Preventive measures and monitoring compliance State responsibility for violations of common Article 3 Serious violations of common Article 3 as war crimes Individual criminal responsibility in non-international armed conflicts Paragraph 4: Legal status of the Parties to the conflict Obligation to allow and facilitate rapid and unimpeded passage The International Committee of the Red Cross Paragraph 2: Offer of services by an impartial humanitarian body such as the ICRC Obligations implicit in collecting and caring for the wounded and sick The obligation to care for the wounded and sick The obligation to collect the wounded and sick Subparagraph (2): Collection and care of the wounded and sick The prohibition of sexual violence under common Article 3 Courts convened by non-State armed groups Judicial guarantees which are indispensable Requirement of a regularly constituted court affording all the indispensable judicial guarantees Definition of outrages upon personal dignity Outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment Violence to life and person, in particular murder of all kinds, mutilation, cruel treatment and torture Subparagraph (1): Acts prohibited under common Article 3 Subparagraph (1): Fundamental obligations under common Article 3 The applicability of common Article 3 to all civilians and to a Party’s own armed forces Common Article 3 and the conduct of hostilities Laying down arms or being placed hors de combat Members of armed forces who have laid down their arms and those placed hors de combat Persons taking no active part in the hostilities Binding force of common Article 3 on multinational forces Binding force of common Article 3 on non-State armed groups ‘each Party to the conflict shall be bound to apply’ Paragraph 1: Binding force of common Article 3 Continuing application of common Article 3 after the end of a non-international armed conflict The end of a non-international armed conflict The beginning of a non-international armed conflict Non-international armed conflict not confined to the territory of one State ‘Internal’ non-international armed conflicts The threshold of non-international armed conflict The Parties to a non-international armed conflict ‘In the case of armed conflict not of an international character’ Paragraph 1: Scope of application of common Article 3 It is very likely that the ships could appear in the service of pirates, involved in the purchase of ships through proxies. Thrasher is currently being manufactured in single units at the UMC shipyards on special order. The ship also received new weapons developed at the UMC. What was once scrap metal has been replaced by superior armor and the power system has been brought up to the standards of modern engineering ships. Despite the appearance remaining the same, Thrasher has seriously changed. In a short time, a version of the engineering frigate was developed based on this prototype. At the request of the mercenaries, Thrasher was studied by the qualified engineers. The unusual frigate was captured with almost no damage and taken to UMC. Soon, the mercenaries destroyed the thugs involved in the destruction of cargo ships. Thrasher was seen as part of a small group of Butchers under the command of Graml Rusty. Somebody thought it would be a good idea to use some of the metal to create a fearsome look for the frigate. The ship’s old hull was badly damaged, and so it became the carcass on which the new plating from various scrap metals was attached. The survivors of the Doomed Flotilla were rumoured to have had a hand in this by trying to escape from the infected sectors. It’s not known for certain who was involved in the modernization and transformation of the frigate. In the past, it was the Imperial mining ship “Digger”. Special bonus for everyone who buys the bundle - Premium license for 30 days!
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