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Published byNeal Dorsey Modified over 9 years ago
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To represent, lead and serve the airline industry Liability for Acts of Terrorism: The New Unlawful Interference Convention McGill University - Institute of Air & Space Law 31 October 2009 Michael Gill, Senior Legal Counsel – IATA
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2 The search for a fair compromise IATA advocated a purist approach: States, not airlines, are targets of terrorist activity We sought a reasonable compromise which would provide: Legal certainty Compensation for victims Protection for the airlines and other industry stakeholders
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3 The essential feature - the liability cap with knowledge Airline or its employees acted intentionally or recklessly and with knowledge Act of employee: airline must prove that an appropriate system for selection and monitoring of staff has been established and implemented Rebuttable presumption that an airline has not acted recklessly if it proves that a system to ensure compliance with Annex 17 of Chicago Convention in its home State has been established and implemented
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4 Does the Convention provide balance? Strict liability for risk of damage which is not aimed at airlines Liability cap is weak Airlines are uncomfortable with exclusive remedy + restrictions on recourse Overall scheme is unfairly weighted against the airlines
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5 Operational challenges of the International Fund Any additional charge on airline tickets/air waybills presents commercial issues The airline is responsible for remittance of funds: will it be feasible to pass on contributions to passenger/shippers ? Airlines must weigh up the cost/benefits of the Convention scheme without knowing the exact level at which contributions will be set
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6 Entry into force 35 ratifications Only 7 signatories so far 750,000,000 departing passengers per year Some scenarios
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