- Source: Convention on Diplomatic Asylum
- Daftar kasus Mahkamah Internasional
- Penggerebekan Kedutaan Meksiko di Ekuador 2024
- Convention on Diplomatic Asylum
- 2024 raid on the Mexican embassy in Ecuador
- Diplomatic law
- Daniel Noboa
- Right of asylum
- United Nations Convention Against Torture
- 2012–2013 Ecuador–United Kingdom diplomatic crisis
- Diplomatic immunity
- Asylum in Australia
- Refugee travel document
The Convention on Diplomatic Asylum was signed on 28 March 1954 at the tenth Pan-American Conference, held in Caracas.
The signatories who ratified the convention were Argentina, Brazil, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela. Six other states signed but did not ratify it: Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Honduras and Nicaragua.
The convention followed the precedent established by the case of Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre – a Peruvian politician who was granted asylum by Colombia in 1949, at their embassy in Lima, where he stayed for five years until being allowed to leave the country.
References
External links
Convention on Diplomatic Asylum (text via treaties.un.org)
Convention on Diplomatic Asylum (ratification information, etc. via oas.org)