711.3827/2

The Minister in Haiti (Armour) to the Secretary of State

No. 387

Sir: I have the honor to refer to the Department’s instruction No. 187, of July 13, 1934,15 and to the previous instructions mentioned therein, concerning the desire of the Government of the United States to reach an understanding with the Government of Haiti in regard to the interpretation of Article 4 of the Havana Convention on Commercial Aviation.16

In reply to notes sent by the Legation to the Foreign Office, I have finally received a note from the Foreign Minister, stating that the Government of Haiti agrees to the understanding that, in accordance with the terms of Article 4 of the Havana Convention, private aircraft of either of the two countries will be permitted to enter the other country, on special or tourist flights without the necessity of requesting formal authorization for each flight, subject to compliance with the technical requirements regarding entry and the regulations in force in the country to be visited.

I am enclosing a copy of the note received from the Foreign Office and a translation thereof, together with my reply thereto.17

Respectfully yours,

Norman Armour
[Enclosure—Translation]

The Haitian Secretary of State for Foreign Relations (Laleau) to the American Minister (Armour)

Mr. Minister: I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of Your Excellency’s memorandum of July 31 last, referring to previous communications from the American Legation, dated March 7, 1933, June [Page 506] 20, 1933, December 28, 1933, and February 8, 1934, all relating to a desire of Your Excellency’s Government as set forth in the Aide-Mémoire of June 20, 1933, from the Legation, to arrive at an understanding by which an airplane registered in the United States would have permission by virtue of the general authorization contained in the Havana Convention on Commercial Aviation, to enter Haiti, submitting to the technical conditions of the Haitian Government concerning entry and landing, as well as to the laws and regulations in force in that country; and that private airplanes registered in Haiti will have permission by virtue of the general authorization contained in the Havana Convention on Commercial Aviation, to enter the United States, submitting to similar conditions of the United States Government and to the laws in force in that country, without making it necessary, in the one case and in the other, to ask through diplomatic channels, that the flights be authorized.

My Government gives its agreement to this understanding under the technical conditions of the laws and regulations of the country, existing, or which may exist, concerning the entry and landing of airplanes, and of which I will send you copies, as’ soon as I have them in my possession.

I note that besides the conditions mentioned in the Aeronautical Bulletin No. 7–C, of which Your Excellency has sent me a copy, foreigners desiring to go to the United States should consult the American Consular Agent, regarding a visa for entry into that country, and that they are obliged, in conformity with the regulations’ of the Internal Revenue Bureau, to prove that they have paid all revenue taxes due to the Government of that country.

It is understood that our Governments desired simply to arrive at an understanding of the interpretation of the Havana Convention on Commercial Aviation—without making any supplement to that Convention—in so far as it concerns the right of private airplanes of the contracting parties to enter their respective territories, without making it necessary to obtain an authorization for the flight from the Government of the country to which the flight is being made.

Please accept [etc.]

Léon Laleau
  1. Not printed.
  2. Foreign Relations, 1928, vol. i, p. 585.
  3. Latter enclosure not printed.