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Policy statement
ICC
endorsement of the UNCITRAL Convention on independent guarantees and stand-by
letters of credit
Commission on Banking Technique
and Practice, 21
June 1999
On the unanimous consent
of its Commission on Banking Technique and Practice, the International Chamber
of Commerce endorses the United Nations Convention on Independent Guarantees
and Stand-by Letters of Credit.
Since its earliest years,
ICC has provided important international leadership in the field of international
banking operations, particularly as a forum for developing rules of practice.
Since 1933, the Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits (UCP),
in its various revisions, has become a universally recognized standard, stating
and establishing custom and practice for letters of credit.
In this process, the United
Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL), by its endorsement
of the subsequent UCP versions, provided an important bridge to those countries
who were at the time unable to participate directly in the work of ICC. Other
ICC rules, such as Incoterms, have also been endorsed by UNCITRAL, which has
contributed to their international acceptance.
ICC rules cannot be fully
effective in all countries without their being recognized under local law. In
this respect, the recent work of UNCITRAL on the United Nations Convention on
Independent Guarantees and Stand-by Letters of Credit provides an important
impetus to attain this objective. The Convention sets forth the basic principles
of law for independent undertakings in a manner which fully assures their independent
nature, which guarantees widest possible party autonomy and which establishes
a uniform international legal standard for limits to the exception for fraudulent
or abusive drawings.
ICC appreciates that the
Convention was drafted in full recognition of the role of the various
ICC rules in this field, that the UNCITRAL Working Group was directly
and indirectly influenced by, and in turn influenced, the revision of
the UCP, ICC's Uniform Rules for Demand Guarantees (URDG) and its recently
adopted rules on International Standby Practices (ISP 98). ICC also notes
that the UN Convention expressly defers to international banking practice
as represented by ICC rules.
Statements
Commission
on Banking Technique and Practice
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