Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 60 Part 2.djvu/699

 1788 INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS OTHER THAN TREATIES [60 STAT. Translation THE ISLAMIC GOVERNMENT ORDAINED BY ALLAH SANA'A May 4, 1946 Jamada-al-Thaniya,3, 1365 His Excellency Mr. WILLIAM ALFRED EDDY Chief, U. S. Special Mission to the Kingdom of The Yemen. I have the honor to acknowledge receipt of Your Excellency's letter dated May 4, 1946, corresponding to Jamada-al-Thaniya, 3, 1365, the text of which is as follows:- I have the honor to make the following statement of my Govern- ment's understanding of the agreement reached through conversa- tions held at Sana'a April 14 to May 4 by representatives of the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the Kingdom of the Yemen with reference to diplomatic and con- sular representation, juridical protection, commerce and naviga- tion as hereafter defined. These two Governments, having in mind the letter dated March 4, 1946, from the President of the United States of America to the Imam Yehya Bin Mohamed Hamid-ud- din, King of the Yemen, by which the United States of America recognized the complete and absolute independence of the Kingdom of the Yemen, and desiring to strengthen the friendly relations happily existing between the two countries, and to respect the rights of this independence recognized by the above-mentioned letter as the basis for all their relations and to maintain the most-favored- nation principle in its unconditional and unlimited form as the basis of their commercial relations, agree to the following provisions: ARTICLE I The United States of America and the Kingdom of the Yemen will exchange diplomatic representatives and consular officers at a date which shall be fixed by mutual agreement between the two Govern- ments. ARTICLE II The diplomatic representatives of each Party accredited to the Government of the other Party shall enjoy in the territories of such other Party the rights, privileges, exemptions and immunities accorded under generally recognized principles of international law. The consular officers of each Party who are assigned to the Govern- ment of the other Party, and are duly provided with exequaturs, shall be permitted to reside in the territories of such other Party at the places where consular officers are permitted by the applicable laws to reside; they shall enjoy the honorary privileges and the

�