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PART VI
PUNISHMENTS
Imprisonment, to be without hard labour
24. All imprisonment for an offence shall be without hard labour.
Person liable to certain imprisonment may be sentenced to shorter term
25. A person liable to imprisonment for life or any other period may be sentenced for any shorter term:
Provided however that nothing in this section shall apply to any sentence of imprisonment for life required to be imposed by section 47, 48, 63 or 193 (relating to the offences of treason, instigating invasion, piracy and murder).
Fine in addition to, or instead of, imprisonment
26. A person liable to imprisonment for an offence may be is sentenced to pay a fine in addition to or instead of imprisonment:
Provided however that nothing in this section shall apply to any sentence of imprisonment for life required to be imposed by section 47, 48, 63 or 193 (relating to the offences of treason, instigating invasion, piracy and murder).
Concurrent sentences
27. Where a person after conviction for an offence is convicted of another offence, either before sentence is passed upon him under the first conviction or before the expiration of that sentence, any sentence of imprisonment which is passed upon him under the subsequent conviction shall be executed after the expiration of the former sentence, unless the court directs that it shall be executed concurrently with the former sentence or any part thereof:
Provided that it shall not be lawful for a court to direct that a sentence of imprisonment in default of payment of a fine shall be executed concurrently with a former sentence.
Warrants and orders
28. (1) A warrant under the hand of the judge or magistrates' court by whom any person is sentenced to imprisonment, ordering that the sentence be carried out in any prison within the Gilbert Islands, shall be issued by the sentencing judge or magistrates' court, and shall be full authority to the officer in charge of such prison and to all other persons for carrying into effect the sentence described in such warrant.
(2) Except where otherwise provided in this Code or otherwise ordered by the court, every sentence shall be deemed to commence from and to include the whole of the day on which it was pronounced.
(3) Every warrant for the execution of any sentence may be issued either by the judge or magistrates' court passing, sentence or by the successor in office.
(4) The court may at any time amend any defect in substance or in form, in any order or warrant, and no omission or error as to the time and place, and no defect in form in any order or warrant given under this Code, shall be held to render void or unlawful any act done or intended to be done.
Article 103
Role of States in enforcement of sentences of imprisonment
1. (a) A sentence of imprisonment shall be served in a State designated by the Court from a list of States which have indicated to the Court their willingness to accept sentenced persons.
(b) At the time of declaring its willingness to accept sentenced persons, a State may attach conditions to its acceptance as agreed by the Court and in accordance with this Part.
(c) A State designated in a particular case shall promptly inform the Court whether it accepts the Court's designation.
2. (a) The State of enforcement shall notify the Court of any circumstances, including the exercise of any conditions agreed under paragraph 1, which could materially affect the terms or extent of the imprisonment. The Court shall be given at least 45 days' notice of any such known or foreseeable
circumstances. During this period, the State of enforcement shall take no action that might prejudice its obligations under article 110.
(b) Where the Court cannot agree to the circumstances referred to in subparagraph (a), it shall notify the State of enforcement and proceed in accordance with article 104, paragraph 1.
3. In exercising its discretion to make a designation under paragraph 1, the Court shall take into account the following:
(a) The principle that States Parties should share the responsibility for enforcing sentences of imprisonment, in accordance with principles of equitable distribution, as provided in the Rules of Procedure and Evidence;
(b) The application of widely accepted international treaty standards governing the treatment of prisoners;
(c) The views of the sentenced person;
(d) The nationality of the sentenced person;
(e) Such other factors regarding the circumstances of the crime or the person sentenced, or the effective enforcement of the sentence, as may be appropriate in designating the State of enforcement.
4. If no State is designated under paragraph 1, the sentence of imprisonment shall be served in a prison facility made available by the host State, in accordance with the conditions set out in the headquarters agreement referred to in article 3, paragraph 2. In such a case, the costs arising out of the enforcement of a sentence of imprisonment shall be borne by the Court.
Article 105
Enforcement of the sentence
1. Subject to conditions which a State may have specified in accordance with article 103, paragraph 1 (b), the sentence of imprisonment shall be binding on the States Parties, which shall in no case modify it.
2. The Court alone shall have the right to decide any application for appeal and revision. The State of enforcement shall not impede the making of any such application by a sentenced person.