| Vienna Convention On Consular Relations |
Article Index for Vienna Convention |
Website Links For Vienna |
Information AboutVienna Convention On Consular Relations |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT VIENNA CONVENTION ON CONSULAR RELATIONS | |
| cold war treaties | |
| diplomacy | |
| SHOPPER'S DELIGHT | |
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The VCCR enumerates basic legal rights and duties of signatory States including
Article 36 of the VCCR requires that foreign nationals who are arrested or detained be given notice "without delay" of their right to have their embassy or consulate notified of that arrest. The notice can be as simple as a fax, giving the person's name, the place of arrest, and, if possible, something about the reason for the arrest or detention. The police must fax that notice to the embassy or consulate, which can then check up on the person. The United States is a party to this treaty, but it has not had a good historical track record of compliance (partly because under the U.S. federal system, implementation is up to the individual states in the great majority of cases, and the national government does not have direct authority to enforce state government compliance). Mexico sued the United States before the International Court of Justice, and Mexico won. (The case is called Avena, and you can find the text of it on the website for the International Court of Justice.) In March of 2005, the United States pulled out of the Optional Protocol to the convention, which guarantees foreign nationals the right to see a home-country diplomat when they are jailed abroad. EXTERNAL LINKS
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