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UNITED KINGDOM
STATUTORY INSTRUMENT
GN 533/1990
THE IRAQ AND KUWAIT
(UNITED NATIONS SANCTIONS)
(DEPENDENT TERRITORIES) ORDER 1990
ARRANGEMENT OF
ARTICLES
1 Citation and
Commence ment, Extent and Inter pretation
2 Importation of
Goods into the Territory
3 Exportation of
Goods from Iraq or Kuwait
4 Supply of goods
to Iraq and Kuwait
5 Application of
Articles 3 and 4
6 Exportation of
Certain Goods from the Territory
7 Carriage of
certain goods exported from or destined for Iraq or Kuwait
8 Investigation,
etc of sus pected British ships and aircraft
9 Obtaining of
evidence and information
10 Penalties and
Proceedings
11 Exercise of
powers of the Governor of the Territory
12 Miscellaneous
SCHEDULE 1
Evidence and Information
SCHEDULE 2
TERRITORIES TO WHICH THE ORDER EXTENDS
Whereas under Article
41 of the Charter of the United Nations the Security Council of the United
Nations have, by a resolution adopted
on 6th August 1990, called upon Her
Majesty's Government in the United Kingdom and all other States to apply
certain measures to
give effect to a decision of that Council in relation to
the situation between Iraq and Kuwait.
Now therefore Her
Majesty, in exercise of the powers conferred on Her by Section 1 of the United
Nations Act 1946, is pleased, by
and with the advice of Her Privy Council, to
order, and it is hereby ordered, as follows:—
Citation and
Commencement, Extent and Interpretation
1 (1) This
Order may be cited as the Iraq and Kuwait (United Nations Sanctions)(Dependent
Territories) Order 1990.
(2) This Order shall come into force on the 9th
August 1990.
(3) (a) This
Order shall extend to the territories listed in Schedule 2 to this Order.
(b) In the application of this Order to any of the
said terri tories the expression "the Territory" in this Order means
that
territory.
(4) In this Order the following expressions have
the meanings hereby respectively assigned to them, that is to say:—
"commander",
in relation to an aircraft, means the person des ignated as commander of the
aircraft by the operator thereof,
and in cludes any person who is for the time
being in charge of command of the aircraft;
"Governor",
means the Governor or other officer administering the government of the
Territory.
"Land transport
vehicle" includes a barge;
"master", in
relation to a ship, includes any person (other than a pilot) for the time being
in charge of the ship;
"operator",
in relation to an aircraft or to a land transport vehi cle, means the person
for the time being having the
management of the aircraft or the vehicle;
"owner",
where the owner of a ship is not the operator, means the operator and any
person to whom it is chartered; and
"person in Iraq
or Kuwait" includes any body constituted or in corporated under the law of
Iraq or Kuwait and any body
carrying on business (whether within Iraq or Kuwait
or not) which is controlled by persons or bodies resident in Iraq or Kuwait
or
constituted or incorpo rated as aforesaid.
Importation of
Goods into the Territory
2 (1) Except
under the authority of a licence granted by the Gov ernor or specified in
Article 2(1) of the Iraq and Kuwait (United Nations
Sanctions) Order 1990 any
goods exported from either Iraq or Kuwait after the 6th August 1990 are
prohibited from being imported
into the Territory.
(2) Any person who imports any goods into the
Territory in contravention of paragraph 1 of this Article shall be guilty of an
offence.
(3) Nothing in this Article shall be construed
so as to prejudice any other provision of law prohibiting or restricting the
importation
of goods into the Territory.
Exportation of
Goods from Iraq or Kuwait
3 (1) Except
under the authority of a licence granted under Ar ticle 2(1) of the Iraq and
Kuwait (United Nations Sanctions) Order 1990
no person shall—
(a) make or carry out any contract for the exportation
of any goods from either Iraq or Kuwait;
(b) make or carry out any contract for the sale of
any goods which he intends or has reason to believe that another person intends
to
export from either Iraq or Kuwait; or
(c) do any act which would promote or is calculated
to promote the exportation of any goods from either Iraq or Kuwait.
(2) No person shall deal in any goods that have
been exported from Iraq or Kuwait after the 6th August 1990, that is to say,
shall,
by way of trade or otherwise for gain, acquire or dispose of such goods
or of any property or interest in them or any right to or
charge upon them or
process them or do any act calculated to promote any such acquisition, disposal
or processing by himself or
any other person.
provided that the aforesaid prohibition shall not apply, if a licence
has been granted under paragraph (1) of this Article and is
in force, to any
dealing author ised by the said licence.
Supply of goods
to Iraq and Kuwait
4 Except under the authority of a
licence granted by the Governor under this Order or under the Export of Goods
(Control)(Iraq and
Kuwait Sanctions) Order 1990 no person shall—
(a) supply or deliver or agree to supply or deliver
to or to the order of any person in either Iraq or Kuwait any goods that are
not
in either country;
(b) Supply or deliver or agree to supply or deliver
any such goods to any person, knowing or having reasonable cause to believe
that
they will be supplied or delivered to or to the order of a person in
either Iraq or Kuwait or that they will be used for the purposes
of any
business carried on in or operated from Iraq or Kuwait; or
(c) do any act calculated to promote the supply or
delivery of any goods to any person in Iraq or Kuwait or for the purpose of any
business
carried on in Iraq or Kuwait in contravention of the foregoing
provisions of this para graph.
Application of
Articles 3 and 4
5 (1) The
provisions of Articles 3 and 4 shall apply to any person within the Territory
to which this Order extends and to any person
elsewhere who:
(a) is a British citizen, a British Dependent
Territories citi zen, a British overseas citizen, or a British protected person
and is
ordinarily resident in the territory; or
(b) is a body incorporated or constituted under the
law of the Territory.
(2) Any person specified in paragraph 1 of this
Article who contravenes the provisions of Article 3(1) or (2) or article 4
shall be
guilty of an offence.
Exportation of
Certain goods from the Territory
6 (1) Except
under the authority of a licence specified in Article 4 of this order all goods
are prohibited from being exported to Iraq
or Kuwait.
(2) Any person who exports any goods from the
Territory in contravention of paragraph (1) of this Article shall be guilty of
an offence
against this Order.
(3) Nothing in this Article shall be construed
so as to prejudice any other provision of law prohibiting or restricting the
exportation
of goods from the Territory.
Carriage of certain
goods exported from or destined from Iraq or Kuwait
7 (1) Without
prejudice to the generality of Article 3 of this order, no ship or aircraft to
which this Article applies and no land transport
vehicle within the Territory
shall be used for the carriage of any goods if those goods are being or have
been exported from Iraq
or Kuwait in contravention of Article 3 of this Order.
(2) Without prejudice to the generality of
Article 4 of this Or der, no ship or aircraft to which this Article applies and
any land
trans port vehicle within the Territory shall be used for the carriage
of any goods if the carriage is, or forms part of, carriage
from any place
outside Iraq or Kuwait to any destination therein or to any person for the pur poses
of any business carried on
in or operated from Iraq or Kuwait.
(3) This Article applies to British ships registered
in the Terri tory, to aircraft so registered and to any other ship or aircraft
that is for the time being chartered to any person who is—
(a) a British citizen, a British Dependent
Territories citizen, a British Overseas citizen or a British protected person
and is ordinarily
resident in the Territory; or
(b) a body incorporated or constituted under the
law of the Territory.
(4) If any ship, aircraft or land transport
vehicle is used in contravention of paragraph (1) of this Article, then each of
the following
paragraph—
(a) in the case of the British ship registered in
the Territory, or any aircraft so registered, the owner and master of the ship
or,
as the case may be, the operator and the commander of the aircraft; or
(b) in the case of any other ship or aircraft, the
person to whom the ship or aircraft is for the time being chartered and, if he
is
such a person as is referred to in sub-para graph (a) or sub-paragraph (b)
of paragraph (3) of this Article, the master of the ship
or, as the case may
be, the operator and the commander of the aircraft; or
(c) in the case of a land transport vehicle, the
operator of the vehicle;
shall be guilty of
an offence against the Order unless he proves that he did not know and had no
reason to suppose that the goods
were being or had been exported from Iraq or
Kuwait in contravention of Article 2(1) of this Order.
(5) If any ship, aircraft or land transport
vehicle is used in contravention of paragraph (2) of this Article, then—
(a) in the case of the British ship registered in
the Territory, or any aircraft so registered, the owner and the master of the
ship
or, as the case may be, the operator and the commander of the aircraft; or
(b) in the case of any other ship or aircraft, the
person to whom the ship or aircraft is for the time being chartered and, if he
is
such a person as is referred to in sub-para graph (a) or sub-paragraph (b)
of paragraph (3) of this Article, the master of the ship
or, as the case may
be, the operator and the commander of the aircraft; or
(c) in the case of a land transport vehicle, the
operator of the vehicle,
shall be guilty of
an offence against this order unless he proves that he did not know and had no
reason to suppose that the carriage
of the goods in question was, or formed
part of carriage from any place outside Iraq or Kuwait to any destination
therein or to
any person fro the pur poses of any business carried on in or
operated from Iraq or Kuwait.
(6) Nothing in this Article applies to goods in
respect of which a licence granted by the Secretary of State or the Governor is
in force
under:
(a) Article 2(1) of this Order; or
(b) Article 3 of this Order.
(7) Nothing in this Article shall be construed
so as to prejudice any other provision of law prohibiting or restricting the
use of ships,
air craft or land transport vehicles.
Investigation,
etc of suspected British ships and aircraft
8 (1) Where
any authorised officer, that is to say, any such offi cer as is referred to in
section 692(1) of the Merchant Shipping Act
1894, has reason to suspect that
any British ship registered in the United Kingdom or in any other country or
place to which this
Order extends has been or is being or is about to be used
in contravention of paragraph (1) or paragraph (2) of Article 5 of the
Order,
he may (either alone or accompanied and assisted by persons under his
authority) board the ship and search her and, for
that purpose, may use or au thorise
the use of reasonable force, and he may request the master of the ship to
furnish such information
relating to the ship and her cargo and produce for his
inspection such documents so relating and such cargo as he may specify; and
an
authorised officer (either there and then or upon consideration of any
information furnished or document or cargo produced in
pursuance of such
request) may, in the case of a ship that is reasonable suspected of being or of
being about to be used in contravention
of Article 5(2) of this order, exercise
the following further powers with a view to the prevention of the commission
(or the contin
ued commission) of any such contravention or in order that
enquiries into the matter be pursued, that is to say, he may either direct
the
master to refrain, except with the consent of an authorised officer, from
landing at any port specified by the officer any
part of the ship's cargo that
is so specified or request the master to take an one or more of the following
steps:—
(a) to cause the ship not to proceed with the
voyage on which she is then engaged or about to engage until the master is notified
by
any authorised officer that the ship may so proceed;
(b) if the ship is then in a port in the United
Kingdom or in any other country or place to which this Order extends, to cause
her to
remain there until the master is notified by any authorised officer that
the ship may depart;
(c) if the ship is then in any other place, to take
her to any such port specified by the officer and to cause her to remain there
until
the master is notified as mentioned in sub-paragraph (b) of this
paragraph and
(d) to take her to any other destination that may
be speci fied by the officer in agreement with the master;
and the master
shall comply with any such request or direction.
(2) Without prejudice to the provisions of
paragraph (8) of this Article, where a master refuses or fails to comply with a
request made
under this Article that his ship shall or shall not proceed to or
from any place or where an authorised officer otherwise has reason
to suspect
that such a request that has been so made may not be complied with, any such
officer may take such steps as appear to
him to be necessary to secure
compliance with that request and, without prejudice to the generality of the
foregoing, may for that
purpose enter upon, or author ise entry upon, that ship
and use, or authorise the sue of, reasonable force.
(3) Where the Governor of the Territory or any
person author ised by him for that purpose either generally or in a particular
case has
reason to suspect that any aircraft registered in the United Kingdom
or in any other country or place to which this Order extends
or any aircraft
for the time being chartered to any person specific in contravention of
paragraph (1) or paragraph (2) of Article
7 of this Order then the Gover nor or
that authorised person or that officer may request the charterer, the operator
and the commander
of the aircraft or any of them to fur nish such information
relating to the aircraft and its cargo and produce for their or his
inspection
such documents so relating and such cargo as they or he may specify, and that
authorised person or that officer may
either alone or accompanied and assisted
by persons under his author ity) board the aircraft and search it and, for that
purpose,
may use or authorise the use of reasonable force; and, if the aircraft
is then in the Territory, the Governor or any such authorised
person or any
such offi cer (either there and then or upon consideration of any information
fur nished or document or cargo produced
in pursuance of such a request) may
further request the charterer, operator and the commander or any of them to
cause the aircraft
to remain in the Territory until notified that the aircraft
may depart; and the charterer, the operator and the com mander shall
comply
with any such request.
(4) Without prejudice to the provisions of
paragraph (8) of this Article, where the Governor or any person authorised by
him as afore
said or any such officer as aforesaid has reason to suspect that
any re quest that an aircraft should remain in the Territory that
has been made
under paragraph (3) of this Article may not be complied with the Governor or
that authorised person or that officer
may take such steps as appear to him to
be necessary to secure compliance with that request and, without prejudice to
the generality
of the foregoing, may for that purpose—
(a) enter, or authorise entry, upon any land and
upon that aircraft;
(b) detain, or authorise the detention of, that
aircraft; and
(c) use, or authorise the use of, reasonable force.
(5) a person authorised by the Governor to exercise
any power for the purpose of paragraph (3) or paragraph (4) of this Article
shall,
if requested to do so, produce evidence of his authority before
exercising that power.
(6) No information furnished or document
produced by any person in pursuance of a request made under this Article shall
be dis closed
except—
(a) with the consent of the person by whom the
information was furnished or the document was produced:
Provided that a person who has obtained information or is in
possession of a document only in his capacity as servant or agent of
another
person may not give consent for the purposes of this sub-paragraph but such con sent
may instead be given by any person
who is entitled to that information or to
the possession of that docu ment in his own right; or
(b) to any person who would have been empowered
under this Article to request that it be furnished or produced or to any person
holding
or acting in any office under or in the service of the Crown in respect
of the Government of the United Kingdom on under or in the
service of the
Government of any other territory to which this Order extends; or
(c) on the authority of the Governor to any organ
of the United Nations or to any person in the service of the United Nations or
of
the Government of any other country for the purpose of assisting the United
Nations or that government in securing compliance with
or de tecting evasion of
measures in relation to Iraq or Kuwait decided upon by the Security council of
the United Na tions; or
(d) with a view to the institution of, or otherwise
for the purposes of, any proceedings for an offence against this Order or
(whether
in the Territory or in any other terri tory to which this Order
extends), with respect to any of the matters regulated by this Order,
for an offence
against any enactment relating to customs or for an of fence against any
provision of law with respect to simi lar
matters that is for the time being in
force in any country or place to which this Order extends.
(7) Any power conferred by this Article to
request the furnish ing of information or the production of a document or of
cargo for in
spection shall include a power to specify whether the information
should be furnished orally or in writing and in what form and
to specify the
time by which and the place in which the information should be fur nished or
the document or cargo produced for
inspection.
(8) Each of the following persons shall be
guilty of an offence against this Order, that is to say:—
(a) A master of a ship who disobeys any direction
given un der paragraph (1) of this Article with respect to the landing of any
cargo;
(b) A master of a ship or a charterer or an
operator or a commander of the aircraft who, without reasonable ex cuse,
refuses or fails
within a reasonable time to comply with any request made under
this Article by any person empowered to make it or who wilfully furnishes
false
information or produces false documents to such a per son in response to such a
request;
(c) A master or a member of a crew of a ship or a
charterer or an operator or a commander or a member of a crew of an aircraft
who wilfully
obstructs any such person (or any person acting under the
authority of any such per son) in the exercise of his powers under this
Article.
(9) Nothing in this Article shall be construed
so as to prejudice any other provision of law conferring powers or imposing
restrictions
or enabling restrictions to be imposed with respect to ships or
aircraft.
Obtaining of
evidence and information
9 The provisions of the Schedule 1 to
this Order shall have effect in order to facilitate the obtaining, by or on
behalf of the Governor
of the Territory of evidence and information for the
purpose of securing com pliance with or detecting evasion of this Order and
in
order to facilitate the obtaining, by or on behalf of the Governor of the
Territory of evi dence of the commission of an offence
against this Order or
with respect to any of the matters regulated by this Order, of an offence
relating to customs.
Penalties and
Proceedings
10 (1) Any
person guilty of an offence against this Order shall be liable—
(a) on conviction on indictment to imprisonment for
a term not exceeding two years or to a fine or to both; or
(b) on summary conviction to imprisonment for a
term not exceeding six months or to a fine not exceeding 2,000 or its
equivalent or
to both.
(2) Where any body corporate is guilty of an
offence against this Order, and that offence is proved to have been committed
with the
consent or connivance of, or to be attributable to any neglect on the
part of, any director, manager, secretary or other similar
officer of the body
corporate of any person who was purporting to act in any such capacity, he, as
well as the body corporate,
shall be guilty of that offence and shall be liable
to be proceeded against and punished accordingly.
(3) Summary proceedings for an offence against
this Order, being an offence alleged to have been committed outside the
Territory, may
be commenced at any time not later than twelve months from the
date on which the person charged first enters the Territory after
com mitting
the offence.
(4) Proceedings against any person for an
offence against this Order may be taken before the appropriate court in the
Territory, or
in any territory to which this Order extends, having jurisdiction
in the place where that person is for the time being.
(5) No proceedings for an offence against this
Order shall be instituted in a scheduled territory except by or with the
consent of the
principal public officer of the territory having responsibility
for criminal prosecutions.
Provided that this
paragraph shall not prevent the arrest, or the issue or execution of a warrant
for the arrest, of any person
in respect of such an offence, or the remand in
custody or on bail of any person charged with such an offence, notwithstanding
that the necessary consent to the in stitution of proceedings for the offence
has not been obtained.
Exercise of
powers of the Governor of the Territory
11 (1) The
Governor of the Territory may to such extent and sub ject to such restrictions
and conditions as he may think proper, delegate
or authorise the delegation of
any of his powers under this Order (other than the power to give authority
under Schedule 1 to this
Order to apply for a search warrant) to any person, or
class or description of persons, approved by him, and references in this
Order
to the Governor shall be construed accordingly.
(2) Any licences granted under this Order may be
either gen eral or special, may be subject to or without conditions, may be
limited
so as to expire on a specified date unless renewed and may be varied or
revoked by the authority that granted them.
Miscellaneous
12 (1) This
Order applies to or in relation to any ship or aircraft or any body corporate
that purports to be registered in any particular
place or, as the case may be,
that purports to be incorporated or consti tuted under the law of that place as
it applies to to
in relation to any ship or aircraft that is so registered or
any body corporate that is so registered or any body corporate that
it so
incorporated or constituted.
(2) Any provision of this Order which prohibits
the doing of a thing except under the authority of a licence granted by the
Governor
or under the Iraq and Kuwait (United Nations Sanctions) Order 1990 or
the Export of Goods (Control), (Iraq and Kuwait Sanctions)
Order 1990 shall not
have effect in relation to any such thing done in a country or place other than
the Territory to which this
Order extends or done elsewhere outside the
Territory by a person who is ordinarily resident in, or by a body incorporated
or constituted
under the law of, that country or place, provided that it is so
done under the authority of a licence or with per mission granted,
in
accordance with any law in force in that country or place (being a law
substantially corresponding to the relevant provision
of this Order), by the
authority competent in that behalf under that law.
G.I. de Deney
Clerk of the Privy Council
Article 9 Schedule 1
Evidence and Information
1 (1) Without
prejudice to any other provision of this Order, or any provision of any other
law, the Governor (or any person authorised
by him for that purpose either
generally or in a particular case) may re quest any person in or resident in
the Territory to furnish
to the Gover nor (or to that authorised person) any
information in his possession or control, or to produce to the Governor (or
to
that authorised person) any document in his possession or control, which the
Governor (or that au thorised person) may require
for the purpose of securing
compliance with or detecting evasion of this Order; and any person to whom such
a request is made shall
comply with it within such time and in such man ner as
may be specified in the request.
(2) Nothing in the foregoing sub-paragraph shall
be taken to require any person who has acted as counsel or solicitor for any
person
to disclose any privileged communication made to him in that capacity.
(3) Where a person is convicted before a
superior court for failing to furnish information or produce a document when
requested so to
do under this paragraph, the court may make an order requiring
him, within such period as may be specified in the order, to furnish
the in formation
or produce the document.
(4) The power conferred by this paragraph to request
any per son to produce documents shall include power to take copies of or ex tracts
from any document so produced and to request that person, or, where that person
is a body corporate, any other person who is present
or past officer of, or is
employed by, the body corporate, to provide an explanation of any of them.
2 (1) If
any judge, magistrate or justice of the peace is satisfied by information on
oath given by a person authorised by the Governor
to act for the purposes of
this paragraph either generally or in a particular case—
(a) that there is reasonable ground for suspecting
that an offence against this Order has been or is being commit ted and that
evidence
of the commission of the offence is to be found on any premises
specified in the informa tion, or in any vehicle, vessel or aircraft
so
specified; or
(b) that any documents which ought to have been
produced under paragraph 1 of this Schedule and have not been produced are to
be found
on any such premises or in any such vehicle, vessel or aircraft, he
may grant a search warrant authorising any police officer, together
with any
other persons named in the warrant and any other police officers, to enter the
premises specified in the information or,
as the case may be, any premises upon
which the vehicle, vessel or aircraft so specified may be at any time within
one month from
the date of the warrant and to search the premises, or, as the
case may be, the vehicle, vessel or aircraft.
(2) A person authorised by any such warrant as
aforesaid to search any premises or any vehicle, vessel or aircraft may search
every
person who is found in, or whom he has reasonable ground to believe to
have recently left or to be about to enter, those premises
or that vehicle,
vessel or aircraft and may seize any document or article found on the premises
or in the vehicle, vessel or aircraft
or on such person which he has reasonable
ground to believe ought to have been produced under paragraph 1 of this
Schedule or to
take in relation to any such article or document any other steps
which may appear necessary for preserving it and preventing interference
with
it:
Provided that no female
shall in pursuance of any warrant is sued under this paragraph, be searched
except by a female.
(3) Where, by virtue of this paragraph, a person
is empowered to enter any premises, vehicle, vessel or aircraft he may use such
force
as is reasonably necessary for that purpose.
(4) Any documents or articles of which
possession is taken under this paragraph may be retained for a period of three months
or, if
within that period there are commenced any proceedings for an offence
against this Order to which they are relevant, until the conclusion
of those
proceedings.
3 A person authorised by the Governor to
exercise any power for the purposes of this Schedule shall, if requested to do
so, produce
evi dence of his authority before exercising that power.
4 No information furnished or document
produced (including any copy or extract made of any document produced) by any
person in pur
suance of a request made under this Schedule and no document
seized under paragraph 2(2) of this Schedule shall be disclosed except—
(a) with the consent of the person by whom the
information was furnished or the document was produced or the person from whom
the document
was seized:
Provided that a person who has obtained information or is in
possession of a document only in his capacity as servant or agent of
another
person may not give consent for the purposes of this sub-paragraph but such con sent
may instead be given by any person
who is entitled to that information or to
the possession of that docu ment in his own right; or
(b) to any person who would have been empowered
under this Schedule to request that it be furnished or pro duced or to any
person holding
or acting in any office under or in the service of the Crown in
respect of the Government of the United Kingdom or under or in the
service of
the Government of any territory to which this Order extends; or
(c) with a view to the institution of, or otherwise
for the purposes of any proceedings for an offence against this order (whether
in
the Territory or any other territory to which this Order extends) or for an
offence against any provision of law with respect to
matters similar to those
regulated by this Order that is for the time being in force in the United
Kingdom.
5 Any person who
(a) without reasonable excuse, refuses or fails
within the time and in the manner specified (or, if no time has been specified,
within
a reasonable time) to comply with any request made under this Schedule
by any person who is empowered to make it; or
(b) wilfully furnishes false information or a false
explana tion or otherwise wilfully obstructs any person in the exercise of his
powers
under this Schedule; or
(c) with intent to evade the provisions of this
Schedule, destroys, mutilates, defaces, secretes, or removes any document,
shall be guilty of
an offence against this Order.
SCHEDULE 2
TERRITORIES TO WHICH THE ORDER EXTENDS
Anguilla
Bermuda
British Antarctic Territory
British Indian Ocean Territory
Cayman Islands
Falklands Islands
South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands
Gibraltar
Hong Kong
Montserrat
Pitcairn
St. Helena and its dependencies
Turks and Caicos Islands
Virgin Islands
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(This note is not part of the Order)
This Order, made under the United
Nations Act 1946, applies to each of the territories specified in Schedule
2. It prohibits the importa tion into
the territory of certain goods exported from Iraq or Kuwait and the exportation
from the territory
of certain goods intended for Iraq or Kuwait. It also prohibits certain activities and
dealings relating to the exportation from Iraq or Kuwait of the former goods
and the supply
to Iraq or Kuwait of the latter goods, including carriage of
these goods in British ships or aircraft.
It also makes provision for the investigation of ships and aircraft that
are suspected of contravening this Order.
It confers certain powers relating to the obtaining of evidence and
infor mation for the purposes of this Order.
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URL: http://www.commonlii.org/bm/legis/consol_act/iaknsto1990671