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Documents Concerning Travel Restrictions for Certain United Nations, Diplomatic, and Consular Personnel

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 February 2017

Abstract

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Type
Other Documents
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 1986

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References

* [Section 141 of the US Foreign Relations Authorization Act, Fiscal Years 1986 and 1987, concerning US responsibilities for employees of the United Nations, appears at I.L.M. page 26.

[The four information circulars from the UN Under-Secretary-General for Administration and Management trace the host country requests concerning travel restrictions placed on nationals of the USSR, Afghanistan, Cuba, Iran, Libya, Vietnam, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, the German Democratic Republic and Poland and the United Nations reaction and response to such requests.

[The letter from Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Poland and the German Democratic Republic, dated January 8, 1986, concerning the travel restrictions placed on personnel at their UN missions, appears at I.L.M. page 231. The US diplomatic note sent to the embassies of these four countries in Washington, dated December 30, 1985, appears at I.L.M. page 233. The Bulgarian diplomatic note sent to the US embassy in Sofia, concerning reciprocal measures, appears at page 238.]

* [Reproduced from the text provided to International Legal Materials by the US Department of State. The text of the four diplomatic notes is basically the same. Only Poland has an office outside the New York and Washington locations, which is mentioned in paragraph three of the note reproduced below. The note to Bulgaria refers to “personnel of the Embassy of the People's Republic of Bulgaria…as well as personnel and dependents of the Office of Commercial Counselor and of the Bulgarian Travel Office in New York City”. The note to Czechoslovakia refers to “personnel of the Embassy of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic…as well as personnel and dependents of the Czechoslovak Tourist Office (CEDOK), Financial Office (TUZEX) & the Commercial Section in New York City”. The note to the German Democratic Republic refers to “personnel of the Embassy of the German Democratic Republic…as well as personnel and dependents of the Office of Commercial Affairs in New York City”.

[As of January 31, 1986, no start up time had been indicated with regard to the Polish Consulate in Chicago. The US Office of Foreign Missions has also made verbal modifications and clarifications to the travel arrangements outlined in the diplomatic notes.

[The Bulgarian diplomatic note to the US embassy in Sofia, concerning reciprocal measures, appears at I.L.M. page 238.]

* [Translated for International Legal Materials by Dencho Georgiev from the Bulgarian text provided by the U.S. Department of State.]