ARTICLE 321.
Subject to the present provisions, the rights of passage, transit and
landing provided for in Articles 318, 319 and 320 are subject to the
observance of such regulations as Turkey may consider it necessary to
enact, but such regulations must be approved by the Principal Allied
Powers and shall be applied without distinction to Turkish aircraft
and to those of the Allied countries.
ARTICLE 322.
Certificates of nationality, air-worthiness or competency and
licences, issued or recognised as valid by any of the Allied Powers,
shall be recognised in Turkey as valid and as equivalent to the
certificates and licences issued by Turkey.
ARTICLE 323.
As regards internal commercial air traffic the aircraft of the Allied
Powers shall enjoy in Turkey most-favoured-nation treatment.
ARTICLE 324.
The benefit of the provisions of Articles 318 and 319 shall not,
without the consent of the Allied Powers, be extended by Turkey to
States which fought on her side in the war of 19l4-l919 so long as
such States have not become Members of the League of Nations or been
admitted to adhere to the Convention concluded at Paris on October 13,
1919, relating to Aerial Navigation.
ARTICLE 325.
No concession or rights in a concession relating to civil aerial
navigation shall be granted by Turkey, without the consent of the
Allied Powers, to nationals of States which fought on her side in the
war of 1914-1919 so long as such States have not become Members of the
League of Nations or been admitted to adhere to the Convention
concluded at Paris on October 13, 1919, relating to Aerial Navigation.
ARTICLE 326.
Turkey undertakes to enforce the necessary measures to ensure that all
Turkish aircraft flying over her territory shall comply with the rules
as to lights and signals, rules of the air and rules for air traffic
on and in the neighbourhood of aerodromes, which have been laid down
in the Convention concluded at Paris on October 13, 19l9, relating to
Aerial Navigation.
ARTICLE 327.
The obligations imposed by the provisions of this Part shall remain in
force until Turkey shall have been admitted into the League of Nations
or shall have been authorised, in accordance with the provisions of
the Convention relating to Aerial Navigation concluded at Paris on
October 13, 1919, to adhere to that Convention.
PART XI.
PORTS, WATERWAYS AND RAILWAYS.
SECTION I.
GENERAL PROVISIONS.
ARTICLE 328.
Turkey undertakes to grant freedom of transit through her territories
on the routes most convenient for international transit, either by
rail, navigable waterway or canal, to persons, goods, vessels,
carriages, wagons and mails coming from or going to the territories of
any of the Allied Powers, whether contiguous or not; for this purpose
the crossing of territorial waters shall be allowed. Such persons,
goods, vessels, carriages, wagons and mails shall not be subjected to
any transit duty or to any undue delays or restrictions, and shall be
entitled in Turkey to national treatment as regards charges,
facilities and all other matters.
Goods in transit shall be exempt from all customs or other similar
duties.
All charges imposed on transport in transit shall be reasonable having
regard to the conditions of the traffic. No charge, facility or
restriction shall depend directly or indirectly on the ownership or
the nationality of the ship or other means of transport on which any
part of the through journey has been, or is to be, accomplished.
ARTICLE 329.
Turkey undertakes neither to impose nor to maintain any control over
transmigration traffic through her territories beyond measures
necessary to ensure that passengers are bona fide in transit; nor to
allow any shipping company or any other private body, corporation or
person interested in the traffic to take any part whatever in, or to
exercise any direct or indirect infiuence over, any administrative
service that may be necessary for this purpose.
ARTICLE 330.
Turkey undertakes to make no discrimination or preference, direct or
indirect, in the duties, charges and prohibitions relating to
importations into or exportations from her territories, or, subject to
any special provisions in the present Treaty, in the charges and
conditions of transport of goods or persons entering or leaving her
territories, based on the frontier crossed, or on the kind, ownership
or fiag of the means of transport (including aircraft) employed, or on
the original or immediate place of departure of the vessel, wagon or
aircraft or other means of transport employed, or its ultimate or
intennediate destination, or on the route of or places of
trans-shipment on the journey, or on whether any port through which
the goods are imported or exported is a Turkish port or a port
belonging to any foreign country, or en whether the goods are imported
or exported by sea, by land or by air.
Turkey particularly undertakes not to establish against the ports and
vessels of any of the Allied Powers any surtax or any direct or
indirect bounty for export or import by Turkish ports or vessels, or
by those of another Power, for example, by means of combined
tariffs. She further undertakes that persons or goods passing through
a port or using a vessel of any of the Allied Powers shall not be
subjected to any formality or delay whatever to which such persons or
goods would not be subjected if they passed through a Turkish port or
a port of any other Power, or used a Turkish vessel or a vessel of any
other Power.
ARTICLE 331.
All necessary administrative and technical measures shall be taken to
expedite, as much as possible, the transmission of goods across the
Turkish frontiers and to ensure their forwarding and transport from
such frontiers irrespective of whether such goods are coming from or
going to the territories of the Allied Powers or are in transit from
or to those territories, under the same material conditions in such
matters as rapidity of carriage and care ent route as are enjoyed by
other goods of the sarme kind carried on Turkish territory under
similar conditions of transport .
In particular, the transport of perishable goods shall be promptly and
regularly carried out, and the customs formalities shall be effected
in such a way as to allow the goods to be carried straight through by
trains which make connection.
ARTICLE 332.
The seaports of the Allied Powers are entitled to all favours and to
all reduced tariffs granted on Turkish railways or navigable waterways
for the benefit of Turkish ports (without prejudice to the rights of
concessionaires) or of any port of another Power.
ARTICLE 333
Subject to the rights of concessionaires, Turkey may not refuse to
participate in the tariffs or combinations of tariffs intended to
secure for ports of any of the Allied Powers advantages similar to
those granted by Turkey to her own ports or the ports of any other
Power.
SECTION II.
NAVIGATION.
CHAPTER 1.
FREEDOM OF NAVIGATION.
ARTICLE 334.
The nationals of any of the Allied Powers as well as their vessels and
property shall enjoy in all Turkish ports and on the inland navigation
routes of Turkey at least the same treatment in all respects as
Turkish nationals, vessels and property.
In particular, the vessels of any one of the Allied Powers shall be
entitled to transport goods of any description and passengers to or
from any ports or places in Turkish territory to which Turkish vessels
may have access, under conditions which shall not be more onerous than
those applied in the case of national vessels, they shall be treated
on a footing of equality with national vessels as regards port and
harbour facilities and charges of every description, including
facilities for stationing, loading and unloading, tonnage duties and
charges, harbour, pilotage, lighthouse, quarantine and all analogous
duties and charges of whatsoever nature levied in the name of or for
the profit of the Government, public functionaries, private
individuals, corporations or establishments of any kind.
In the event of Turkey granting a preferential regime to any of the
Allied Powers or to any other foreign Power, this regime shall be
extended immediately and unconditionally to all the Allied Powers.
There shall be no restrictions on the movement of persons or vessels
other than those arising from prescriptions concerning customs,
police, public health, emigration, and immigration and those relating
to the import and export of prohibited goods. Such regulations must be
reasonable and uniform and must not impede traffic unnecessarily.
CHAPTER II.
PORTS OF INTERNATIONAL CONCERN
ARTICLE 335.
The following Eastern ports are declared ports of international
concern and placed under the regime defined in the following Articles
of this section;
Constantinople, from St. Stefano to Dolma Bagtchi;
Haidar Pasha;
Smyrna;
Alexandretta;
Haifa;
Basra;
Trebizond (in the conditions laid down in Article 352);
Batum (subject to conditions to be subsequently fixed).
Free zones shall be provided in these ports.
Subject to any provisions to the contrary in the present Treaty, the
regime laid down for the above ports shall not prejudice the
territorial sovereignty.
(1) Navigation.
Subject to the present provisions, the rights of passage, transit and
landing provided for in Articles 318, 319 and 320 are subject to the
observance of such regulations as Turkey may consider it necessary to
enact, but such regulations must be approved by the Principal Allied
Powers and shall be applied without distinction to Turkish aircraft
and to those of the Allied countries.
ARTICLE 322.
Certificates of nationality, air-worthiness or competency and
licences, issued or recognised as valid by any of the Allied Powers,
shall be recognised in Turkey as valid and as equivalent to the
certificates and licences issued by Turkey.
ARTICLE 323.
As regards internal commercial air traffic the aircraft of the Allied
Powers shall enjoy in Turkey most-favoured-nation treatment.
ARTICLE 324.
The benefit of the provisions of Articles 318 and 319 shall not,
without the consent of the Allied Powers, be extended by Turkey to
States which fought on her side in the war of 19l4-l919 so long as
such States have not become Members of the League of Nations or been
admitted to adhere to the Convention concluded at Paris on October 13,
1919, relating to Aerial Navigation.
ARTICLE 325.
No concession or rights in a concession relating to civil aerial
navigation shall be granted by Turkey, without the consent of the
Allied Powers, to nationals of States which fought on her side in the
war of 1914-1919 so long as such States have not become Members of the
League of Nations or been admitted to adhere to the Convention
concluded at Paris on October 13, 1919, relating to Aerial Navigation.
ARTICLE 326.
Turkey undertakes to enforce the necessary measures to ensure that all
Turkish aircraft flying over her territory shall comply with the rules
as to lights and signals, rules of the air and rules for air traffic
on and in the neighbourhood of aerodromes, which have been laid down
in the Convention concluded at Paris on October 13, 19l9, relating to
Aerial Navigation.
ARTICLE 327.
The obligations imposed by the provisions of this Part shall remain in
force until Turkey shall have been admitted into the League of Nations
or shall have been authorised, in accordance with the provisions of
the Convention relating to Aerial Navigation concluded at Paris on
October 13, 1919, to adhere to that Convention.
PART XI.
PORTS, WATERWAYS AND RAILWAYS.
SECTION I.
GENERAL PROVISIONS.
ARTICLE 328.
Turkey undertakes to grant freedom of transit through her territories
on the routes most convenient for international transit, either by
rail, navigable waterway or canal, to persons, goods, vessels,
carriages, wagons and mails coming from or going to the territories of
any of the Allied Powers, whether contiguous or not; for this purpose
the crossing of territorial waters shall be allowed. Such persons,
goods, vessels, carriages, wagons and mails shall not be subjected to
any transit duty or to any undue delays or restrictions, and shall be
entitled in Turkey to national treatment as regards charges,
facilities and all other matters.
Goods in transit shall be exempt from all customs or other similar
duties.
All charges imposed on transport in transit shall be reasonable having
regard to the conditions of the traffic. No charge, facility or
restriction shall depend directly or indirectly on the ownership or
the nationality of the ship or other means of transport on which any
part of the through journey has been, or is to be, accomplished.
ARTICLE 329.
Turkey undertakes neither to impose nor to maintain any control over
transmigration traffic through her territories beyond measures
necessary to ensure that passengers are bona fide in transit; nor to
allow any shipping company or any other private body, corporation or
person interested in the traffic to take any part whatever in, or to
exercise any direct or indirect infiuence over, any administrative
service that may be necessary for this purpose.
ARTICLE 330.
Turkey undertakes to make no discrimination or preference, direct or
indirect, in the duties, charges and prohibitions relating to
importations into or exportations from her territories, or, subject to
any special provisions in the present Treaty, in the charges and
conditions of transport of goods or persons entering or leaving her
territories, based on the frontier crossed, or on the kind, ownership
or fiag of the means of transport (including aircraft) employed, or on
the original or immediate place of departure of the vessel, wagon or
aircraft or other means of transport employed, or its ultimate or
intennediate destination, or on the route of or places of
trans-shipment on the journey, or on whether any port through which
the goods are imported or exported is a Turkish port or a port
belonging to any foreign country, or en whether the goods are imported
or exported by sea, by land or by air.
Turkey particularly undertakes not to establish against the ports and
vessels of any of the Allied Powers any surtax or any direct or
indirect bounty for export or import by Turkish ports or vessels, or
by those of another Power, for example, by means of combined
tariffs. She further undertakes that persons or goods passing through
a port or using a vessel of any of the Allied Powers shall not be
subjected to any formality or delay whatever to which such persons or
goods would not be subjected if they passed through a Turkish port or
a port of any other Power, or used a Turkish vessel or a vessel of any
other Power.
ARTICLE 331.
All necessary administrative and technical measures shall be taken to
expedite, as much as possible, the transmission of goods across the
Turkish frontiers and to ensure their forwarding and transport from
such frontiers irrespective of whether such goods are coming from or
going to the territories of the Allied Powers or are in transit from
or to those territories, under the same material conditions in such
matters as rapidity of carriage and care ent route as are enjoyed by
other goods of the sarme kind carried on Turkish territory under
similar conditions of transport .
In particular, the transport of perishable goods shall be promptly and
regularly carried out, and the customs formalities shall be effected
in such a way as to allow the goods to be carried straight through by
trains which make connection.
ARTICLE 332.
The seaports of the Allied Powers are entitled to all favours and to
all reduced tariffs granted on Turkish railways or navigable waterways
for the benefit of Turkish ports (without prejudice to the rights of
concessionaires) or of any port of another Power.
ARTICLE 333
Subject to the rights of concessionaires, Turkey may not refuse to
participate in the tariffs or combinations of tariffs intended to
secure for ports of any of the Allied Powers advantages similar to
those granted by Turkey to her own ports or the ports of any other
Power.
SECTION II.
NAVIGATION.
CHAPTER 1.
FREEDOM OF NAVIGATION.
ARTICLE 334.
The nationals of any of the Allied Powers as well as their vessels and
property shall enjoy in all Turkish ports and on the inland navigation
routes of Turkey at least the same treatment in all respects as
Turkish nationals, vessels and property.
In particular, the vessels of any one of the Allied Powers shall be
entitled to transport goods of any description and passengers to or
from any ports or places in Turkish territory to which Turkish vessels
may have access, under conditions which shall not be more onerous than
those applied in the case of national vessels, they shall be treated
on a footing of equality with national vessels as regards port and
harbour facilities and charges of every description, including
facilities for stationing, loading and unloading, tonnage duties and
charges, harbour, pilotage, lighthouse, quarantine and all analogous
duties and charges of whatsoever nature levied in the name of or for
the profit of the Government, public functionaries, private
individuals, corporations or establishments of any kind.
In the event of Turkey granting a preferential regime to any of the
Allied Powers or to any other foreign Power, this regime shall be
extended immediately and unconditionally to all the Allied Powers.
There shall be no restrictions on the movement of persons or vessels
other than those arising from prescriptions concerning customs,
police, public health, emigration, and immigration and those relating
to the import and export of prohibited goods. Such regulations must be
reasonable and uniform and must not impede traffic unnecessarily.
CHAPTER II.
PORTS OF INTERNATIONAL CONCERN
ARTICLE 335.
The following Eastern ports are declared ports of international
concern and placed under the regime defined in the following Articles
of this section;
Constantinople, from St. Stefano to Dolma Bagtchi;
Haidar Pasha;
Smyrna;
Alexandretta;
Haifa;
Basra;
Trebizond (in the conditions laid down in Article 352);
Batum (subject to conditions to be subsequently fixed).
Free zones shall be provided in these ports.
Subject to any provisions to the contrary in the present Treaty, the
regime laid down for the above ports shall not prejudice the
territorial sovereignty.
(1) Navigation.
Comment