Page:Lltreaties-ustbv001.pdf/481

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
MOROCCO (GENERAL ACT OF ALGECIRAS)—APRIL 7, 1906

Regulations drawn up in the manner indicated by the first paragraph of this article shall determine the number of such retail shops which may be opened at Tangier and, if occasion arises, in the ports that may be later designated. They shall fix the formalities to be imposed on the importation of explosives intended for industry and public works, of arms and ammunition intended to supply such shops, as well as the maximum quantity of stock that can be kept.

In case of the violation of the regulating ordinances, the license may be temporarily or permanently withdrawn without prejudice to other penalties incurred by the offenders.

Art. 19. Every introduction of, or attempt to introduce, the prohibited merchandise shall make it liable to confiscation, and further to the punishments and fines mentioned below, which shall be pronounced by the competent jurisdiction.

Art. 20. The introduction or attempt to introduce in a port open to commerce, or through a customhouse, shall be punished:

1o. By a fine of from 500 to 2,000 pesetas and an additional fine equal to three times the value of the imported merchandise;
2o. By imprisonment of from five days to a year, or else by only one of these two punishments.

Art. 21. The introduction or attempt to introduce outside a port open to commerce or a customhouse shall be punished:

1o. By a fine of from 1,000 to 5,000 pesetas and an additional fine equal to three times the value of the imported merchandise;
2o. By imprisonment of from three months to two years, or else by only one of these two punishments.

Art. 22. The fraudulent sale, the receiving and peddling, of merchandise prohibited by the present regulations shall be punished according to the penalties specified in article 20.

Art. 23. The accomplices in the offenses set forth in articles 20, 21, and 22 shall be liable to the same penalties as the principals. The elements determining complicity shall be adjudged according to the laws of the court in charge of the case.

Art. 24. When there is good reason to suppose that a vessel anchored in a port open to commerce carries guns, ammunition, or other prohibited merchandise, with a view of introducing the same into Morocco, the officers of the Shereefian customs shall so inform the competent consular authority, in order that the latter may carry out, in company with a delegate of the Shereefian customs, such investigations, verifications, or searches as may be judged necessary.