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Investigation, etc. of suspected ships and aircraft

15.—(1) Where any authorised officer, that is to say, any such officer other than an officer of the Board of Trade as is referred to in section 692(1) of the Merchant Shipping Act 1894(1), has reason to suspect that any ship registered in the Bailiwick of Guernsey or the Bailiwick of Jersey or the United Kingdom has been or is being or is about to be used in contravention of paragraph (1) or (2) of article 6 above, he may (either alone or accompanied and assisted by persons under his authority) board the ship and search her and, for that purpose, may request the master of the ship to furnish such information relating to the ship and her cargo and produce for his inspection such documents so relating and such cargo as he may specify; and the master shall comply with any such request.

(2) An authorised officer, within the meaning of paragraph (1) above, may, in the case of a ship that is reasonably suspected of being or of being about to be used in contravention of paragraph (1) or (2) of article 6 above, exercise the following further powers (either at the time of the exercise of the powers conferred by paragraph (1) above or upon consideration of any information furnished or document or cargo produced in pursuance of a request under that paragraph) with a view to the prevention of the commission (or the continued commission) of any such contravention or in order that enquiries into the matter may be pursued, that is to say, he may either direct the master to refrain, except with the consent of any authorised officer, from landing at any port specified by the officer any part of the ship’s cargo that is so specified or request the master to take any one or more of the steps specified in paragraph (3) below; and the master shall comply with any such request or direction.

(3) The steps referred to in paragraph (2) above are:

(a)to cause the ship not to proceed with the voyage on which she is then engaged or about to engage until the master is notified by any authorised officer that the ship may so proceed;

(b)if the ship is then in a port in the Bailiwick of Guernsey or the Bailiwick of Jersey or the United Kingdom to cause her to remain there until the master is notified by any authorised officer that the ship may depart;

(c)if the ship is then in any other place, to take her to any such port specified by the officer and to cause her to remain there until the master is notified as mentioned in sub-paragraph (b) above; and

(d)to take her to any other destination that may be specified by the officer in agreement with the master.

(4) Without prejudice to the provisions of paragraph (11) below, where a master refuses or fails to comply with a request made under this article that his ship shall or shall not proceed to or from any place or where an authorised officer otherwise has reason to suspect that such a request that has been so made may not be complied with, any such officer may take such steps as appear to him to be necessary to secure compliance with that request and, without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing, may for that purpose enter upon, or authorise entry upon, that ship and use, or authorise the use of, reasonable force.

(5) Where, in the case of the Bailiwick of Guernsey, the Attorney General for Guernsey or, in the case of the Bailiwick of Jersey, the Bailiff, or any person authorised by either of them for that purpose either generally or in a particular case, has reason to suspect that any aircraft registered in the United Kingdom or any aircraft for the time being chartered to any person specified in article 6(3) above has been or is being or is about to be used in contravention of article 6(1) or (2) above, the Attorney General or, as the case may be,the Bailiff or that authorised person may request the charterer, the operator and the commander of the aircraft or any of them to furnish such information relating to the aircraft and its cargo and produce for his inspection such documents so relating and such cargo as he may specify, and the Attorney General or, as the case may be, the Bailiff or that authorised person may (either alone or accompanied and assisted by persons under his authority) board the aircraft and search it and, for that purpose, may use or authorise the use of reasonable force; and the charterer, the operator and the commander shall comply with any such request.

(6) If the aircraft is in the Bailiwick of Guernsey or the Bailiwick of Jersey, the Attorney General for Guernsey or, in the case of the Bailiwick of Jersey, the Bailiff or any such authorised person as is referred to in paragraph (5) above may (either at the time of the exercise of the powers conferred by paragraph (5) above or upon consideration of any information furnished or document or cargo produced in pursuance of a request under that paragraph) further request the charterer, operator and the commander or any of them to cause the aircraft to remain in the Bailiwick of Guernsey or, as the case may be, the Bailiwick of Jersey until notified that the aircraft may depart; and the charterer, the operator and the commander shall comply with any such request.

(7) Without prejudice to the provisions of paragraph (11) below, where, in the case of the Bailiwick of Guernsey, the Attorney General for Guernsey or, in the case of the Bailiwick of Jersey, the Bailiff, or any person authorised by either of them for that purpose either generally or in a particular case, has reason to suspect that any request that an aircraft should remain in the Bailiwick of Guernsey or, as the case may be, the Bailiwick of Jersey that has been made under paragraph (6) above may not be complid with, he may take such steps as appear to him to be necessary to secure compliance with that request and, without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing, may for that purpose:

(a)enter, or authorise entry, upon any land and upon that aircraft;

(b)detain, or authorise the detention of, that aircraft; and

(c)use, or authorise the use of, reasonable force.

(8) A person authorised by the Attorney General for Guernsey or, in the case of the Bailiwick of Jersey, the Bailiff to exercise any power for the purposes of paragraph (5), (6) or (7) above shall, if requested to do so, produce evidence of his authority before exercising that power.

(9) No information furnished or document produced by any person in pursuance of a request made under this article shall be disclosed except:

(a)with the consent of the person by whom the information was furnished or the document was produced:

(b)to any person who would have been empowered under this article to request that it be furnished or produced or to any person holding or acting in any office under or in the service of the Crown in respect of the Government of the United Kingdom or under or in the service of the States of Guernsey or Alderney or the Chief Pleas of Sark or, as the case may be, the States of Jersey; or

(c)on the authority of the Attorney General for Guernsey in respect of the Bailiwick of Guernsey or the Bailiff in respect of the Bailiwick of Jersey, to any organ of the United Nations or to any person in the service of the United Nations or of the Government of any other country for the purpose of assisting the United Nations or that Government in securing compliance with or detecting evasion of measures in relation to Serbia and Montenegro decided upon by the Security Council of the United Nations; or

(d)with a view to the institution of, or otherwise for the purposes of, any proceedings for an offence under this Order or, with respect to any of the matters regulated by this Order, for an offence under any enactment relating to customs or for an offence under any provision of law with respect to similar matters that is for the time being in force in the Bailiwick of Guernsey or the Bailiwick of Jersey.

(10) Any power conferred by this article to request the furnishing of information or the production of a document or of cargo for inspection shall include a power to specify whether the information should be furnished orally or in writing and in what form and to specify the time by which and the place in which the information should be furnished or the document or cargo produced for inspection.

(11) Each of the following persons shall be guilty of an offence under this Order, that is to say:

(a)a master of a ship who disobeys any direction given under paragraph (2) above with respect to the landing of any cargo;

(b)a master of a ship or a charterer or an operator or a commander of an aircraft—

(i)who, without reasonable excuse, refuses or fails within a reasonable time to comply with any request made under this article by any person empowered to make it, or

(ii)who wilfully furnishes false information or produces any false document to such a person in response to such a request;

(c)a master or a member of a crew of a ship or a charterer or an operator or a commander or a member of a crew of an aircraft who wilfully obstructs any such person (or any person acting under the authority of any such person) in the exercise of his powers under this article.

(12) Nothing in this article shall be construed so as to prejudice any other provision of law concerning powers or imposing restrictions or enabling restrictions to be imposed with respect to ships or aircraft.

(1)

1894 c. 60; section 692(1) has been amended, so far as is material, by Customs and Excise Management Act 1979 (c. 2), Sch.4, para.1.