✨ Regulations for Seizure of Enemy Ships




2352

THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.

(b) Any neutral ship engaged in rendering unneutral service:
(c) Any neutral ship engaged in breach of blockade:
(d) Any neutral ship which is herself contraband of war.
3. The following ships shall not be liable to seizure as prize:β€”
(a) Ships protected by a British or allied pass or license, or under
the general provisions of an Order in Council of His Majesty
or of His Excellency the Governor-General in Council
and while acting in accordance therewith:
(b) Hospital ships as provided by the Hague Convention of the
18th October, 1907, for the adaptation of the principles of
the Geneva Convention to Maritime War; also neutral
merchant ships, yachts, or boats, having on board wounded,
sick, or ship-wrecked of the belligerents, but subject to any
undertaking that may have been given to them they remain
liable to capture for any violations of neutrality they may
have committed:
(c) Enemy vessels employed exclusively in coast fisheries or small
boats employed in local trade. This immunity does not
extend to fishing-vessels capable of being used for deep-sea
fishing:
(d) Enemy ships, while exclusively engaged on religious, scientific,
or philanthropic missions:
(e) Enemy ships employed as cartel ships.

C. A. JEFFERY,
Clerk of the Executive Council.

[No. 89

By Authority: E. V. PAUL, Government Printer, Wellington.

Price 6d.]


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πŸ›‘οΈ Regulations providing for the Seizure as Prize of Enemy Ships (continued from previous page)

πŸ›‘οΈ Defence & Military
4 September 1939
Shipping, Detention, Emergency Regulations, Enemy Ships, Prize Seizure
  • C. A. Jeffery, Clerk of the Executive Council