial international humanitarian
organization,
provided that, in either case, the requirements set
out in that Article are complied with.
3. Small craft described in Article 27 of the Second
Convention shall be protected, even if the notification
envisaged by that Article has not been made. The Parties
to the conflict are, nevertheless, invited to inform
each other of any details of such craft which will
facilitate their identification and recognition. Article
23 - Other medical ships and craft
1. Medical ships and craft other than those referred
to in Article 22 of this Protocol and Article 38 of the
Second Convention shall, whether at sea or in other
waters, be respected and protected in the same way as
mobile medical units under the Conventions and this
Protocol. Since this protection can only be effective if
they can be identified and recognized as medical ships
or craft, such vessels should be marked with the
distinctive emblem and as far as possible comply with
the second paragraph of Article 43 of the Second
Convention.
2. The ships and craft referred to in paragraph 1
shall remain subject to the laws of war. Any warship on
the surface able immediately to enforce its command may
order them to stop, order them off, or make them take a
certain course, and they shall obey every such command.
Such ships and craft may not in any other way be
diverted from their medical mission so long as they are
needed for the wounded, sick and shipwrecked on board.
3. The protection provided in paragraph 1 shall cease
only under the conditions set out in Articles 34 and 35
of the Second Convention. A clear refusal to obey a
command given in accordance with paragraph 2 shall be an
act harmful to the enemy under Article 34 of the Second
Convention.
4. A Party to the conflict may notify any adverse
Party as far in advance of sailing as possible of the
name, description, expected time of sailing, course and
estimated speed of the medical ship or craft,
particularly in the case of ships of over 2,000 gross
tons, and may provide any other information which would
facilitate identification and recognition. The adverse
Party shall acknowledge receipt of such information.
5. The provisions of Article 37 of the Second
Convention shall apply to medical and religious
personnel in such ships and craft.
6. The provisions of the Second Convention shall
apply to the wounded, sick and shipwrecked belonging to
the categories referred to in Article 13 of the Second
Convention and in Article 44 of this Protocol who may be
on board such medical ships and craft. Wounded, sick and
shipwrecked civilians who do not belong to any or the
categories mentioned in Article 13 of the Second
Convention shall not be subject, at sea, either to
surrender to any Party which is not their own, or to
removal from such ships or craft; if they find
themselves in the power of a Party to the conflict other
than their own, they shall be covered by the Fourth
Convention and by this Protocol.
Article 24 - Protection of medical Aircraft
Medical aircraft shall be respected and protected,
subject to the provisions of this Part.
Article 25 - Medical aircraft in areas not controlled
by an adverse Party
In and over land areas physically controlled by
friendly forces, or in and over sea areas not physically
controlled by an adverse Party, the respect and
protection of medical aircraft of a Party to the
conflict is not dependent on any agreement with an
adverse Party. For greater safety, however, a Party to
the conflict operating its medical aircraft in these
areas may notify the adverse Party, as provided in
Article 29, in particular when such aircraft are making
flights bringing them within range of surface-to-air
weapons systems of the adverse Party.
Article 26 - Medical aircraft in contact or similar
zones
1. ln and over those parts of the contact zone which
are physically controlled by friendly forces and in and
over those areas the physical control of which is not
clearly established, protection for medical aircraft can
be fully effective only by prior agreement between the
competent military authorities of the Parties to the
conflict, as provided for in Article 29. Although, in
the absence of such an agreement, medical aircraft
operate at their own risk, they shall nevertheless be
respected after they have been recognized as such.
2. "Contact zone" means any area on land where the
forward elements of opposing forces are in contact with
each other, especially where they are exposed to direct
fire from the ground.
Article 27 - Medical aircraft in areas controlled by
an adverse Party
1. The medical aircraft of a Party to the conflict
shall continue to be protected while flying over land or
sea areas physically controlled by an adverse Party,
provided that prior agreement to such flights has been
obtained from the competent authority of that adverse
Party.
2. A medical aircraft which flies over an area
physically controlled by an adverse Party without, or in
deviation from the terms of, an agreement provided for
in paragraph 1, either through navigational error or
because of an emergency affecting the safety of the
flight, shall make every effort to identify itself and
to inform the adverse Party of the circumstances. As
soon as such medical aircraft has been recognized by the
adverse Party, that Party shall make all reasonable
efforts to give the order to land or to alight on water,
referred to in Article 30, paragraph 1, or to take other
measures to safeguard its own interests, and, in either
case, to allow the aircraft time for compliance, before
resorting to an attack against the aircraft.
Article 28 - Restrictions on operations of medical
aircraft
1. The Parties to the conflict are prohibited from
using their medical aircraft to attempt to acquire any
military advantage over an adverse Party. The presence
of medical aircraft shall not be used in an attempt to
render military objectives immune from attack.
2. Medical aircraft shall not be used to collect or
transmit intelligence data and shall not carry any
equipment intended for such purposes. They are
prohibited from carrying any persons or cargo not
included within the definition in Article 8 (6). The
carrying on board of the personal effects of the
occupants or of equipment intended solely to facilitate
navigation, communication or identification shall not be
considered as prohibited,
3. Medical aircraft shall not carry any armament
except small arms and ammunition taken from the wounded,
sick and shipwrecked on board and not yet handed to the
proper service, and such light individual weapons as may
be necessary to enable the medical personnel on board to
defend themselves and the wounded, sick and shipwrecked
in their charge.
4. While carrying out the flights referred to in
Articles 26 and 27, medical aircraft shall not, except
by prior agreement with the adverse Party, be used to
search for the wounded, sick and shipwrecked.
Article 29 - Notifications and agreements concerning
medical aircraft
1. Notifications under Article 25, or requests for
prior agreement under Articles 26, 27, 28, paragraph 4,
or 31 shall state the proposed number of medical
aircraft, their flight plans and means of
identification, and shall be understood to mean that
every flight will be carried out in compliance with
Article 28.
2. A Party which receives a notification given under
Article 25 shall at once acknowledge receipt of such
notification. 3. A Party which receives a request for
prior agreement under Articles 25, 27, 28, paragraph 4,
or 31 shall, as rapidly as possible, notify the
requesting Party:
(a) that the request is agreed to;
(b) that the request is denied; or
(c) of reasonable alternative proposals to the
request. It may also propose prohibition or restriction
of other flights in the area during the time involved.
If the Party which submitted the request accepts the
alternative proposals, it shall notify the other Party
of such acceptance.
4. The Parties shall take the necessary measures to
ensure that notifications and agreements can be made
rapidly.
5. The Parties shall also take the necessary measures
to disseminate rapidly the substance of any such
notifications and agreements to the military units
concerned and shall instruct those units regarding the
means of identification that will be used by the medical
aircraft in question.
Article 30 - Landing and inspection of medical
aircraft
1. Medical aircraft flying over areas which are
physically controlled by an adverse Party, or over areas
the physical control of which is not clearly
established, may be ordered to land or to alight on
water, as appropriate, to permit inspection in
accordance with the following paragragraphs [sic].
Medical aircraft shall obey any such order.
2. If such an aircraft lands or alights on water,
whether ordered to do so or for other reasons, it may be
subjected to inspection solely to determine the matters
referred to in paragraphs 3 and 4. Any such inspection
shall be commenced without delay and shall be conducted
expeditiously. The inspecting Party shall not require
the wounded and sick to be removed from the aircraft
unless their removal is essential for the inspection.
That Party shall in any event ensure that the condition
of the wounded and sick is not adversely affected by the
inspection or by the removal.
3. If the inspection discloses that the aircraft:
(a) is a medical aircraft within the meaning of
Article 8 (10),
(b) is not in violation of the conditions prescribed
in Article 28, and
(c) has not flown without or in breach of a prior
agreement where such agreement is required,
the aircraft and those of its occupants who belong to
the adverse Party or to a neutral or other State not a
Party to the conflict shall be authorized to continue
the flight without delay.
4. If the inspection discloses that the aircraft:
(a) is not a medical aircraft within the meaning of
Article 8 (10),
(b) is in violation or the conditions prescribed in
Article 28, or
(c) has flown without or in breach of a prior
agreement where such agreement is required,
the aircraft may be seized. Its occupants shall be
treated in conformity with the relevant provisions of
the Conventions and of this Protocol. Any aircraft
seized which had been assigned as a permanent medical
aircraft may be used thereafter only as a medical
aircraft.
Article 31 - Neutral or other States not Parties to
the conflict
1. Except by prior agreement, medical aircraft shall
not fly over or land in the territory of a neutral or
other State not a Party to the conflict. However, with
such an agreement, they shall be respected throughout
their flight and also for the duration of any calls in
the territory. Nevertheless they shall obey any summons
to land or to alight on water, as appropriate.
2. Should a medical aircraft, in the absence of an
agreement or in deviation from the terms of an
agreement, fly over the territory of a neutral or other
State not a Party to the conflict, either through
navigational error or because of an emergency affecting
the safety of the flight, it shall make every effort to
give notice of the flight and to identify itself. As
soon as such medical aircraft is recognized, that State
shall make all reasonable efforts to give the order to
land or to alight on water referred to in Article 30,
paragraph 1, or to take other measures to safeguard its
own interests, and, in either case, to allow the
aircraft time for compliance, before resorting to an
attack against the aircraft.
3. If a medical aircraft, either by agreement or in
the circumstances mentioned in paragraph 2, lands or
alights on water in the territory of a neutral or other
State not Party to the conflict, whether ordered to do
so or for other reasons, the aircraft shall be subject
to inspection for the purposes of determining whether it
is in fact a medical aircraft. The inspection shall be
commenced without delay and shall be conducted
expeditiously. The inspecting Party shall not require
the wounded and sick of the Party operating the aircraft
to be removed from it unless their removal is essential
for the inspection. The inspecting Party shall in any
event ensure that the condition of the wounded and sick
is not adversely affected by the inspection or the
removal. If the inspection discloses that the aircraft
is in fact a medical aircraft, the aircraft with its
occupants, other than those who must be detained in
accordance with the rules of international law
applicable in armed conflict, shall be allowed to resume
its flight, and reasonable facilities shall be given for
the continuation of the flight. If the inspection
discloses that the aircraft is not a medical aircraft,
it shall be seized and the occupants treated in
accordance with paragraph 4.
4. The wounded, sick and shipwrecked disembarked,
otherwise than temporarily, from a medical aircraft with
the consent of the local authorities in the territory of
a neutral or other State not a Party to the conflict
shall, unless agreed otherwise between that State and
the Parties to the conflict, be detained by that State
where so required by the rules of international law
applicable in armed conflict, in such a manner that they
cannot again take part in the hostilities. The cost of
hospital treatment and internment shall be borne by the
State to which those persons belong.
5. Neutral or other States not Parties to the
conflict shall apply any conditions and restrictions on
the passage of medical aircraft over, or on the landing
of medical aircraft in, their territory equally to all
Parties to the conflict.
SECTION III
MISSING AND DEAD PERSONS
Article 32 - General principle
In the implementation of this Section, the activities
of the High Contracting Parties, of the Parties to the
conflict and of the international humanitarian
organizations mentioned in the Conventions and in this
Protocol shall be prompted mainly by the right of
families to know the fate of their relatives.
Article 33 - Missing persons
1. As soon as circumstances permit, and at the latest
from the end of active hostilities, each Party to the
conflict shall search for the persons who have been
reported missing by an adverse Party. Such adverse Party
shall transmit all relevant information concerning such
persons in order to facilitate such searches.
2. In order to facilitate the gathering of
information pursuant to the preceding paragraph, each
Party to the conflict shall, with respect to persons who
would not receive more favourable consideration under
the Conventions and this Protocol:
(a) record the information specified in Article 138
of the Fourth Convention in respect of such persons who
have been detained, imprisoned or otherwise held in
captivity for more than two weeks as a result of
hostilities or occupation, or who have died during any
period of detention;
(b) to the fullest extent possible, facilitate and,
if need be, carry out the search for and the recording
of information concerning such persons if they have died
in other circumstances as a result of hostilities or
occupation.
3. Information concerning persons reported missing
pursuant to paragraph 1 and requests for such
information shall be transmitted either directly or
through the Protecting Power or the Central Tracing
Agency of the International Committee of the Red Cross
or national Red Cross (Red Crescent, Red Lion and Sun)
Societies. Where the information is not transmitted
through the International Committee of the Red Cross and
its Central Tracing Agency, each Party to the conflict
shall ensure that such information is also supplied to
the Central Tracing Agency.
4. The Parties to the conflict shall endeavour to
agree on arrangements for teams to search for, identify
and recover the dead from battlefield areas, including
arrangements, if appropriate, for such teams to be
accompanied by personnel of the adverse Party while
carrying out these missions in areas controlled by the
adverse Party. Personnel of such teams shall be
respected and protected while exclusively carrying out
these duties.
Article 34 - Remains of deceased
1. The remains of persons who have died for reasons
related to occupation or in detention resulting from
occupation or hostilities and those or persons not
nationals of the country in which they have died as a
result of hostilities shall be respected, and the
gravesites of all such persons shall be respected,
maintained and marked as provided for in Article 130 of
the Fourth Convention, where their remains or gravesites
would not receive more favourable consideration under
the Conventions and this Protocol.
2. As soon as circumstances and the relations between
the adverse Parties permit, the High Contracting Parties
in whose territories graves and, as the case may be,
other locations of the remains of persons who have died
as a result of hostilities or during occupation or in
detention are situated, shall conclude agreements in
order:
(a) to facilitate access to the gravesites by
relatives of the deceased and by representatives of
official graves registration services and to regulate
the practical arrangements for such access;
(b) to protect and maintain such gravesites
permanently;
(c) to facilitate the return of the remains of the
deceased and of personal effects to the home country
upon its request or, unless that country objects, upon
the request of the next of kin.
3. In the absence of the agreements provided for in
paragraph 2 (b) or (c) and if the home country or such
deceased is not willing to arrange at its expense for
the maintenance of such gravesites, the High Contracting
Party in whose territory the gravesites are situated may
offer to facilitate the return of the remains of the
deceased to the home country. Where such an offer has
not been accepted the High Contracting Party may, after
the expiry of five years from the date of the offer and
upon due notice to the home country, adopt the
arrangements laid down in its own laws relating to
cemeteries and graves.
4. A High Contracting Party in whose territory the
grave sites referred to in this Article are situated
shall be permitted to exhume the remains only:
(a) in accordance with paragraphs 2 (c) and 3, or
(b) where exhumation is a matter or overriding public
necessity, including cases of medical and investigative
necessity, in which case the High Contracting Party
shall at all times respect the remains, and shall give
notice to the home country or its intention to exhume
the remains together with details of the intended place
of reinterment.
PART III
METHODS AND MEANS OF WARFARE
COMBATANT AND PRISONER-OF-WAR STATUS
SECTION I : METHODS AND MEANS OF WARFARE
Article 35 - Basic rules
1. In any armed conflict, the right of the Parties to
the conflict to choose methods or means of warfare is
not unlimited.
2. It is prohibited to employ weapons, projectiles
and material and methods of warfare of a nature to cause
superfluous injury or unnecessary suffering.
3. It is prohibited to employ methods or means of
warfare which are intended, or may be expected, to cause
widespread, long-term and severe damage to the natural
environment.
Article 36 - New weapons
In the study, development, acquisition or adoption of
a new weapon, means or method of warfare, a High
Contracting Party is under an obligation to determine
whether its employment would, in some or all
circumstances, be prohibited by this Protocol or by any
other rule of international law applicable to the High
Contracting Party.
Article 37 - Prohibition of Perfidy
1. It is prohibited to kill, injure or capture an
adversary by resort to perfidy. Acts inviting the
confidence of an adversary to lead him to believe that
he is entitled to, or is obliged to accord, protection
under the rules of international law applicable in armed
conflict, with intent to betray that confidence, shall
constitute perfidy. The following acts are examples of
perfidy:
(a) the feigning of an intent to negotiate under a
flag of truce or of a surrender;
(b) the feigning of an incapacitation by wounds or
sickness;
(c) the feigning of civilian, non-combatant status;
and
(d) the feigning of protected status by the use of
signs, emblems or uniforms of the United Nations or of
neutral or other States not Parties to the conflict.
2. Ruses of war are not prohibited. Such ruses are
acts which are intended to mislead an adversary or to
induce him to act recklessly but which infringe no rule
of international law applicable in armed conflict and
which are not perfidious because they do not invite the
confidence of an adversary with respect to protection
under that law. The following are examples of such
ruses: the use of camouflage, decoys, mock operations
and misinformation.
Article 38 - Recognized emblems
1. It is prohibited to make improper use of the
distinctive emblem of the red cross, red crescent or red
lion and sun or of other emblems, signs or signals
provided for by the Conventions or by this Protocol. It
is also prohibited to misuse deliberately in an armed
conflict other internationally recognized protective
emblems, signs or signals, including the flag of truce,
and the protective emblem of cultural property.
2. It is prohibited to make use of the distinctive
emblem of the United Nations, except as authorized by
that Organization.
Article 39 - Emblems of nationality
1. It is prohibited to make use in an armed conflict
of the flags or military emblems, insignia or uniforms
of neutral or other States not Parties to the conflict.
2. It is prohibited to make use of the flags or
military emblems, insignia or uniforms of adverse
Parties while engaging in attacks or in order to shield,
favour, protect or impede military operations.
3. Nothing in this Article or in Article 37,
paragraph 1 (d), shall affect the existing generally
recognized rules of international law applicable to
espionage or to the use of flags in the conduct of armed
conflict at sea.
Article 40 - Quarter
It is prohibited to order that there shall be no
survivors, to threaten an adversary therewith or to
conduct hostilities on this basis.
Article 41 - Safeguard of an enemy hors de combat
1. A person who is recognized or who, in the
circumstances should be recognized to be hors de combat
shall not be made the object of attack.
2. A person is hors de combat if: (a) he is in the
power of an adverse Party;
(b) he clearly expresses an intention to surrender;
or
(c) he has been rendered unconscious or is otherwise
incapacitated by wounds or sickness, and therefore is
incapable of defending himself;
provided that in any of these cases he abstains from
any hostile act and does not attempt to escape.
3. When persons entitled to protection as prisoners
of war have fallen into the power or an adverse Party
under unusual conditions of combat which prevent their
evacuation as provided for in Part III, Section I, of
the Third Convention, they shall be released and all
feasible precautions shall be taken to ensure their
safety.
Article 42 - Occupants of aircraft
1. No person parachuting from an aircraft in distress
shall be made the object of attack during his descent.
2. Upon reaching the ground in territory controlled
by an adverse Party, a person who has parachuted from an
aircraft in distress shall be given an opportunity to
surrender before being made the object of attack, unless
it is apparent that he is engaging in a hostile act.
3. Airborne troops are not protected by this Article.
SECTION II COMBATANT AND PRISONER-OF-WAR STATUS
Article 43 - Armed forces
1. The armed forces of a Party to a conflict consist
of all organized armed forces, groups and units which
are under a command responsible to that Party for the
conduct or its subordinates, even if that Party is
represented by a government or an authority not
recognized by an adverse Party. Such armed forces shall
be subject to an internal disciplinary system which,
inter alia, shall enforce compliance with the rules of
international law applicable in armed conflict.
2. Members of the armed forces of a Party to a
conflict (other than medical personnel and chaplains
covered by Article 33 of the Third Convention) are
combatants, that is to say, they have the right to
participate directly in hostilities.
3. Whenever a Party to a conflict incorporates a
paramilitary or armed law enforcement agency into its
armed forces it shall so notify the other Parties to the
conflict.
Article 44 - Combatants and prisoners of war
1. Any combatant, as defined in Article 43, who falls
into the power of an adverse Party shall be a prisoner
of war.
2. While all combatants are obliged to comply with
the rules of international law applicable in armed
conflict, violations of these rules shall not deprive a
combatant of his right to be a combatant or, if he falls
into the power of an adverse Party, of his right to be a
prisoner of war, except as provided in paragraphs 3 and
4.
3. In order to promote the protection of the civilian
population from the effects of hostilities, combatants
are obliged to distinguish themselves from the civilian
population while they are engaged in an attack or in a
military operation preparatory to an attack.
Recognizing, however, that there are situations in armed
conflicts where, owing to the nature of the hostilities
an armed combatant cannot so distinguish himself, he
shall retain his status as a combatant, provided that,
in such situations, he carries his arms openly:
(a) during each military engagement, and
(b) during such time as he is visible to the
adversary while he is engaged in a military deployment
preceding the launching of an attack in which he is to
participate.
Acts which comply with the requirements of this
paragraph shall not be considered as perfidious within
the meaning of Article 37, paragraph 1 (c).
4. A combatant who falls into the power of an adverse
Party while failing to meet the requirements set forth
in the second sentence of paragraph 3 shall forfeit his
right to be a prisoner of war, but he shall,
nevertheless, be given protections equivalent in all
respects to those accorded to prisoners of war by the
Third Convention and by this Protocol. This protection
includes protections equivalent to those accorded to
prisoners of war by the Third Convention in the case
where such a person is tried and punished for any
offences he has committed.
5. Any combatant who falls into the power of an
adverse Party while not engaged in an attack or in a
military operation preparatory to an attack shall not
forfeit his rights to be a combatant and a prisoner of
war by virtue of his prior activities .
6. This Article is without prejudice to the right of
any person to be a prisoner of war pursuant to Article 4
of the Third Convention.
7. This Article is not intended to change the
generally accepted practice of States with respect to
the wearing of the uniform by combatants assigned to the
regular, uniformed armed units of a Party to the
conflict.
8. In addition to the categories of persons mentioned
in Article 13 of the First and Second Conventions, all
members of the armed forces of a Party to the conflict,
as defined in Article 43 of this Protocol, shall be
entitled to protection under those Conventions if they
are wounded or sick or, in the case of the Second
Convention, shipwrecked at sea or in other waters.
Article 45 - Protection of persons who have taken
part in hostilities
1. A person who takes part in hostilities and falls
into the power of an adverse Party shall be presumed to
be a prisoner of war, and therefore shall be protected
by the Third Convention, if he claims the status of
prisoner of war, or if he appears to be entitled to such
status, or if the Party on which he depends claims such
status on his behalf by notification to the detaining
Power or to the Protecting Power. Should any doubt arise
as to whether any such person is entitled to the status
of prisoner of war, he shall continue to have such
status and, therefore, to be protected by the Third
Convention and this Protocol until such time as his
status has been determined by a competent tribunal.
2. If a person who has fallen into the power of an
adverse Party is not held as a prisoner of war and is to
be tried by that Party for an offence arising out of the
hostilities, he shall have the right to assert his
entitlement to prisoner-of-war status before a judicial
tribunal and to have that question adjudicated. Whenever
possible under the applicable procedure, this
adjudication shall occur before the trial for the
offence. The representatives of the Protecting Power
shall be entitled to attend the proceedings in which
that question is adjudicated, unless, exceptionally, the
proceedings are held in camera in the interest of State
security. In such a case the detaining Power shall
advise the Protecting Power accordingly.
3. Any person who has taken part in hostilities, who
is not entitled to prisoner-of-war status and who does
not benefit from more favourable treatment in accordance
with the Fourth Convention shall have the right at all
times to the protection of Article 75 of this Protocol.
In occupied territory, any such person, unless he is
held as a spy, shall also be entitled, notwithstanding
Article 5 of the Fourth Convention, to his rights of
communication under that Convention.
Article 46 - Spies
1. Notwithstanding any other provision of the
Conventions or of this Protocol, any member of the armed
forces of a Party to the conflict who falls into the
power of an adverse Party while engaging in espionage
shall not have the right to the status of prisoner of
war and may be treated as a spy.
2. A member of the armed forces of a Party to the
conflict who, on behalf of that Party and in territory
controlled by an adverse Party, gathers or attempts to
gather information shall not be considered as engaging
in espionage if, while so acting, he is in the uniform
of his armed forces.
3. A member of the armed forces of a Party to the
conflict who is a resident of territory occupied by an
adverse Party and who, on behalf of the Party on which
he depends, gathers or attempts to gather information of
military value within that territory shall not be
considered as engaging in espionage unless he does so
through an act of false pretences or deliberately in a
clandestine manner. Moreover, such a resident shall not
lose his right to the status of prisoner of war and may
not be treated as a spy unless he is captured while
engaging in espionage.
4. A member of the armed forces of a Party to the
conflict who is not a resident of territory occupied by
an adverse Party and who has engaged in espionage in
that territory shall not lose his right to the status of
prisoner of war and may not be treated as a spy unless
he is captured before he has rejoined the armed forces
to which he belongs.
Article 47 - Mercenaries
1. A mercenary shall not have the right to be a
combatant or a prisoner of war.
2. A mercenary is any person who:
(a) is specially recruited locally or abroad in order
to fight in an armed conflict;
(b) does, in fact, take a direct part in the
hostilities;
(c) is motivated to take part in the hostilities
essentially by the desire for private gain and, in fact,
is promised, by or on behalf of a Party to the conflict,
material compensation substantially in excess of that
promised or paid to combatants of similar ranks and
functions in the armed forces of that Party;
(d) is neither a national of a Party to the conflict
nor a resident of territory controlled by a Party to the
conflict;
(e) is not a member of the armed forces of a Party to
the conflict; and
(f) has not been sent by a State which is not a Party
to the conflict on official duty as a member of its
armed forces.
PART IV CIVILIAN POPULATION
SECTION I:
GENERAL PROTECTION AGAINST EFFECTS OF HOSTILITIES
Chapter I
BASIC RULE AND FIELD OF APPLICATION
Article 48 - Basic rule
In order to ensure respect for and protection of the
civilian population and civilian objects, the Parties to
the conflict shall at all times distinguish between the
civilian population and combatants and between civilian
objects and military objectives and accordingly shall
direct their operations only against military
objectives.
Article 49 - Definition of attacks and scope of
application
1. "Attacks" means acts of violence against the
adversary, whether in offence or in defence.
2. The provisions of this Protocol with respect to
attacks apply to all attacks in whatever territory
conducted, including the national territory belonging to
a Party to the conflict but under the control of an
adverse Party.
3. The provisions of this section apply to any land,
air or sea warfare which may affect the civilian
population, individual civilians or civilian objects on
land. They further apply to all attacks from the sea or
from the air against objectives on land but do not
otherwise affect the rules of international law
applicable in armed conflict at sea or in the air.
4. The provisions of this section are additional to
the rules concerning humanitarian protection contained
in the Fourth Convention, particularly in part II
thereof, and in other international agreements binding
upon the High Contracting Parties, as well as to other
rules of international law relating to the protection of
civilians and civilian objects on land, at sea or in the
air against the effects of hostilities.
Chapter II CIVILIANS AND CIVILIAN POPULATION
Article 50 - Definition of civilians and civilian
population
1. A civilian is any person who does not belong to
one of the categories of persons referred to in Article
4 (A) (1), (2), (3) and (6) of the Third Convention and
in Article 43 of this Protocol. In case of doubt whether
a person is a civilian, that person shall be considered
to be a civilian.
2. The civilian population comprises all persons who
are civilians.
3. The presence within the civilian population of
individuals who do not come within the definition of
civilians does not deprive the population of its
civilian character.
Article 51 - Protection of the civilian population
1. The civilian population and individual civilians
shall enjoy general protection against dangers arising
from military operations. To give effect to this
protection, the following rules, which are additional to
other applicable rules of international law, shall be
observed in all circumstances.
2. The civilian population as such, as well as
individual civilians, shall not be the object of attack.
Acts or threats of violence the primary purpose of which
is to spread terror among the civilian population are
prohibited.
3. Civilians shall enjoy the protection afforded by
this section, unless and for such time as they take a
direct part in hostilities.
4. Indiscriminate attacks are prohibited.
Indiscriminate attacks are:
(a) those which are not directed at a specific
military objective;
(b) those which employ a method or means of combat
which cannot be directed at a specific military
objective; or
(c) those which employ a method or means of combat
the effects of which cannot be limited as required by
this Protocol;
and consequently, in each such case, are of a nature
to strike military objectives and civilians or civilian
objects without distinction.
5. Among others, the following types of attacks are
to be considered as indiscriminate:
(a) an attack by bombardment by any methods or means
which treats as a single military objective a number of
clearly separated and distinct military objectives
located in a city, town, village or other area
containing a similar concentration of civilians or
civilian objects; and
(b) an attack which may be expected to cause
incidental loss of civilian life, injury to civilians,
damage to civilian objects, or a combination thereof,
which would be excessive in relation to the concrete and
direct military advantage anticipated.
6. Attacks against the civilian population or
civilians by way of reprisals are prohibited.
7. The presence or movements of the civilian
population or individual civilians shall not be used to
render certain points or areas immune from military
operations, in particular in attempts to shield military
objectives from attacks or to shield, favour or impede
military operations. The Parties to the conflict shall
not direct the movement of the civilian population or
individual civilians in order to attempt to shield
military objectives from attacks or to shield military
operations.
8. Any violation of these prohibitions shall not
release the Parties to the conflict from their legal
obligations with respect to the civilian population and
civilians, including the obligation to take the
precautionary measures provided for in Article 57.
Chapter III
CIVILIAN OBJECTS
Article 52 - General Protection of civilian objects
1. Civilian objects shall not be the object of attack
or of reprisals. Civilian objects are all objects which
are not military objectives as defined in paragraph 2.
2. Attacks shall be limited strictly to military
objectives. In so far as objects are concerned, military
objectives are limited to those objects which by their
nature, location, purpose or use make an effective
contribution to military action and whose total or
partial destruction, capture or neutralization, in the
circumstances ruling at the time, offers a definite
military advantage.
3. In case of doubt whether an object which is
normally dedicated to civilian purposes, such as a place
of worship, a house or other dwelling or a school, is
being used to make an effective contribution to military
action, it shall be presumed not to be so used.
Article 53 - Protection of cultural objects and of
places of worship
Without prejudice to the provisions of the Hague
Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in
the Event of Armed Conflict of 14 May 1954, and of other
relevant international instruments, it is prohibited:
(a) to commit any acts of hostility directed against
the historic monuments, works of art or places of
worship which constitute the cultural or spiritual
heritage of peoples;
(b) to use such objects in support of the military
effort;
(c) to make such objects the object of reprisals.
Article 54 - Protection of objects indispensable to
the survival of the civilian population
1. Starvation of civilians as a method of warfare is
prohibited.
2. It is prohibited to attack, destroy, remove or
render useless objects indispensable to the survival of
the civilian population, such as food-stuffs,
agricultural areas for the production of food-stuffs,
crops, livestock, drinking water installations and
supplies and irrigation works, for the specific purpose
of denying them for their sustenance value to the
civilian population or to the adverse Party, whatever
the motive, whether in order to starve out civilians, to
cause them to move away, or for any other motive.
3. The prohibitions in paragraph 2 shall not apply to
such of the objects covered by it as are used by an
adverse Party:
(a) as sustenance solely for the members of its armed
forces; or
(b) if not as sustenance, then in direct support of
military action, provided, however, that in no event
shall actions against these objects be taken which may
be expected to leave the civilian population with such
inadequate food or water as to cause its starvation or
force its movement.
4. These objects shall not be made the object of
reprisals.
5. In recognition of the vital requirements of any
Party to the conflict in the defence of its national
territory against invasion, derogation from the
prohibitions contained in paragraph 2 may be made by a
Party to the conflict within such territory under its
own control where required by imperative military
necessity.
Article 55 - Protection of the natural environment
1. Care shall be taken in warfare to protect the
natural environment against widespread, long-term and
severe damage. This protection includes a prohibition of
the use of methods or means of warfare which are
intended or may be expected to cause such damage to the
natural environment and thereby to prejudice the health
or survival of the population.
2. Attacks against the natural environment by way of
reprisals are prohibited.
Article 56 - Protection of works and installations
containing dangerous forces
1. Works or installations containing dangerous
forces, namely dams, dykes and nuclear electrical
generating stations, shall not be made the object of
attack, even where these objects are military
objectives, if such attack may cause the release of
dangerous forces and consequent severe losses among the
civilian population. Other military objectives located
at or in the vicinity of these works or installations
shall not be made the object of attack if such attack
may cause the release of dangerous forces from the works
or installations and consequent severe losses among the
civilian population.
2. The special protection against attack provided by
paragraph 1 shall cease:
(a) for a dam or a dyke only if it is used for other
than its normal function and in regular, significant and
direct support of military operations and if such attack
is the only feasible way to terminate such support;
(b) for a nuclear electrical generating station only
if it provides electric power in regular, significant
and direct support of military operations and if such
attack is the only feasible way to terminate such
support;
(c) for other military objectives located at or in
the vicinity of these works or installations only if
they are used in regular, significant and direct support
of military operations and if such attack is the only
feasible way to terminate such support.
3. In all cases, the civilian population and
individual civilians shall remain entitled to all the
protection accorded them by international law, including
the protection of the precautionary measures provided
for in Article 57. If the protection Ceases and any of
the works, installations or military objectives
mentioned in paragraph 1 is attacked, all practical
precautions shall be taken to avoid the release of the
dangerous forces.
4. It is prohibited to make any of the works,
installations or military objectives mentioned in
paragraph 1 the object of reprisals.
5. The Parties to the conflict shall endeavour to
avoid locating any military objectives in the vicinity
of the works or installations mentioned in paragraph 1.
Nevertheless, installations erected for the sole purpose
of defending the protected works or installations from
attack are permissible and shall not themselves be made
the object of attack, provided that they are not used in
hostilities except for defensive actions necessary to
respond to attacks against the protected works or
installations and that their armament is limited to
weapons capable only of repelling hostile action against
the protected works or installations.
6. The High Contracting Parties and the Parties to
the conflict are urged to conclude further agreements
among themselves to provide additional protection for
objects containing dangerous forces.
7. In order to facilitate the identification of the
objects protected by this article, the Parties to the
conflict may mark them with a special sign consisting of
a group of three bright orange circles placed on the
same axis, as specified in Article 16 of Annex I to this
Protocol. The absence of such marking in no way relieves
any Party to the conflict of its obligations under this
Article.
Chapter IV
PRECAUTIONARY MEASURES
Article 57 - Precautions in attack
1. In the conduct of military operations, constant
care shall be taken to spare the civilian population,
civilians and civilian objects.
2. With respect to attacks, the following precautions
shall be taken:
(a) those who plan or decide upon an attack shall: (i)
do everything feasible to verify that the objectives to
be attacked are neither civilians nor civilian objects
and are not subject to special protection but are
military objectives within the meaning of paragraph 2 of
Article 52 and that it is not prohibited by the
provisions of this Protocol to attack them; (ii) take
all feasible precautions in the choice of means and
methods of attack with a view to avoiding, and in any
event to minimizing, incidental loss or civilian life,
injury to civilians and damage to civilian objects;
(iii) refrain from deciding to launch any attack which
may be expected to cause incidental loss of civilian
life, injury to civilians, damage to civilian objects,
or a combination thereof, which would be excessive in
relation to the concrete and direct military advantage
anticipated;
(b) an attack shall be cancelled or suspended if it
becomes apparent that the objective is not a military
one or is subject to special protection or that the
attack may be expected to cause incidental loss of
civilian life, injury to civilians, damage to civilian
objects, or a combination thereof, which would be
excessive in relation to the concrete and direct
military advantage anticipated;
(c) effective advance warning shall be given of
attacks which may affect the civilian population, unless
circumstances do not permit.
3. When a choice is possible between several military
objectives for obtaining a similar military advantage,
the objective to be selected shall be that the attack on
which may be expected to cause the least danger to
civilian lives and to civilian objects.
4. In the conduct of military operations at sea or in
the air, each Party to the conflict shall, in conformity
with its rights and duties under the rules of
international law applicable in armed conflict, take all
reasonable precautions to avoid losses of civilian lives
and damage to civilian objects.
5. No provision of this article may be construed as
authorizing any attacks against the civilian population,
civilians or civilian objects.
Article 58 - Precautions against the effects of
attacks
The Parties to the conflict shall, to the maximum
extent feasible:
(a) without prejudice to Article 49 of the Fourth
Convention, endeavour to remove the civilian population,
individual civilians and civilian objects under their
control from the vicinity of military objectives;
(b) avoid locating military objectives within or near
densely populated areas;
(c) take the other necessary precautions to protect
the civilian population, individual civilians and
civilian objects under their control against the dangers
resulting from military operations.
Chapter V
LOCALITIES AND ZONES UNDER SPECIAL PROTECTION
Article 59 - Non-defended localities
1. It is prohibited for the Parties to the conflict
to attack, by any means whatsoever, non-defended
localities.
2. The appropriate authorities of a Party to the
conflict may declare as a non-defended locality any
inhabited place near or in a zone where armed forces are
in contact which is open for occupation by an adverse
Party. Such a locality shall fulfil the following
conditions:
(a) all combatants, as well as mobile weapons and
mobile military equipment must have been evacuated;
(b) no hostile use shall be made of fixed military
installations or establishments;
(c) no acts of hostility shall be committed by the
authorities or by the population; and
(d) no activities in support of military operations
shall be undertaken.
3. The presence, in this locality, of persons
specially protected under the Conventions and this
Protocol, and of police forces retained for the sole
purpose of maintaining law and order, is not contrary to
the conditions laid down in paragraph 2.
4. The declaration made under paragraph 2 shall be
addressed to the adverse Party and shall define and
describe, as precisely as possible, the limits of the
non-defended locality. The Party to the conflict to
which the declaration is addressed shall acknowledge its
receipt and shall treat the locality as a non-defended
locality unless the conditions laid down in paragraph 2
are not in fact fulfilled, in which event it shall
immediately so inform the Party making the declaration.
Even if the conditions laid down in paragraph 2 are not
fulfilled, the locality shall continue to enjoy the
protection provided by the other provisions of this
Protocol and the other rules of international law
applicable in armed conflict.
5. The Parties to the conflict may agree on the
establishment of non-defended localities even if such
localities do not fulfil the conditions laid down in
paragraph 2. The agreement should define and describe,
as precisely as possible, the limits of the non-defended
locality; if necessary, it may lay down the methods of
supervision.
6. The Party which is in control of a locality
governed by such an agreement shall mark it, so far as
possible, by such signs as may be agreed upon with the
other Party, which shall be displayed where they are
clearly visible, especially on its perimeter and limits
and on highways.
7. A locality loses its status as a non-defended
locality when its ceases to fulfil the conditions laid
down in paragraph 2 or in the agreement referred to in
paragraph 5. In such an eventuality, the locality shall
continue to enjoy the protection provided by the other
provisions of this Protocol and the other rules of
international law applicable in armed conflict.
Article 60 - Demilitarized zones
1. It is prohibited for the Parties to the conflict
to extend their military operations to zones on which
they have conferred by agreement the status of
demilitarized zone, if such extension is contrary to the
terms of this agreement.
2. The agreement shall be an express agreement, may
be concluded verbally or in writing, either directly or
through a Protecting Power or any impartial humanitarian
organization, and may consist of reciprocal and
concordant declarations. The agreement may be concluded
in peacetime, as well as after the outbreak of
hostilities, and should define and describe, as
precisely as possible, the limits of the demilitarized
zone and, if necessary, lay down the methods of
supervision.
3. The subject of such an agreement shall normally be
any zone which fulfils the following conditions:
(a) all combatants, as well as mobile weapons and
mobile military equipment, must have been evacuated;
(b) no hostile use shall be made of fixed military
installations or establishments;
(c) no acts of hostility shall be committed by the
authorities or by the population; and
(d) any activity linked to the military effort must
have ceased.
The Parties to the conflict shall agree upon the
interpretation to be given to the condition laid down in
subparagraph (d) and upon persons to be admitted to the
demilitarized zone other than those mentioned in
paragraph 4.
4. The presence, in this zone, of persons specially
protected under the Conventions and this Protocol, and
of police forces retained for the sole purpose of
maintaining law and order, is not contrary to the
conditions laid down in paragraph 3.
5. The Party which is in control of such a zone shall
mark it, so far as possible, by such signs as may be
agreed upon with the other Party, which shall be
displayed where they are clearly visible, especially on
its perimeter and limits and on highways.
6. If the fighting draws near to a demilitarized
zone, and if the Parties to the conflict have so agreed,
none of them may use the zone for purposes related to
the conduct of military operations or unilaterally
revoke its status.
7. If one of the Parties to the conflict commits a
material breach of the provisions of paragraphs 3 or 6,
the other Party shall be released from its obligations
under the agreement conferring upon the zone the status
of demilitarized zone. In such an eventuality, the zone
loses its status but shall continue to enjoy the
protection provided by the other provisions of this
Protocol and the other rules of international law
applicable in armed conflict.
Chapter VI
CIVIL DEFENCE
Article 61 - Definitions and scope
For the purpose of this Protocol:
(1) "Civil defence" means the performance of some or
all of the undermentioned humanitarian tasks intended to
protect the civilian population against the dangers, and
to help it to recover from the immediate effects, of
hostilities or disasters and also to provide the
conditions necessary for its survival. These tasks are:
(a) warning;
(b) evacuation;
(c) management of shelters;
(d) management of blackout measures;
(e) rescue;
(f) medical services, including first aid, and
religious assistance;
(g) fire-fighting;
(h) detection and marking of danger areas;
(i) decontamination and similar protective measures;
(j) provision of emergency accommodation and
supplies;
(k) emergency assistance in the restoration and
maintenance of order in distressed areas;
(l) emergency repair of indispensable public
utilities;
(m) emergency disposal of the dead;
(n) assistance in the preservation of objects
essential for survival;
(o) complementary activities necessary to carry out
any of the tasks mentioned above, including, but not
limited to, planning and organization;
(2) "Civil defence organizations" means those
establishments and other units which are organized or
authorized by the competent authorities of a Party to
the conflict to perform any of the tasks mentioned under
(1), and which are assigned and devoted exclusively to
such tasks; (3) "Personnel" of civil defence
organizations means those persons assigned by a Party to
the conflict exclusively to the performance of the tasks
mentioned under (1), including personnel assigned by the
competent authority of that Party exclusively to the
administration of these organizations;
(4) "MatĒriel" of civil defence organizations means
equipment, supplies and transports used by these
organizations for the performance of the tasks mentioned
under (1).
Article 62 - General protection
1. Civilian civil defence organizations and their
personnel shall be respected and protected, subject to
the provisions of this Protocol, particularly the
provisions of this section. They shall be entitled to
perform their civil defence tasks except in case of
imperative military necessity.
2. The provisions of paragraph 1 shall also apply to
civilians who, although not members of civilian civil
defence organizations, respond to an appeal from the
competent authorities and perform civil defence tasks
under their control.
3. Buildings and matĒriel used for civil defence
purposes and shelters provided for the civilian
population are covered by Article 52. Objects used for
civil defence purposes may not be destroyed or diverted
from their proper use except by the Party to which they
belong.
Article 63 - Civil defence in occupied territories
1. In occupied territories, civilian civil defence
organizations shall receive from the authorities the
facilities necessary for the performance of their tasks.
In no Circumstances shall their personnel be compelled
to perform activities which would interfere with the
proper performance of these tasks. The Occupying Power
shall not change the structure or personnel of such
organizations in any way which might jeopardize the
efficient performance of their mission. These
organizations shall not be required to give priority to
the nationals or interests of that Power.
2. The Occupying Power shall not compel, coerce or
induce civilian civil defence organizations to perform
their tasks in any manner prejudicial to the interests
of the civilian population.
3. The Occupying Power may disarm civil defence
personnel for reasons of security.
4. The Occupying Power shall neither divert from
their proper use nor requisition buildings or matĒriel
belonging to or used by civil defence organizations if
such diversion or requisition would be harmful to the
civilian population.
5. Provided that the general rule in paragraph 4
continues to be observed, the Occupying Power may
requisition or divert these resources, subject to the
following particular conditions:
(a) that the buildings or matĒriel are necessary for
other needs of the civilian population; and
(b) that the requisition or diversion continues only
while such necessity exists.
6. The Occupying Power shall neither divert nor
requisition shelters provided for the use of the
civilian population or needed by such population.
Article 64 - Civilian civil defence organizations of
neutral or other States not Parties to the conflict and
international co-ordinating organizations
1. Articles 62, 63, 65 and 66 shall also apply to the
personnel and matériel of civilian civil defence
organizations of neutral or other States not Parties to
the conflict which perform civil defence tasks mentioned
in Article 61 in the territory of a Party to the
conflict, with the consent and under the control of that
Party. Notification of such assistance shall be given as
soon as possible to any adverse Party concerned. In no
circumstances shall this activity be deemed to be an
interference in the conflict. This activity should,
however, be performed with due regard to the security
interests of the Parties to the conflict concerned.
2. The Parties to the conflict receiving the
assistance referred to in paragraph 1 and the High
Contracting Parties granting it should facilitate
international co-ordination of such civil defence
actions when appropriate. In such cases the relevant
international organizations are covered by the
provisions of this Chapter.
3. In occupied territories, the Occupying Power may
only exclude or restrict the activities of civilian
civil defence organizations of neutral or other States
not Parties to the conflict and of international
co-ordinating organizations if it can ensure the
adequate performance of civil defence tasks from its own
resources or those of the occupied territory.
Article 65 - Cessation of protection
1. The protection to which civilian civil defence
organizations, their personnel, buildings, shelters and
matĒriel are entitled shall not cease unless they commit
or are used to commit, outside their proper tasks, acts
harmful to the enemy. Protection may, however, cease
only after a warning has been given setting, whenever
appropriate, a reasonable time-limit, and after such
warning has remained unheeded.
2. The following shall not be considered as acts
harmful to the enemy:
(a) that civil defence tasks are carried out under
the direction or control of military authorities;
(b) that civilian civil defence personnel co-operate
with military personnel in the performance of civil
defence tasks, or that some military personnel are
attached to civilian civil defence organizations;
(c) that the performance of civil defence tasks may
incidentally benefit military victims, particularly
those who are hors de combat.
3. It shall also not be considered as an act harmful
to the enemy that civilian civil defence personnel bear
light individual weapons for the purpose of maintaining
order or for self-defence. However, in areas where land
fighting is taking place or is likely to take place, the
Parties to the conflict shall undertake the appropriate
measures to limit these weapons to handguns, such as
pistols or revolvers, in order to assist in
distinguishing between civil defence personnel and
combatants. Although civil defence personnel bear other
light individual weapons in such areas, they shall
nevertheless be respected and protected as soon as they
have been recognized as such.
4. The formation of civilian civil defence
organizations along military lines, and compulsory
service in them, shall also not deprive them of the
protection conferred by this Chapter.
Article 66 - Identification
1. Each Party to the conflict shall endeavour to
ensure that its civil defence organizations, their
personnel, buildings and matĒriel, are identifiable
while they are exclusively devoted to the performance of
civil defence tasks. Shelters provided for the civilian
population should be similarly identifiable.
2. Each Party to the conflict shall also endeavour to
adopt and implement methods and procedures which will
make it possible to recognize civilian shelters as well
as civil defence personnel, buildings and matĒriel on
which the international distinctive sign of civil
defence is displayed.
3. In occupied territories and in areas where
fighting is taking place or is likely to take place,
civilian civil defence personnel should be recognizable
by the international distinctive sign of civil defence
and by an identity card certifying their status.
4. The international distinctive sign of civil
defence is an equilateral blue triangle on an orange
ground when used for the protection of civil defence
organizations, their personnel, buildings and matĒriel
and for civilian shelters.
5. In addition to the distinctive sign, Parties to
the conflict may agree upon the use of distinctive
signals for civil defence identification purposes.
6. The application of the provisions of paragraphs 1
to 4 is governed by Chapter V of Annex I to this
Protocol.
7. In time of peace, the sign described in paragraph
4 may, with the consent of the competent national
authorities, be used for civil defence identification
purposes.
8. The High Contracting Parties and the Parties to
the conflict shall take the measures necessary to
supervise the display of the international distinctive
sign of civil defence and to prevent and repress any
misuse thereof.
9. The identification of civil defence medical and
religious personnel, medical units and medical
transports is also governed by Article 18.
Article 67 - Members of the armed forces and military
units assigned to civil defence organizations
1. Members of the armed forces and military units
assigned to civil defence organizations shall be
respected and protected, provided that:
(a) such personnel and such units are permanently
assigned and exclusively devoted to the performance of
any of the tasks mentioned in Article 61;
(b) if so assigned, such personnel do not perform any
other military duties during the conflict;
(c) such personnel are clearly distinguishable from
the other members of the armed forces by prominently
displaying the international distinctive sign of civil
defence, which shall be as large as appropriate, and
such personnel are provided with the identity card
referred to in Chapter V of Annex I to this Protocol
certifying their status;
(d) such personnel and such units are equipped only
with light individual weapons for the purpose of
maintaining order or for self-defence. The provisions of
Article 65, paragraph 3 shall also apply in this case;
(e) such personnel do not participate directly in
hostilities, and do not commit, or are not used to
commit, outside their civil defence tasks, acts harmful
to the adverse Party
(f) such personnel and such units perform their civil
defence tasks only within the national territory of
their Party.
The non-observance of the conditions stated in (e)
above by any member of the armed forces who is bound by
the conditions prescribed in (a) and (b) above is
prohibited.
2. Military personnel serving within civil defence
organizations shall, if they fall into the power of an
adverse Party, be prisoners of war. In occupied
territory they may, but only in the interest of the
civilian population of that territory, be employed on
civil defence tasks in so far as the need arises,
provided however that, if such work is dangerous, they
volunteer for such tasks.
3. The buildings and major items of equipment and
transports of military units assigned to civil defence
organizations shall be clearly marked with the
international distinctive sign of civil defence. This
distinctive sign shall be as large as appropriate.
4. The matĒriel and buildings of military units
permanently assigned to civil defence organizations and
exclusively devoted to the performance of civil defence
tasks shall, if they fall into the hands of an adverse
Party, remain subject to the laws of war. They may not
be diverted from their civil defence purpose so long as
they are required for the performance of civil defence
tasks, except in case of imperative military necessity,
unless previous arrangements have been made for adequate
provision for the needs of the civilian population.
SECTION II
RELIEF IN FAVOUR OF THE CIVILIAN POPULATION
Article 68 - Field of application
The provisions of this Section apply to the civilian
population as defined in this Protocol and are
supplementary to Articles 23, 55, 59, 60, 61 and 62 and
other relevant provisions of the Fourth Convention.
Article 69 - Basic needs in occupied territories
1. In addition to the duties specified in Article 55
of the Fourth Convention concerning food and medical
supplies, the Occupying Power shall, to the fullest
extent of the means available to it and without any
adverse distinction, also ensure the provision of
clothing, bedding, means of shelter, other supplies
essential to the survival of the civilian population of
the occupied territory and objects necessary for
religious worship.
2. Relief actions for the benefit of the civilian
population of occupied territories are governed by
Articles 59, 60, 61, 62, 108, 109, 110 and 111 of the
Fourth Convention, and by Article 71 of this Protocol,
and shall be implemented without delay.
Article 70 - Relief actions
1. If the civilian population of any territory under
the control of a Party to the conflict, other than
occupied territory, is not adequately provided with the
supplies mentioned in Article 69, relief actions which
are humanitarian and impartial in character and
conducted without any adverse distinction shall be
undertaken, subject to the agreement of the Parties
concerned in such relief actions. Offers of such relief
shall not be regarded as interference in the armed
conflict or as unfriendly acts. In the distribution of
relief consignments, priority shall be given to those
persons, such as children, expectant mothers, maternity
cases and nursing mothers, who, under the Fourth
Convention or under this Protocol, are to be accorded
privileged treatment or special protection.
2. The Parties to the conflict and each High
Contracting Party shall allow and facilitate rapid and
unimpeded passage of all relief consignments, equipment
and personnel provided in accordance with this Section,
even if such assistance is destined for the civilian
population of the adverse Party.
3. The Parties to the conflict and each High
Contracting Party which allows the passage of relief
consignments, equipment and personnel in accordance with
paragraph 2:
(a) shall have the right to prescribe the technical
arrangements, including search, under which such passage
is permitted;
(b) may make such permission conditional on the
distribution of this assistance being made under the
local supervision of a Protecting Power;
(c) shall, in no way whatsoever, divert relief
consignments from the purpose for which they are
intended nor delay their forwarding, except in cases of
urgent necessity in the interest of the civilian
population concerned.
4. The Parties to the conflict shall protect relief
consignments and facilitate their rapid distribution.
5. The Parties to the conflict and each High
Contracting Party concerned shall encourage and
facilitate effective international co-ordination of the
relief actions referred to in paragraph 1.
Article 71 - Personnel participating in relief
actions
1. Where necessary, relief personnel may form part of
the assistance provided in any relief action, in
particular for the transportation and distribution of
relief consignments; the participation of such personnel
shall be subject to the approval of the Party in whose
territory they will carry out their duties.
2. Such personnel shall be respected and protected.
3. Each Party in receipt of relief consignments
shall, to the fullest extent practicable, assist the
relief personnel referred to in paragraph 1 in carrying
out their relief mission. Only in case of imperative
military necessity may the activities of the relief
personnel be limited or their movements temporarily
restricted.
4. Under no circumstances may relief personnel exceed
the terms of their mission under this Protocol. In
particular they shall take account of the security
requirements of the Party in whose territory they are
carrying out their duties. The mission of any of the
personnel who do not respect these conditions may be
terminated.
SECTION III
TREATMENT OF PERSONS IN THE POWER OF A PARTY TO THE
CONFLICT
Chapter I FIELD OF APPLICATION AND PROTECTION OF
PERSONS AND OBJECTS
Article 72 - Field of application
The provisions of this Section are additional to the
rules concerning humanitarian protection of civilians
and civilian objects in the power of a Party to the
conflict contained in the Fourth Convention,
particularly Parts I and III thereof, as well as to
other applicable rules of international law relating to
the protection of fundamental human rights during
international armed conflict.
Article 73 - Refugees and stateless persons
Persons who, before the beginning of hostilities,
were considered as stateless persons or refugees under
the relevant international instruments accepted by the
Parties concerned or under the national legislation of
the State of refuge or State of residence shall be
protected persons within the meaning of Parts I and III
of the Fourth Convention, in all circumstances and
without any adverse distinction.
Article 74 - Reunion of dispersed families
The High Contracting Parties and the Parties to the
conflict shall facilitate in every possible way the
reunion of families dispersed as a result of armed
conflicts and shall encourage in particular the work of
the humanitarian organizations engaged in this task in
accordance with the provisions of the Conventions and of
this Protocol and in conformity with their respective
security regulations.
Article 75 - Fundamental guarantees
1. In so far as they are affected by a situation
referred to in Article 1 of this Protocol, persons who
are in the power of a Party to the conflict and who do
not benefit from more favourable treatment under the
Conventions or under this Protocol shall be treated
humanely in all circumstances and shall enjoy, as a
minimum, the protection provided by this Article without
any adverse distinction based upon race, colour, sex,
language, religion or belief, political or other
opinion, national or social origin, wealth, birth or
other status, or on any other similar criteria. Each
Party shall respect the person, honour, convictions and
religious practices of all such persons.
2. The following acts are and shall remain prohibited
at any time and in any place whatsoever, whether
committed by civilian or by military agents:
(a) violence to the life, health, or physical or
mental well-being of persons, in particular: (i) murder;
(ii) torture of all kinds, whether physical or mental;
(iii) corporal punishment; and (iv) mutilation;
(b) outrages upon personal dignity, in particular
humiliating and degrading treatment, enforced
prostitution and any form or indecent assault; (c) the
taking of hostages;
(d) collective punishments; and
(e) threats to commit any of the foregoing acts.
3. Any person arrested, detained or interned for
actions related to the armed conflict shall be informed
promptly, in a language he understands, of the reasons
why these measures have been taken. Except in cases of
arrest or detention for penal offences, such persons
shall be released with the minimum delay possible and in
any event as soon as the circumstances justifying the
arrest, detention or internment have ceased to exist.
4. No sentence may be passed and no penalty may be
executed on a person found guilty of a penal offence
related to the armed conflict except pursuant to a
conviction pronounced by an impartial and regularly
constituted court respecting the generally recognized
principles of regular judicial procedure, which include
the following:
(a) the procedure shall provide for an accused to be
informed without delay of the particulars of the offence
alleged against him and shall afford the accused before
and during his trial all necessary rights and means of
defence;
(b) no one shall be convicted of an offence except on
the basis of individual penal responsibility;
(c) no one shall be accused or convicted of a
criminal offence on account or any act or omission which
did not constitute a criminal offence under the national
or international law to which he was subject at the time
when it was committed; nor shall a heavier penalty be
imposed than that which was applicable at the time when
the criminal offence was committed; if, after the
commission of the offence, provision is made by law for
the imposition of a lighter penalty, the offender shall
benefit thereby;
(d) anyone charged with an offence is presumed
innocent until proved guilty according to law;
(e) anyone charged with an offence shall have the
right to be tried in his presence;
(f) no one shall be compelled to testify against
himself or to confess guilt;
(g) anyone charged with an offence shall have the
right to examine, or have examined, the witnesses
against him and to obtain the attendance and examination
of witnesses on his behalf under the same conditions as
witnesses against him;
(h) no one shall be prosecuted or punished by the
same Party for an offence in respect of which a final
judgement acquitting or convicting that person has been
previously pronounced under the same law and judicial
procedure;
(i) anyone prosecuted for an offence shall have the
right to have the judgement pronounced publicly; and
(j) a convicted person shall be advised on conviction
or his judicial and other remedies and of the
time-limits within which they may be exercised.
5. Women whose liberty has been restricted for
reasons related to the armed conflict shall be held in
quarters separated from men's quarters. They shall be
under the immediate supervision of women. Nevertheless,
in cases where families are detained or interned, they
shall, whenever possible, be held in the same place and
accommodated as family units.
6. Persons who are arrested, detained or interned for
reasons related to the armed conflict shall enjoy the
protection provided by this Article until their final
release, repatriation or re-establishment, even after
the end of the armed conflict.
7. In order to avoid any doubt concerning the
prosecution and trial of persons accused of war crimes
or crimes against humanity, the following principles
shall apply:
(a) persons who are accused or such crimes should be
submitted for the purpose of prosecution and trial in
accordance with the applicable rules of international
law; and
(b) any such persons who do not benefit from more
favourable treatment under the Conventions or this
Protocol shall be accorded the treatment provided by
this Article, whether or not the crimes of which they
are accused constitute grave breaches of the Conventions
or of this Protocol.
8. No provision of this Article may be construed as
limiting or infringing any other more favourable
provision granting greater protection, under any
applicable rules of international law, to persons
covered by paragraph 1.
Chapter II MEASURES IN FAVOUR OF WOMEN AND CHILDREN
Article 76 - Protection of women
1. Women shall be the object of special respect and
shall be protected in particular against rape, forced
prostitution and any other form of indecent assault.
2. Pregnant women and mothers having dependent
infants who are arrested, detained or interned for
reasons related to the armed conflict, shall have their
cases considered with the utmost priority.
3. To the maximum extent feasible, the Parties to the
conflict shall endeavour to avoid the pronouncement of
the death penalty on pregnant women or mothers having
dependent infants, for an offence related to the armed
conflict. The death penalty for such offences shall not
be executed on such women.
Article 77 - Protection of children
1. Children shall be the object of special respect
and shall be protected against any form of indecent
assault. The Parties to the conflict shall provide them
with the care and aid they require, whether because of
their age or for any other reason.
2. The Parties to the conflict shall take all
feasible measures in order that children who have not
attained the age of fifteen years do not take a direct
part in hostilities and, in particular, they shall
refrain from recruiting them into their armed forces. In
recruiting among those persons who have attained the age
of fifteen years but who have not attained the age of
eighteen years the Parties to the conflict shall
endeavour to give priority to those who are oldest.
3. If, in exceptional cases, despite the provisions
of paragraph 2, children who have not attained the age
of fifteen years take a direct part in hostilities and
fall into the power of an adverse Party, they shall
continue to benefit from the special protection accorded
by this Article, whether or not they are prisoners of
war.
4. If arrested, detained or interned for reasons
related to the armed conflict, children shall be held in
quarters separate from the quarters of adults, except
where families are accommodated as family units as
provided in Article 75, paragraph 5.
5 . The death penalty for an offence related to the
armed conflict shall not be executed on persons who had
not attained the age of eighteen years at the time the
offence was committed.
Article 78 - Evacuation of children
1. No Party to the conflict shall arrange for the
evacuation or children, other than its own nationals, to
a foreign country except for a temporary evacuation
where compelling reasons of the health or medical
treatment of the children or, except in occupied
territory, their safety, so require. Where the parents
or legal guardians can be found, their written consent
to such evacuation is required. If these persons cannot
be found, the written consent to such evacuation of the
persons who by law or custom are primarily responsible
for the care of the children is required. Any such
evacuation shall be supervised by the Protecting Power
in agreement with the Parties concerned, namely, the
Party arranging for the evacuation, the Party receiving
the children and any Parties whose nationals are being
evacuated. In each case, all Parties to the conflict
shall take all feasible precautions to avoid endangering
the evacuation.
2. Whenever an evacuation occurs pursuant to
paragraph 1, each child's education, including his
religious and moral education as his parents desire,
shall be provided while he is away with the greatest
possible continuity.
3. With a view to facilitating the return to their
families and country of children evacuated pursuant to
this Article, the authorities of the Party arranging for
the evacuation and, as appropriate, the authorities of
the receiving country shall establish for each child a
card with photographs, which they shall send to the
Central Tracing Agency of the International Committee of
the Red Cross. Each card shall bear, whenever possible,
and whenever it involves no risk of harm to the child,
the following information:
(a) surname(s) of the child;
(b) the child's first name(s);
(c) the child's sex;
(d) the place and date of birth (or, if that date is
not known, the approximate age);
(e) the father's full name;
(f) the mother's full name and her maiden name;
(g) the child's next-of-kin;
(h) the child's nationality;
(i) the child's native language, and any other
languages he speaks;
(j) the address of the child's family;
(k) any identification number for the child;
(l) the child's state of health;
(m) the child's blood group;
(n) any distinguishing features;
(o) the date on which and the place where the child
was found;
(p) the date on which and the place from which the
child left the country;
(q) the child's religion, if any;
(r) the child's present address in the receiving
country;
(s) should the child die before his return, the date,
place and circumstances of death and place of interment.
Chapter III
JOURNALISTS
Article 79 - Measures or protection for journalists
1. Journalists engaged in dangerous professional
missions in areas of armed conflict shall be considered
as civilians within the meaning of Article 50, paragraph
1.
2. They shall be protected as such under the
Conventions and this Protocol, provided that they take
no action adversely affecting their status as civilians,
and without prejudice to the right of war correspondents
accredited to the armed forces to the status provided
for in Article 4 (A) (4) of the Third Convention.
3. They may obtain an identity card similar to the
model in Annex II of this Protocol. This card, which
shall be issued by the government of the State of which
the Journalist is a national or in whose territory he
resides or in which the news medium employing him is
located, shall attest to his status as a journalist.
PART V
EXECUTION OF THE CONVENTIONS AND OF THIS PROTOCOL
SECTION I
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Article 80 - Measures for execution
1. The High Contracting Parties and the Parties to
the conflict shall without delay take all necessary
measures for the execution of their obligations under
the Conventions and this Protocol.
2. The High Contracting Parties and the Parties to
the conflict shall give orders and instructions to
ensure observance of the Conventions and this Protocol,
and shall supervise their execution.
Article 81 - Activities of the Red Cross and other
humanitarian organizations
1. The Parties to the conflict shall grant to the
International Committee of the Red Cross all facilities,
within their power so as to enable it to carry out the
humanitarian functions assigned to it by the Conventions
and this Protocol in order to ensure protection and
assistance to the victims of conflicts; the
International Committee of the Red Cross may also carry
out any other humanitarian activities in favour of these
victims, subject to the consent of the Parties to the
conflict concerned.
2. The Parties to the conflict shall grant to their
respective Red Cross (Red Crescent, Red Lion and Sun)
organizations the facilities necessary for carrying out
their humanitarian activities in favour of the victims
of the conflict, in accordance with the provisions of
the Conventions and this Protocol and the fundamental
principles of the Red Cross as formulated by the
International Conferences of the Red Cross.
3. The High Contracting Parties and the Parties to
the conflict shall facilitate in every possible way the
assistance which Red Cross (Red Crescent, Red Lion and
Sun) organizations and the League of Red Cross Societies
extend to the victims of conflicts in accordance with
the provisions of the Conventions and this Protocol and
with the fundamental principles of the red Cross as
formulated by the International Conferences of the Red
Cross.
4. The High Contracting Parties and the Parties to
the conflict shall, as far as possible, make facilities
similar to those mentioned in paragraphs 2 and 3
available to the other humanitarian organizations
referred to in the Conventions and this Protocol which
are duly authorized by the respective Parties to the
conflict and which perform their humanitarian activities
in accordance with the provisions of the Conventions and
this Protocol.
Article 82 - Legal advisers in armed forces
The High Contracting Parties at all times, and the
Parties to the conflict in time of armed conflict, shall
ensure that legal advisers are available, when
necessary, to advise military commanders at the
appropriate level on the application of the Conventions
and this Protocol and on the appropriate instruction to
be given to the armed forces on this subject.
Article 83 - Dissemination
1. The High Contracting Parties undertake, in time of
peace as in time of armed conflict, to disseminate the
Conventions and this Protocol as widely as possible in
their respective countries and, in particular, to
include the study thereof in their programmes of
military instruction and to encourage the study thereof
by the civilian population, so that those instruments
may become known to the armed forces and to the civilian
population.
2. Any military or civilian authorities who, in time
of armed conflict, assume responsibilities in respect of
the application of the Conventions and this Protocol
shall be fully acquainted with the text thereof.
Article 84 - Rules of application
The High Contracting Parties shall communicate to one
another, as soon as possible, through the depositary
and, as appropriate, through the Protecting Powers,
their official translations of this Protocol, as well as
the laws and regulations which they may adopt to ensure
its application.
SECTION II
REPRESSION OF BREACHES OF THE CONVENTIONS AND OF THIS
PROTOCOL
Article 85 - Repression of breaches of this Protocol
1. The provisions of the Conventions relating to the
repression of breaches and grave breaches, supplemented
by this Section, shall apply to the repression of
breaches and grave breaches of this Protocol.
2. Acts described as grave breaches in the
Conventions are grave breaches of this Protocol if
committed against persons in the power of an adverse
Party protected by Articles 44, 45 and 73 of this
Protocol, or against the wounded, sick and shipwrecked
of the adverse Party who are protected by this Protocol,
or against those medical or religious personnel, medical
units or medical transports which are under the control
of the adverse Party and are protected by this Protocol.
3. In addition to the grave breaches defined in
Article 11, the following acts shall be regarded as
grave breaches of this Protocol, when committed
wilfully, in violation of the relevant provisions of
this Protocol, and causing death or serious injury to
body or health:
(a) making the civilian population or individual
civilians the object of attack;
(b) launching an indiscriminate attack affecting the
civilian population or civilian objects in the knowledge
that such attack will cause excessive loss of life,
injury to civilians or damage to civilian objects, as
defined in Article 57, paragraph 2 (a)(iii);
(c) launching an attack against works or
installations containing dangerous forces in the
knowledge that such attack will cause excessive loss of
life, injury to civilians or damage to civilian objects,
as defined in Article 57, paragraph 2 (a)(iii);
(d) making non-defended localities and demilitarized
zones the object of attack;
(e) making a person the object of attack in the
knowledge that he is hors de combat;
(f) the perfidious use, in violation of Article 37,
of the distinctive emblem of the red cross, red crescent
or red lion and sun or of other protective signs
recognized by the Conventions or this Protocol.
4. In addition to the grave breaches defined in the
preceding paragraphs and in the Conventions, the
following shall be regarded as grave breaches of this
Protocol, when committed wilfully and in violation of
the Conventions or the Protocol:
(a) the transfer by the occupying Power of parts of
its own civilian population into the territory it
occupies, or the deportation or transfer of all or parts
of the population of the occupied territory within or
outside this territory, in violation of Article 49 of
the Fourth Convention;
(b) unjustifiable delay in the repatriation of
prisoners of war or civilians;
(c) practices of apartheid and other inhuman and
degrading practices involving outrages upon personal
dignity, based on racial discrimination;
(d) making the clearly-recognized historic monuments,
works of art or places of worship which constitute the
cultural or spiritual heritage of peoples and to which
special protection has been given by special
arrangement, for example, within the framework of a
competent international organization, the object of
attack, causing as a result extensive destruction
thereof, where there is no evidence of the violation by
the adverse Party of Article 53, subparagraph (b), and
when such historic monuments, works of art and places of
worship are not located in the immediate proximity of
military objectives;
(e) depriving a person protected by the Conventions
or referred to in paragraph 2 or this Article of the
rights of fair and regular trial.
5. Without prejudice to the application of the
Conventions and of this Protocol, grave breaches of
these instruments shall be regarded as war crimes.
Article 86 - Failure to act
1. The High Contracting Parties and the Parties to
the conflict shall repress grave breaches, and take
measures necessary to suppress all other breaches, of
the Conventions or of this Protocol which result from a
failure to act when under a duty to do so.
2. The fact that a breach of the Conventions or of
this Protocol was committed by a subordinate does not
absolve his superiors from penal disciplinary
responsibility, as the case may be, if they knew, or had
information which should have enabled them to conclude
in the circumstances at the time, that he was committing
or was going to commit such a breach and if they did not
take all feasible measures within their power to prevent
or repress the breach.
Article 87 - Duty of commanders
1. The High Contracting Parties and the Parties to
the conflict shall require military commanders, with
respect to members of the armed forces under their
command and other persons under their control, to
prevent and, where necessary, to suppress and to report
to competent authorities breaches of the Conventions and
of this Protocol.
2. In order to prevent and suppress breaches, High
Contracting Parties and Parties to the conflict shall
require that, commensurate with their level of
responsibility, commanders ensure that members of the
armed forces under their command are aware of their
obligations under the Conventions and this Protocol.
3. The High Contracting Parties and Parties to the
conflict shall require any commander who is aware that
subordinates or other persons under his control are
going to commit or have committed a breach of the
Conventions or of this Protocol, to initiate such steps
as are necessary to prevent such violations of the
Conventions or this Protocol, and, where appropriate, to
initiate disciplinary or penal action against violators
thereof.
Article 88 - Mutual assistance in criminal matters
1. The High Contracting Parties shall afford one
another the greatest measure of assistance in connexion
with criminal proceedings brought in respect of grave
breaches of the Conventions or of this Protocol.
2. Subject to the rights and obligations established
in the Conventions and in Article 85, paragraph 1 of
this Protocol, and when circumstances permit, the High
Contracting Parties shall co-operate in the matter of
extradition. They shall give due consideration to the
request of the State in whose territory the alleged
offence has occurred.
3. The law of the High Contracting Party requested
shall apply in all cases. The provisions of the
preceding paragraphs shall not, however, affect the
obligations arising from the provisions of any other
treaty of a bilateral or multilateral nature which
governs or will govern the whole or part of the subject
of mutual assistance in criminal matters.
Article 89 - Co-operation
In situations of serious violations or the
Conventions or of this Protocol, the High Contracting
Parties undertake to act jointly or individually, in
co-operation with the United Nations and in conformity
with the United Nations Charter.
Article 90 - International Fact-Finding Commission
1. (a) An International Fact-Finding Commission
(hereinafter referred to as "the Commission") consisting
of 15 members of high moral standing and acknowledged
impartiality shall be established;
(b) When not less than 20 High Contracting Parties
have agreed to accept the competence of the Commission
pursuant to paragraph 2, the depositary shall then, and
at intervals of five years thereafter, convene a meeting
of representatives of those High Contracting Parties for
the purpose of electing the members of the Commission.
At the meeting, the representatives shall elect the
members of the Commission by secret ballot from a list
of persons to which each of those High Contracting
Parties may nominate one person;
(c) The members of the Commission shall serve in
their personal capacity and shall hold office until the
election of new members at the ensuing meeting;
(d) At the election, the High Contracting Parties
shall ensure that the persons to be elected to the
Commission individually possess the qualifications
required and that, in the Commission as a whole,
equitable geographical representation is assured;
(e) In the case of a casual vacancy, the Commission
itself shall fill the vacancy, having due regard to the
provisions of the preceding subparagraphs;
(f) The depositary shall make available to the
Commission the necessary administrative facilities for
the performance of its functions.
2. (a) The High Contracting Parties may at the time
of signing, ratifying or acceding to the Protocol, or at
any other subsequent time, declare that they recognize
ipso facto and without special agreement, in relation to
any other High Contracting Party accepting the same
obligation, the competence of the Commission to inquire
into allegations by such other Party, as authorized by
this Article;
(b) The declarations referred to above shall be
deposited with the depositary, which shall transmit
copies thereof to the High Contracting Parties;
(c) The Commission shall be competent to: (i) inquire
into any facts alleged to be a grave breach as defined
in the Conventions and this Protocol or other serious
violation of the Conventions or of this Protocol; (ii)
facilitate, through its good offices, the restoration of
an attitude of respect for the Conventions and this
Protocol;
(d) In other situations, the Commission shall
institute an inquiry at the request of a Party to the
conflict only with the consent of the other Party or
Parties concerned;
(e) Subject to the foregoing provisions or this
paragraph, the provisions of Article 52 of the First
Convention, Article 53 of the Second Convention, Article
132 or the Third Convention and Article 149 of the
Fourth Convention shall continue to apply to any alleged
violation of the Conventions and shall extend to any
alleged violation of this Protocol.
3. (a) Unless otherwise agreed by the Parties
concerned, all inquiries shall be undertaken by a
Chamber consisting of seven members appointed as
follows: (i) five members of the Commission, not
nationals of any Party to the conflict, appointed by the
President of the Commission on the basis of equitable
representation of the geographical areas, after
consultation with the Parties to the conflict; (ii) two
ad hoc members, not nationals of any Party to the
conflict, one to be appointed by each side;
(b) Upon receipt of the request for an inquiry, the
President of the Commission shall specify an appropriate
time-limit for setting up a Chamber. If any ad hoc
member has not been appointed within the time-limit, the
President shall immediately appoint such additional
member or members of the Commission as may be necessary
to complete the membership of the Chamber.
4. (a) The Chamber set up under paragraph 3 to
undertake an inquiry shall invite the Parties to the
conflict to assist it and to present evidence. The
Chamber may also seek such other evidence as it deems
appropriate and may carry out an investigation of the
situation in loco;
(b) All evidence shall be fully disclosed to the
Parties, which shall have the right to comment on it to
the Commission;
(c) Each Party shall have the right to challenge such
evidence.
5. (a) The Commission shall submit to the Parties a
report on the findings of fact of the Chamber, with such
recommendations as it may deem appropriate;
(b) If the Chamber is unable to secure sufficient
evidence for factual and impartial findings, the
Commission shall state the reasons for that inability;
(c) The Commission shall not report its findings
publicly, unless all the Parties to the conflict have
requested the Commission to do so.
6. The Commission shall establish its own rules,
including rules for the presidency or the Commission and
the presidency of the Chamber. Those rules shall ensure
that the functions of the President of the Commission
are exercised at all times and that, in the case of an
inquiry, they are exercised by a person who is not a
national of a Party to the conflict.
7. The administrative expenses of the Commission
shall be met by contributions from the High Contracting
Parties which made declarations under paragraph 2, and
by voluntary contributions. The Party or Parties to the
conflict requesting an inquiry shall advance the
necessary funds for expenses incurred by a Chamber and
shall be reimbursed by the Party or Parties against
which the allegations are made to the extent of 50 per
cent of the costs of the Chamber. Where there are
counter-allegations before the Chamber each side shall
advance 50 per cent of the necessary funds.
Article 91 - Responsibility
A Party to the conflict which violates the provisions
of the Conventions or of this Protocol shall, if the
case demands, be liable to pay compensation. It shall be
responsible for all acts committed by persons forming
part of its armed forces.
PART VI
FINAL PROVISIONS
Article 92 - Signature
This Protocol shall be open for signature by the
Parties to the Conventions six months after the signing
of the Final Act and will remain open for a period or
twelve months.
Article 93 - Ratification
This Protocol shall be ratified as soon as possible.
The instruments of ratification shall be deposited with
the Swiss Federal Council, depositary of the
Conventions.
Article 94 - Accession
This Protocol shall be open for accession by any
Party to the Conventions which has not signed it. The
instruments of accession shall be deposited with the
depositary.
Article 95 - Entry into force
1. This Protocol shall enter-into force six months
after two instruments of ratification or accession have
been deposited.
2. For each Party to the Conventions thereafter
ratifying or acceding to this Protocol, it shall enter
into force six months after the deposit by such Party of
its instrument of ratification or accession.
Article 96 - Treaty relations upon entry into force
or this Protocol
1. When the Parties to the Conventions are also
Parties to this Protocol, the Conventions shall apply as
supplemented by this Protocol.
2. When one of the Parties to the conflict is not
bound by this Protocol, the Parties to the Protocol
shall remain bound by it in their mutual relations. They
shall furthermore be bound by this Protocol in relation
to each of the Parties which are not bound by it, if the
latter accepts and applies the provisions thereof.
3. The authority representing a people engaged
against a High Contracting Party in an armed conflict of
the type referred to in Article 1, paragraph 4, may
undertake to apply the Conventions and this Protocol in
relation to that conflict by means of a unilateral
declaration addressed to the depositary. Such
declaration shall, upon its receipt by the depositary,
have in relation to that conflict the following effects:
(a) the Conventions and this Protocol are brought
into force for the said authority as a Party to the
conflict with immediate effect;
(b) the said authority assumes the same rights and
obligations as those which have been assumed by a High
Contracting Party to the Conventions and this Protocol;
and
(c) the Conventions and this Protocol are equally
binding upon all Parties to the conflict.
Article 97 - Amendment
1. Any High Contracting Party may propose amendments
to this Protocol. The text of any proposed amendment
shall be communicated to the depositary, which shall
decide, after consultation with all the High Contracting
Parties and the International Committee of the Red
Cross, whether a conference should be convened to
consider the proposed amendment.
2. The depositary shall invite to that conference all
the High Contracting Parties as well as the Parties to
the Conventions, whether or not they are signatories or
this Protocol.
Article 98 - Revision of Annex I
1. Not later than four years after the entry into
force of this Protocol and thereafter at intervals of
not less than four years, the International Committee of
the Red Cross shall consult the High Contracting Parties
concerning Annex I to this Protocol and, if it considers
it necessary, may propose a meeting of technical experts
to review Annex I and to propose such amendments to it
as may appear to be desirable. Unless, within six months
of the communication of a proposal for such a meeting to
the High Contracting Parties, one third of them object,
the International Committee of the Red Cross shall
convene the meeting, inviting also observers of
appropriate international organizations. Such a meeting
shall also be convened by the International Committee of
the Red Cross at any time at the request of one third of
the High Contracting Parties.
2. The depositary shall convene a conference of the
High Contracting Parties and the Parties to the
Conventions to consider amendments proposed by the
meeting of technical experts if, after that meeting, the
International Committee of the Red Cross or one third of
the High Contracting Parties so request.
3. Amendments to Annex I may be adopted at such a
conference by a two-thirds majority of the High
Contracting Parties present and voting.
4. The depositary shall communicate any amendment so
adopted to the High Contracting Parties and to the
Parties to the Conventions. The amendment shall be
considered to have been accepted at the end of a period
of one year after it has been so communicated, unless
within that period a declaration of non-acceptance of
the amendment has been communicated to the depositary by
not less than one third of the High Contracting Parties.
5. An amendment considered to have been accepted in
accordance with paragraph 4 shall enter into force three
months after its acceptance for all High Contracting
Parties other than those which have made a declaration
of non-acceptance in accordance with that paragraph. Any
Party making such a declaration may at any time withdraw
it and the amendment shall then enter into force for
that Party three months thereafter.
6. The depositary shall notify the High Contracting
Parties and the Parties to the Conventions of the entry
into force of any amendment, of the Parties bound
thereby, of the date of its entry into force in relation
to each Party, of declarations of non-acceptance made in
accordance with paragraph 4, and of withdrawals of such
declarations. Article 99 - Denunciation
1. In case a High Contracting Party should denounce
this Protocol, the denunciation shall only take effect
one year after receipt of the instrument of
denunciation. If, however, on the expiry of that year
the denouncing Party is engaged in one of the situations
referred to in Article I, the denunciation shall not
take effect before the end of the armed conflict or
occupation and not, in any case, before operations
connected with the final release, repatriation or
re-establishment of the persons protected by the
Convention or this Protocol have been terminated.
2. The denunciation shall be notified in writing to
the depositary, which shall transmit it to all the High
Contracting Parties.
3. The denunciation shall have effect only in respect
of the denouncing Party.
4. Any denunciation under paragraph 1 shall not
affect the obligations already incurred, by reason of
the armed conflict, under this Protocol by such
denouncing Party in respect of any act committed before
this denunciation becomes effective.
Article 100 - Notifications
The depositary shall inform the High Contracting
Parties as well as the Parties to the Conventions,
whether or not they are signatories of this Protocol,
of:
(a) signatures affixed to this Protocol and the
deposit of instruments of ratification and accession
under Articles 93 and 94;
(b) the date of entry into force of this Protocol
under Article 95;
(c) communications and declarations received under
Articles 84, 90 and 97;
(d) declarations received under Article 96, paragraph
3, which shall be communicated by the quickest methods;
and
(e) denunciations under Article 99.
Article 101 - Registration
1. After its entry into force, this Protocol shall be
transmitted by the depositary to the Secretariat of the
United Nations for registration and publication, in
accordance with Article 102 of the Charter of the United
Nations.
2. The depositary shall also inform the Secretariat
of the United Nations of all ratifications, accessions
and denunciations received by it with respect to this
Protocol.
Article 102 - Authentic texts
The original of this Protocol, of which the Arabic,
Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish texts are
equally authentic, shall be deposited with the
depositary, which shall transmit certified true copies
thereof to all the Parties to the Conventions.