Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 47 Part 2.djvu/370

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

1976 PAN AMERICAN CONSULAR CONVENTION. FEB . 20, 1928. February 20, 1928. Oonvention between the United States of America and other American Republics relating to the duties, rights, prerogatives and immunities of con.sular agents. Signed at Habana, February 20, 1928; ratification advised by the Senate, January 22, 1932; ratified by the President, February 1, 1932; ratification Qf the United States oj America deposited with the Pan American [/nion, February 8,1932; proclaimed by the President, February 11,1932. By THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. A PROCLAMATION ~?~~.ardTarmstroBot (talk)· pre- WHEREAS, a convention relating to the duties, rights, prerogatives ITTarmstroBot (talk) 20:31, 11 June 2014 (UTC)es and l=uni· and immunities of consular agents was adopted by the plenipoten- Preamble. tiaries of the United States of America, Peru, Uruguay, Panama, Ecuador, Mexico, EI Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Bolivia, Vene- zuela (with a reservation), Colombia, Honduras, Costa Rica, Chile, Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Haiti, Dominican Republic and Cuba at the Sixth International Conference of American States, which assembled at Habana, Cuba, from January 16 to February 20, 1928, the English text of which convention, as contained iu the final act signed by the plenipotentiaries of the said states at the closing session of the said conference, is word for word as follows: Oontractlng Powers. Plenipotentiaries. CONVENTION [Consular Agents] The government.CJ of the Republics represented at the Sixth Inter- national Conference of American States, held in the city of Habana, Re{>ublic of Cuba, in the year nineteen hundred and twenty-eight, deSirOUS of defining the duties, rights, prerogatives and immunities of consular agents, in accordance with the usages and agreements on the matter; Have decided to conclude a convention to that end and have ap- pointed the following plenipotentiaries: Peru: JesUs Mel<Iuiades Salazar, Victor Maurtua, Enrique Castro OYl!nguren, Luis Ernesto Denegri. Uruguay: Jacobo Varela Acevedo, Juan Jose Amezaga, Leonel Aguirre, Pedro Erasmo Callorda. Panama: Ricardo J. Alfaro, Eduardo Chiari. Ecuador: Gonzalo Zaldumbide, Victor Zevallos, Co16n Eloy Alfaro. Mexico: Julio Garcia, Fernando Gonz8.lez Roa, Salvador Urbina, Aquiles Elorduy. Salvador: Gustavo Guerrero, Hector David C:tStro, Eduardo Alvarez. Guatemala: Carlos Salazar, Bernardo Alvarado Tello, Luis Bel- tranena, Jose Azurdia.