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96
MULTILATERAL AGREEMENTS, 1776-1917

Nevertheless, the stipulations of the said Convention shall be applicable to one of the above-named colonies or possessions, if, in their name, a notification to that effect has been addressed by the representative of Her Britannic Majesty at Paris to the Minister of Foreign Affairs of France.[1]

Each of the above-named Colonies or possessions that shall have adhered to the said Convention, shall have the privilege of withdrawing in the same manner as the contracting powers. In case one of the colonies or possessions in question shall desire to withdraw from the Convention, a notification to that effect shall be addressed by Her Britannic Majesty's representative at Paris to the Minister of Foreign Affairs of France.

Done in twenty-six copies at Paris, this fourteenth day of March, 1884.

  • L. P. Morton
    Henry Vignaud
  • Hohenlohe
  • M. Balcarce
  • Ladislas Count Hoyos
  • Beyens
    Leopold Orban
  • Bn d'Itajubá
  • Léon Somzée
  • Moltke-Hvitfeldt
  • Emanuel de Almeda
  • Manuel Silvela
  • José G. Triana
  • Jules Ferry
    Ad. Cochery
  • Lyons
  • Crisanto Medina
  • Maurocordato
  • Menabrea
  • Essad
  • Bn de Zuylen de Nyevelt
  • Nazare-Aga
  • F. d'Azevedo
  • Odobesco
  • Prince Orloff
  • J. M. Torres-Caïcedo
  • I. Marinovitch
  • G. Sibbern
  • Juan J. Diaz

  1. The Government of the United Kingdom notified the French Government on May 30, 1885, of the extension of the convention to South Australia; on Oct. 17, 1885, of the extension to Victoria; on July 28, 1886, of the extension to Queensland; and on Sept. 23, 1888, of the extension to all the other territories listed in the additional article.