This document provides an overview of air and space law. It discusses key concepts and treaties in international air law such as the Chicago Convention of 1944 which established principles of sovereignty over airspace and freedom of overflight. It also summarizes principles of liability in air transport as established in treaties like the Warsaw Convention. For space law, it outlines the foundational Outer Space Treaty of 1967 and principles regarding jurisdiction, liability, and peaceful uses of outer space.
This document provides an overview of air and space law. It discusses key concepts and treaties in international air law such as the Chicago Convention of 1944 which established principles of sovereignty over airspace and freedom of overflight. It also summarizes principles of liability in air transport as established in treaties like the Warsaw Convention. For space law, it outlines the foundational Outer Space Treaty of 1967 and principles regarding jurisdiction, liability, and peaceful uses of outer space.
This document provides an overview of air and space law. It discusses key concepts and treaties in international air law such as the Chicago Convention of 1944 which established principles of sovereignty over airspace and freedom of overflight. It also summarizes principles of liability in air transport as established in treaties like the Warsaw Convention. For space law, it outlines the foundational Outer Space Treaty of 1967 and principles regarding jurisdiction, liability, and peaceful uses of outer space.
This document provides an overview of air and space law. It discusses key concepts and treaties in international air law such as the Chicago Convention of 1944 which established principles of sovereignty over airspace and freedom of overflight. It also summarizes principles of liability in air transport as established in treaties like the Warsaw Convention. For space law, it outlines the foundational Outer Space Treaty of 1967 and principles regarding jurisdiction, liability, and peaceful uses of outer space.
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Air and Space Law
Prof (Dr.) C. J. Rawandale
and Dr. Shashi Bhushan Ojha Introduction (Air Law) O It refers to international law relating to civil aviation. O Aviation refers to use of aircraft. O Definition of aircraft- Annex 7 of the Chicago Convention 1944. O Freedom of air O Aircraft vs Spacecraft (overlapping features) O Functional Approach vs Spatial Approach Introduction O Int. Air Law includes customary law and treaty laws both. O Domestic Aviation vs International Aviation O Influence of International standards on Domestic Aviation O The first legislation on aviation- Paris 1784 related to flying of balloon O First multilateral Treaty is Hague Declaration I 1899 on use of balloons for military purpose. O First heavier-than-air aircraft flew in 1903 O 1913 bilateral treaty b/w France and Germany on air service. O 1919 Paris Convention on the Regulation of Aerial Navigation- military use. Thereafter 1929 Warsaw Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules relating to International Carriage by Air O The current overall legal framework for international civil aviation is provided by the 1944 Chicago Convention on International Civil Aviation O ICAO, Inmarsat, IATA Chicago Convention O Airspace Sovereignty- Art. 1-every State has complete and exclusive sovereignty over the airspace above its territory O Nationality of the Aircraft- Art. 17-18. Exception Art. 77 (joint or pooled service.) O Conditions to be fulfilled wrt aircraft and navigation- Chapter V and VI and Annex 9 O Pacific Settlement of Dispute (Art. 84-86) O Right to Fly (Five Freedoms) Five Freedoms O The right of aircraft from State A to overfly State B without landing. (Frist) O The right of aircraft from State A to land in State B for technical reasons. (Second) O First two are called technical freedom which is part of International Air Service Transit Agreement. O The right of aircraft from State A to accept paying traffic from State A and put it down in State B. (Third) O The right of aircraft from State A to pick up paying traffic in State B and put it down in State A. (Fourth) O The right of aircraft from State A to take paying traffic from State B to State C. (Fifth) O These are called commercial freedom which are part of International Air Transport Agreement O Flights- i) Scheduled; (ii) Non-scheduled O Scheduled flights are agreed through bilateral agreements (Art. 6) O Cabotage- Illegal unless agreed. (Art. 7) O Chicago Convention applicable only to Civil Aircraft and not to state aircraft (Art. 3) O Limits of airspace (outer limit not specified). O UNCLOS- No Right to Innocent Passage for aircraft over TS; Transit Passage in Straits is recognised. O Tokyo, Montreal and Hague Convention- Crimes related to navigation. O Warsaw and Rome Convention- Liability O Standardization of the norms of Aviation is done by ICAO. O Air Transport Agreement- Art. 6 Chicago Convention. O More than 1700 bilateral air transport agreements have to date been registered with the ICAO. (Art. 81 and 83). O Bermuda Agreement 1946 b/w US and UK. It became model for all subsequent bilateral agreements. O Major heads include: Exchange of traffic rights; designation of aircraft; effective control; mutual recognition of airworthiness certificate; custom and duty rates; information exchange; dispute resolution etc. O However, a number of multilateral agreements relating to other aspects of air transport have also been concluded like Agreement Relating to the Procedure for the Establishment of Tariffs for International Scheduled Air Services. Libality Regime O The international transportation involves many foreign elements. Therefore liability arising therefrom can create complex problems- jurisdictional issue, int. law issue. O Warsaw Convention1929 and its associated protocols tried to unify some of the rules. O Liability implies carrier’s liability; operator’s liability; liability of traffic controllers and manufacturer; liability to third party; contributory negligence of the passenger O Every country has its own law on civil aviation. O ICAO is responsible for standard setting in the field of aviation. O Aircraft Accident Investigation- Art. 26, Chicago Convention. O ICAO adopted Annex 13 to Chicago Convention for Accident Investigation standard. O Scope-Art. 1 O Rules of Documentation- Art. 3-16 O Liability is based on fault of the carrier. Burden of proof lies on the carrier. (Art. 17-21) O Art. 22- Maximum ceiling of the liability O Liability is fixed but in case of willful mistake liability is not fixed (Art. 25) O Jurisdiction- Art 33 O Combined Carriage- Art. 31 O The Hague Protocol 1955 amended the Warsaw Convention. O Hague Protocol modified the rules related to documentation, liability limit, definition of wilful misconduct, liability of servants agents O Montreal Agreement 1966 between air carriers- limited the liability of the carriers operating to, from, with agreed stoppage in US. Prior to that, US withdrew from Warsaw Convention. O The Guadalajara Convention of 1961, supplemented the Warsaw Convention- liability of the "actual carrier", regardless of who entered into the contract with the passenger. O The Guatemala City Protocol of 1971 and Montreal Protocol further refined and updated the provisions of Warsaw Convention. O The Gautemala City Protocol provides for regime of absolute liability of the air carrier but with a max. cap. wrt each person; a domestic system to supplement, subject to specified conditions, compensation payable to claimants. O The Rome Convention,1933 (Replaced in 1958)- to protect third parties on the ground. O Absolute but limited liability of an aircraft operator wrt to third parties on the ground. Security Issues O Criminal acts endangering the safety of navigation has increased many fold in past years. O Criminal acts may include hijacking, terrorist act etc. O Mostly the efforts are directed toward preventing acts of unlawful interference against ‘civil aviation’. O The most important conventions in this regard include: Tokyo Convention 1963; Hague Convention 1970; Montreal Convention 1971; Montreal Protocol 1988; Convention on Plastic Explosives 1991. Tokyo Convention O The state of aircraft registration has the authority to apply its laws to events occurring on board its aircraft while in flight. O The aircraft commander can use reasonable force to tackle the threat to navigation. O Duties and responsibilities of the state where the aircraft lands. O Hijacking. O Which offences?- Art. 3 O Offences ‘on board’. Art. 4. O Powers of the Captain- Art. 5-10 O Hijacking-Art, 11 O Powers and Duties of the State of landing-Art. 12-15 Hague Convention 1970 O Tokyo Convention was insufficient to deal with hijacking cases. O What is unlawful seizure of aircraft? Explained by Art. 1 O Art. 2 makes hijacking punishable. O Hijacking only when aircraft is in flight. O Art 4 directs states to make hijacking punishable offence via municipal law. O Art. 6,7,8- Extradition (aut dedere aut judicare) O Montreal Convention- specified the offences against navigation O It also follows principle of extradite or prosecute as in Hague Convention O Art. 1- definition of offence O Art. 2-14 important. O Protocol to Montreal Convention extended the jurisdiction to acts of violence at airports. Space Law O International Space Law governs the activities in outer space. O Dual use technology O Definition of outer space- No scientific and technical criteria could be found which would permit a precise and lasting definition of outer space (UNCOPUOS) O Space Law includes both customary law (especially jurisdiction, liability) and treaty laws O The foundation to the treaty law was laid by the UNGA resolutions on this subject. O In 1958 an ad hoc committee was established by UNGA through a Resolution to develop legal provisions with respect to outer space. (COPUOS). In 1959 it became permanent body. O In 1961, UNGA adopted a resolution to declare the application of int. law and UN Charter to outer space and it will not be open for appropriation. O Later on the UNGA Resolutions, space race b/w US and USSR, cold war scenario etc led to creation of binding treaty laws. O These efforts led to formation of Outer Space Treaty 1967. O OST is normative in character laying down broad principles related to outer space. O Freedom of Exploration and Use- Art. 1 O Above freedom is not absolute- non- discrimination; equality; common interest; non-appropriation (Art.2); international law (Art. 3); nuclear weapon (Art. 4) clauses etc. O Non-Appropriation- Art. 2 O Applicability of general int. law- Art. 3 O Restriction on Military Activity, peaceful use- Art. 4 O Para 2 of Art. 4 does not contain ‘outer space’. Therefore some scholars argue that OST calls par partial demilitarization. O What is Weapons of Mass Destruction? (debatable). Atleast it includes NBC Weapons. O So whatever is not prohibited by OST is permissible? O Dual use-Peaceful use (is it non-military or non-aggressive military) O The common interest of mankind- Province of Mankind/Common Heritage of Mankind debate O CHM- a) absence of sovereignty; b) international management (implying exploitation is possible); c) sharing of benefits O Astronauts/Cosmonauts are ‘envoy of mankind)-Art. 5. O State Responsibility and Liability-Art. 6 and 7 O Jurisdiction and control-Art. 8 O Cooperation, assistance etc.-Art. 9. O Information to UN- Art. 11 Liability O Responsibility for wrongful act O Fault based; no-fault based; absolute O Trail Smelter Case; Corfu Channel case- general principles of int. law- every state is responsible for its act (state actor and non- state actor) O However it is difficult to pin point the culpability of non-state actor. O Principle of liability wrt space activities was first envisaged in paragraph 5 of the 1963 Declaration of Legal Principles Governing the Activities of States in the Exploration and Use of Outer Space. O It was incorporated in Art. 6 of OST. Same can be found in Art. 14 of the Moon Treaty. O Art. 7 of OST identifies four possible states on whom liability can be imputed. O Joint and several liability O Astronauts Agreement- Art 5(4) O Launching Authority- Art. 6. O No reference to possible compensation. O Treaty on this issue- Liability Convention 1972. O Definition of Damage- Art. 1 O The Convention is not applicable to damage caused to nationals of the launching State or foreign nationals participating in the operation of the space object. Art 7. O Absolute liability (on surface of earth and aircraft)-Art. 2. Exception Art. 6(1). Elsewhere liability is based on fault (Art. 3) O Presentation of claim- Art 8 and 9 O Third party settlement of dispute- Art. 10-19. O How to identify the state to fix liability?- Convention on Registration of Objects Launched into Outer Space 1975 O Questions unanswered: a) what about MNC working in foreign country; what about loss to astronauts or passengers (tourism case); what about unauthorized actions of nationals; activities in outer space; IPR Registration of Space Objects O The Convention on the Registration of Objects Launched into Outer Space,1974 establishes a mandatory system of registration of space objects launched into orbit and beyond O Registry to be maintained at national level as well as by Sec. Gen of UN- Art. 2. O It help to ensure effective management of traffic, enforcement of safety standards, and imputation of liability for damage. O Open for public review- Art.3 O The contents of each registry and the conditions under which it is maintained shall be determined by the State of registry concerned- Art. 2(3). States never reveal the true function. O ‘As soon as practicable’- Art. 4 Moon Treaty O The Agreement Governing the Activities of States on the Moon and Other Celestial Bodies, 1979 is the latest space law treaty with very limited members. O Applies to Moon as well as other celestial bodies other than Earth and other extraterrestrial objects.- Art. 1 O It broadly reaffirms OST and envisages the permissible activities O Moon and its natural resources are CHM- Art.11 O Application of Int. Law- Art. 2; will be used for peaceful purpose- Art. 3 O Sharing of information related to exploration and use- Art. 5 O Environment Protection-Art. 7 O Jurisdiction on personnel and space object- Art. 12. O States have int. responsibility-Art. 14. O Pacific settlement of Dispute- Art. 15. Rescue of Astronauts O Envoy of Mankind- Art. 5, OST O Jurisdiction over astronauts- territorial and nationality jurisdiction O While in space, jurisdiction belongs to the state of registry. Art.8, OST (but what about persons who do not form part of the personnel) O Same Art 12 of Moon Treaty O Rescue Agreement