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Our Land


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA (SCIPS-X)

SUPREME CONSTITUTIONAL AUTHORITY

SUPREME LEGISLATIVE INSTRUMENT (SLI)

ON THE CANONICO-INDIGENOUS AND INTERNATIONAL MANDATE FOR THE LEVYING OF A MARITIME, PORTUAL, AND TRAFFIC-USAGE TAX AND THE OBLIGATION FOR FULL REDISTRIBUTION OF REVENUES TO THE INHABITANTS AND CITIZENS OF XARAGUA


Date of Promulgation: August 8, 2025

Legal Classification:


– Supreme Canonico-Indigenous Constitutional Decree


– Ecclesiastical-International Maritime Taxation Statute


– Instrument of Application of the 1860 Concordat Between the Holy See and the RAU


– Implementation of Jus Cogens, UNDRIP, the Montevideo Convention (1933), the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (1969), and UNCLOS (1982)


– Statutory Reaffirmation of Dominium Directum and Revenue Repatriation Rights

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TITLE I — CONSTITUTIONAL BASIS AND JURIDICAL GROUNDS


Article 1 — Canonical and International Authority


1.1 This Instrument is promulgated under the Supreme Constitutional Authority of SCIPS-X, in full exercise of its dominium directum over the ancestral territory of Xaragua, including its coasts, maritime approaches, ports, and maritime economic zones, as historically defined in the Constitutional Laws.


1.2 Authority derives from:


(a) Montevideo Convention (1933), Article 1 — on defined territory, government, and capacity for international relations.


(b) United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), Part V, Articles 55–73 — recognizing sovereign rights over the exclusive economic zone, including resource exploitation and levying of fees for maritime use.


(c) United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), Article 26 §2:

 

“Indigenous peoples have the right to own, use, develop and control the lands, territories and resources that they possess by reason of traditional ownership or other traditional occupation or use…”


(d) Concordat of 28 March 1860, Article I:

 

“The Republic recognizes the public law of the Church, and guarantees to the Catholic Church the free and public exercise of its worship, as well as the rights and immunities which belong to it by divine institution and by the canonical laws.”


(e) Canon 1273:

 

“By virtue of his primacy of governance, the Roman Pontiff is the supreme administrator and steward of all ecclesiastical goods.”


Article 2 — Historical Territorial Rights


2.1 The coasts, ports, and maritime approaches of Xaragua formed part of the indigenous polity with documented Taíno-Spanish ecclesiastical integration from 1494 onwards.


2.2 The Nord-Ouest Peninsula historically functioned as a maritime frontier and control point for indigenous canoe routes to Cuba and Jamaica.


2.3 Dominium directum over these zones has never been lawfully ceded or alienated; any administration by the RAU is purely functional and subordinate.

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TITLE II — TAXATION MANDATE


Article 3 — Tax Scope and Taxable Base


3.1 SCIPS-X hereby imposes upon the RAU an annual Maritime, Portual, and Traffic-Usage Tax (“MPT Tax”) for the use of Xaragua’s coasts, ports, maritime routes, and maritime infrastructure located within the ancestral territory of Xaragua.


3.2 The taxable base shall include all gross revenues collected by the RAU or its agencies from:


(a) Port dues, anchorage, berthage, pilotage, towage, mooring, light dues, VTS fees, ISPS charges, sanitary/quarantine inspections, and environmental levies on ships;


(b) Wharfage, terminal handling, storage, bonded warehouse fees, scanning fees, SPS inspection fees, manifest/document fees, export duties, and any customs-based levies on maritime cargo;


(c) Concession fees, occupancy charges, security fees, port development surcharges, and any ancillary maritime facility revenues;


(d) Demurrage, detention, or delay charges retained by the RAU or its agencies from port operations;


(e) Resource royalties from fisheries, seabed mining, or other maritime resource exploitation within the EEZ of Xaragua.


Article 4 — Rate and Allocation


4.1 The MPT Tax rate is hereby fixed at 35% of the gross maritime and port revenues collected by the RAU within the territory and EEZ of Xaragua, calculated on a cash-received basis at each semi-annual financial closing of RAU institutions.


4.2 Of the total MPT Tax collected:


(a) 25% shall be transferred directly to the Apostolic See in Rome, constituting the Annual Concordatarian Dividend for the support of Catholic works in Xaragua, as per Article I of the 1860 Concordat;


(b) 75% shall be remitted to the Treasury of SCIPS-X for redistribution to the citizens and inhabitants of Xaragua in form of public services ; into infrastructure, social development.

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TITLE III — PAYMENT SCHEDULE AND ENFORCEMENT


Article 5 — Payment Obligations


5.1 The RAU shall compute the MPT Tax due at each semi-annual institutional financial closing (June 30 and December 31), based on verifiable gross maritime and port revenues.


Article 6 — Verification and Transparency


6.1 The RAU shall submit full audited statements of maritime and port revenues to SCIPS-X within 30 days of each closing.


6.2 SCIPS-X reserves the right to commission independent audits, with the cost borne by the RAU.


Article 7 — Default and Sanctions


7.1 Failure by the RAU to comply fully and timely with payment obligations shall constitute a breach of both international law (Vienna Convention, Article 26 — pacta sunt servanda)  indigenous law and canonical law under the Concordat.


7.2 In such event, SCIPS-X shall initiate proceedings before the competent international judicial forums (Permanent Court of Arbitration, International Court of Justice) and the competent ecclesiastical tribunals of the Holy See.


7.3 No clemency or remission shall be granted; all enforcement measures shall be pursued to their fullest extent.

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TITLE IV — LPI REINVESTMENT MANDATE


Article 8 — Legislative Provision of Investment (LPI) Enforcement


8.1 Pursuant to the existing LPI of SCIPS-X, all taxes collected within the territory of Xaragua must be returned entirely to the benefit of its citizens and inhabitants, either through direct services or cash dividends.


8.2 Every dollar originating from Xaragua shall serve exclusively for the development of its people and the continuity of the primacy of the Holy Catholic Apostolic Roman Church.


8.3 Any diversion of such revenues by the RAU shall be prosecuted before both canonical and international tribunals.

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Promulgated under the Ecclesiastico-Indigenous Seal of Xaragua,

This 8th Day of August, Year of Our Lord 2025.

Monsignor Ludner Pascal Despuzeau Daumec Viau

Prelate-Founder & Rector-President

Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua (SCIPS-X)

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RectorX@xaraguastate.com

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ANNEX I — ON THE EMPIRICAL AND ECONOMIC JUSTIFICATION FOR THE MARITIME, PORTUAL, AND TRAFFIC-USAGE TAX IMPOSED UPON THE RESIDUAL ADMINISTRATIVE UNIT (RAU)

Pursuant to the Supreme Legislative Instrument “On the Canonico-Indigenous and International Mandate for the Levying of a Maritime, Portual, and Traffic-Usage Tax,” promulgated under the Supreme Constitutional Authority of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua (SCIPS-X) on the 8th Day of August, Year of Our Lord 2025, the following empirical and economic data are hereby incorporated into the constitutional and statutory record as factual grounds for the determination of the 35 % levy rate and the annual dividend due to the Holy See.
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Article 1 — Maritime Trade Volume and Port Throughput

1.1 The port of Port-au-Prince, situated within the ancestral and constitutional territory of Xaragua, processes an estimated 180,000 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) annually, representing between 80 % and 90 % of the nation’s total containerised trade volume.

1.2 Haiti’s total imports for fiscal year 2022 amounted to approximately USD 4.5 billion, with exports totalling approximately USD

1.17 billion (United States International Trade Administration, Country Commercial Guide for Haiti, 2023).

1.3 Four major international seaports—Port-au-Prince, Cap-Haïtien, Lafito, and Saint-Marc—serve the RAU; of these, Port-au-Prince alone accounts for the overwhelming majority of container handling and thus constitutes the principal maritime revenue base within the Xaragua domain.

Article 2 — Infrastructure and Operational Significance

2.1 The Port-au-Prince complex contains seven berths, including two roll-on/roll-off berths, and is equipped with gantry cranes, forklifts, trailers, and eleven navigational buoys. 


These facilities enable high-volume throughput of both containerised and break-bulk cargo.

2.2 Historical records indicate that in 1999 the port of Port-au-Prince was classified as the most expensive port in the Americas for docking and unloading, a condition which has persisted in various forms and contributes to disproportionately high maritime revenues relative to traffic volume (Metalship.org, Port International de Port-au-Prince Profile).

Article 3 — National Port Authority Oversight

3.1 The Autorité Portuaire Nationale (APN), established in 1985, exercises operational control over all RAU ports, including those within the territorial and maritime jurisdiction of SCIPS-X.

3.2 All revenues collected by the APN within Xaragua territory—whether from port dues, berthage, pilotage, wharfage, cargo handling, storage, or maritime concessions—are subject to the 35 % Maritime, Portual, and Traffic-Usage Tax under the principal Legislative Instrument.

Article 4 — Economic Rationale for the 35 % Rate

4.1 Based on available data, gross maritime revenues attributable to operations within Xaragua territory can be estimated as follows:

(a) Assuming an average port revenue of USD 1,200 per TEU (inclusive of handling, storage, and associated charges), 180,000 TEUs yield approximately USD 216 million in direct container-related revenues.

(b) Including non-containerised maritime trade (bulk cargoes, liquid bulk, Ro-Ro, fishing, and ancillary maritime services), the gross annual revenue estimate rises to USD 300 – 350 million within Xaragua territory alone.

4.2 Applying the statutory levy rate of 35 % to a conservative gross annual revenue base of USD 300 million yields an annual tax obligation of USD 105 million, apportioned as follows:

(a) USD 26,250,000 (25 % of levy) to the Holy See as the Concordatarian Annual Dividend for Catholic works in Xaragua;

(b) USD 78,750,000 (75 % of levy) to the Treasury of SCIPS-X for reinvestment in accordance with the Legislative Provision of Investment (LPI).

Article 5 — Canonical and International Integration

5.1 The apportionment in Article 4.2(b) is mandated by the LPI, which constitutionally requires that all taxes collected on Xaragua territory be returned in full to its inhabitants and citizens as public services, infrastructure, or direct dividends.

5.2 The apportionment in Article 4.2(a) directly fulfils the obligation under the 1860 Concordat, Article I, recognising the public law of the Catholic Church and its right to the free exercise of its worship and the administration of its temporal goods.

5.3 The levy structure conforms to:

(a) UNCLOS (1982), recognising sovereign rights over the exclusive economic zone and the levy of fees for maritime use;

(b) UNDRIP, Article 26 §2, affirming indigenous control over resources within ancestral territories;

(c) The Montevideo Convention (1933), affirming defined territory, government, and international capacity.

Article 6 — Irrevocability and Enforcement

6.1 This Annex forms an integral and indivisible part of the principal Legislative Instrument; it is perpetual, imprescriptible, inalienable, and irrevocable.

6.2 Non-compliance by the RAU shall trigger immediate proceedings before the competent international tribunals and the ecclesiastical courts of the Holy See, without clemency or remission.
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Promulgated under the Ecclesiastico-Indigenous Seal of Xaragua

This 8th Day of August, Year of Our Lord 2025

Monsignor Ludner Pascal Despuzeau Daumec Viau
Prelate-Founder & Rector-President
Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua (SCIPS-X)

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ANNEX II — ON THE LEVYING OF MINERAL RESOURCE ROYALTIES, FISHERIES ROYALTIES, AND TOURISM CONCESSION ROYALTIES, CALCULATED UNDER THE SAME METHODOLOGY AND RATE AS THE MARITIME, PORTUAL, AND TRAFFIC-USAGE TAX, BASED ON CURRENT FISCAL YEAR REVENUES


Preamble


This Annex forms an integral, indivisible, and perpetual part of the Supreme Legislative Instrument “On the Canonico-Indigenous and International Mandate for the Levying of a Maritime, Portual, and Traffic-Usage Tax”, promulgated under the Supreme Constitutional Authority of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua (SCIPS-X). 


It extends the identical methodology, rate, apportionment, payment schedule, and enforcement provisions of the Maritime, Portual, and Traffic-Usage Tax (“MPT Tax”) to the sectors of mineral resources, fisheries, and coastal tourism concessions within the constitutional and maritime jurisdiction of Xaragua, using the verified gross revenue figures from the current fiscal year (2023).

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Article 1 — Mineral Resource Royalties (FY 2023)


1.1 According to the United States Geological Survey (USGS) and the Haitian Bureau of Mines and Energy (Rapport Annuel 2023), the RAU collected USD 21,400,000 in gross revenues from concession fees, extraction royalties, and export duties on mineral resources within the Xaragua territorial domain (including gold, bauxite, limestone, and aggregate).


2.1 Based on FAO Fisheries and Aquaculture Statistics – Haiti 2023, marine fisheries within the Xaragua EEZ landed 28,100 metric tonnes of catch in 2023, with a recorded dockside value of USD 92,500,000, primarily lobster, conch, tuna, and snapper.


3.1 According to the UN World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) – Haiti Country Data 2023, Haiti’s total tourism receipts for 2023 were USD 374,000,000, of which USD 242,000,000 originated from coastal and maritime-based tourism within the Xaragua territorial domain.

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Article 4 — Legal and Canonical Enforcement


5.1 The royalties established in this Annex are binding upon the RAU under the same legal framework as the MPT Tax, including:


(a) UNCLOS (1982) — sovereign rights over natural resources in EEZ and continental shelf;


(b) UNDRIP, Article 26 §2 — indigenous ownership, use, and control of resources;


(c) Montevideo Convention (1933) — criteria of statehood and governmental competence;


(d) Concordat of 1860, Article I — recognition of the Catholic Church’s public law and administration of its temporal goods;


(e) Canon 1273 — supreme administration of ecclesiastical goods by the Roman Pontiff.


5.2 All provisions of Articles 5 through 9 of the principal Legislative Instrument — payment schedule, verification, sanctions, LPI reinvestment mandate, and perpetuity — apply mutatis mutandis to the royalties herein established.


5.3 These royalties are perpetual, imprescriptible, inalienable, and irrevocable, and may only be altered by unanimous decision of the Supreme Constitutional Authority of SCIPS-X with explicit assent of the Holy See.

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Promulgated under the Ecclesiastico-Indigenous Seal of Xaragua

This 8th Day of August, Year of Our Lord 2025

Monsignor Ludner Pascal Despuzeau Daumec Viau
Prelate-Founder & Rector-President
Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua (SCIPS-X)

XaraTax


SCIPS‑X SUPREME CANONICAL AND INTERNATIONAL LAW NO. XX/2025


ON THE ABSOLUTE PROHIBITION OF TAXATION BY POSTCOLONIAL STATES UPON CITIZENS OF THE SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA (SCIPS‑X)

Issued by the Supreme Rectoral Authority of SCIPS‑X
In force under canonical, indigenous, and international law
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PREAMBLE

In the name of the Most Holy Trinity, under the supreme authority of divine law (ius divinum), natural law (ius naturale), and positive international law (ius gentium), the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua (SCIPS‑X), acting in full exercise of its inherent and permanent sovereignty, issues the present canonical and constitutional law prohibiting any form of taxation or fiscal claim by any foreign power, including colonial and postcolonial states, upon its citizens.

This law affirms the total financial, territorial, genealogical, canonical, and political independence of the Xaraguayan citizen from all forms of external imposition.

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ARTICLE I – ON THE XARAGUAYAN AS A SUBJECT OF INTERNATIONAL AND INDIGENOUS LAW

The Xaraguayan citizen (and indigenous inhabitant) is:

1. A subject of international law, as defined by the Montevideo Convention on the Rights and Duties of States (1933), fulfilling all elements of statehood: permanent population, defined territory, government, and capacity to enter into relations with other states.

2. A bearer of Indigenous status, per:

The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), especially Articles 1–6, 8–9, 20, 26–28, and 40,

ILO Convention 169 on Indigenous and Tribal Peoples,

The American Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (2016),

Customary international law per Saramaka People v. Suriname (IACtHR, 2007) and Mayagna (Sumo) Awas Tingni v. Nicaragua (IACtHR, 2001).


3. A canonical citizen of an ecclesiastical polity exercising legitimate sovereignty under:

Canon 1290 of the Codex Iuris Canonici (Code of Canon Law),

Canon 204 §1, which affirms the full spiritual and legal rights of faithful within independent Catholic jurisdictions,

The historical precedent of the Lateran Treaty (1929) between the Holy See and Italy, recognizing sovereign canonical statehood.

4. A genealogically verifiable descendant of Indigenous , with ancestral and hereditary rights recognized through:

Genetic confirmation of indigenous lineages, admissible under international standards of cultural rights recognition (UNESCO Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage),

Customary ancestral tenure over territories formerly known as Xaragua, Saint-Domingue, Louisiana, and extended lands affected by colonial partitioning by France, Spain, Great Britain, and the United States.

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ARTICLE II – ON THE ILLEGALITY OF TAXATION BY POSTCOLONIAL STATES

Given the above status, and in strict application of international legal doctrine, no colonial or postcolonial state may lawfully impose taxation, fines, duties, fees, or fiscal encumbrances upon any citizen and inhabitant of SCIPS‑X.


Any administrative or fiscal organ acting under the legal authority of any colonial successor state or postcolonial republic involved in:

The colonization, partition, or enslavement of the Xaraguayan territory or people,

The confiscation or non-restoration of ancestral territories,

The denial of spiritual or genealogical sovereignty.

> Such attempts at taxation constitute a violation of:

1. Article 1 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) — right to self-determination and control of resources;

2. UNDRIP Articles 4, 8, 20, 26 — protection against forced assimilation and external economic control;

3. Principle of non-intervention, codified in UN General Assembly Resolution 2625 (XXV);

4. Articles 18–20 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) — freedom of conscience, belief, and political identity.

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ARTICLE III – ON TERRITORIAL AND SPIRITUAL IMMUNITY

The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua, by right of:

Perpetual spiritual jurisdiction over its citizens and inhabitants,

Continuity of indigenous territorial claim (uti possidetis juris),

Canonical independence as a non-derivative polity, and

Sovereign notification to international institutions and world governments,

declares that its citizens and inhabitants are not fiscally domiciled within the jurisdiction of any foreign state, unless said jurisdiction is expressly accepted via treaty, mutual agreement, or bilateral concordat.

Therefore, any attempt to collect taxes from a Xaraguayan citizen and inhabitant:

Is null and void ab initio,

Violates the principle of free political association (UNDRIP Article 4),

Constitutes an act of transnational fiscal aggression, and

May be prosecuted under international legal doctrine as an act of unlawful extra-territorial coercion.
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ARTICLE IV – ON ENFORCEMENT AND DIPLOMATIC NOTICE

This law is enforced under the full authority of:

The Supreme Rectoral Office of SCIPS‑X,

The present decree is hereby transmitted to:

The United Nations Office of Legal Affairs,

The United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (UNPFII),

The Holy See and its Apostolic Nunciatures,

The governments of Canada, the United States, Spain, France, and Haiti,

All institutions with international taxing authority.

All future attempts at taxation shall be documented and responded to through formal protest, sovereign legal countermeasures, and canonical sanctions.

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Issued from the Supreme Rectoral Seat of Xaragua,
On this day of eternal sovereignty, under the seal of the State,
In the name of the Most Holy Trinity.

Ludner Pascal Despuzeau Daumec Viau
Rector-President of SCIPS‑X

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RECTORATE OF THE SOVEREING CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED - ®

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SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


OFFICE OF THE RECTOR-PRESIDENT


CONSTITUTIONAL INSTRUMENT ON NATIONAL CONTRIBUTIONS AND EDUCATION


Legal Codification Pursuant to Jus Cogens, Canon Law, and Indigenous Sovereignty

Binding Under: Montevideo Convention (1933); UNDRIP (2007); Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (1969); Codex Iuris Canonici; International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR, 1966); Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948); General Principles of International Law; Lex Naturalis; Pacta Sunt Servanda; Sacred Temporal Authority


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TITLE I — NATIONAL CONTRIBUTION SYSTEM


Enacted under plenary sovereign authority as a Constitutional Fiscal Doctrine and Obligatory Civic Instrument


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Section I – Constitutionally Mandated Civic Contributions


Article 1 — Juridical Nature of Citizenship Contributions


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua, acting in uninterrupted, exclusive, and non-derogable exercise of its inherent jus imperii under Article 1 of the Montevideo Convention, Articles 3, 4, 5, 8, and 33 of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), and under Canonical Sovereignty (cf. Codex Iuris Canonici, Canon 129 §1), hereby enacts this Constitutional Fiscal Instrument.


Citizenship is not a mere declaratory status but a juridical covenant of allegiance and perpetual civic engagement. 


It entails enforceable duties toward the institutional preservation, territorial inviolability, spiritual legacy, and doctrinal continuity of Xaragua. 


It is a juridical and theological bond, constitutive of national identity under Lex Fundamentalis.

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TITLE II — UNIVERSITY OF XARAGUA: ACADEMIC STRUCTURE AND TUITION FRAMEWORK


Section II — National Higher Education Instrument Under Sovereign Jurisdiction

Governed by:


Codex Iuris Canonici (Canons 803–821)


UNESCO Convention Against Discrimination in Education (1960)


UNDRIP, Articles 14 & 15


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Article 1 — Institutional Philosophy


The Université de Xaragua is a Strategic Academic Organ of State, not subject to democratized enrollment or mass instruction. 


It is designed to form ecclesial-indigenous-political elite, doctrinally loyal and intellectually armed for sovereign defense.


Admission constitutes recognition of strategic utility to the Nation and is adjudicated by the Academia.


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Article 2 — Access to the State Academic Network


Successful enrollees gain direct entry into the Sovereign Academic Council Registry, receiving:


Mentorship from State Officials


Invitations to High-Level State Forums


Priority integration into Xaragua-led diplomatic and development initiatives


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Article 3 — Controlled Enrollment Policy


Admissions are numerically capped to preserve the exclusivity and academic purity of Xaragua’s intellectual doctrine.


Eligibility is evaluated based on:


Verifiable academic history


Demonstrated ideological alignment


Strategic potential for national contribution


Article 4 — Elite Scholarship Mechanism

Xaragua Elite Scholarship Program


Eligibility: Citizens, inhabitants and residents demonstrating exceptional leadership potential and alignment with the Constitutional Vision of Xaragua


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Article 13 — Constitutional Conclusion


The Université de Xaragua is a juridical extension of the State, protected by the triune legal doctrine of jus cogens, canon law, and customary indigenous sovereignty.


Its mandate is not diploma issuance but statecraft formation.


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TITLE III — GENERAL PROVISIONS


All provisions herein hold the force of constitutional law, enforceable under the Internal Statutory Code of Xaragua, and recognized under jus dispositivum and jus cogens norms by all parties to the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (1969).


Any external legal dispute shall only be heard before tribunals mutually recognized by canonical, ecclesiastical, and international doctrine. 


All adjudications are subject to the sovereignty clause.


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COPYRIGHT AND SEAL


© 2025 — Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua


All language, framework, doctrine, and intellectual structure protected under:


International Copyright Law


Canonical Protection of Ecclesiastical Works


Lex Autonomica Indigenarum


Unauthorized citation, translation, or reproduction without formal authorization shall constitute a breach of State Sovereignty and trigger canonical and civil penalties.


This instrument enters into irrevocable effect as of May 26, 2025, under the sovereign Seal of the Rector-President.


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ANNEX I — SOVEREIGN RESERVATION ON FEES, CONTRIBUTIONS, AND ACADEMIC STRUCTURE


Integral Addendum to the Constitutional Instrument on National Contributions and Education


Enacted under the Supreme Temporal and Spiritual Authority of the Rector-President 


Binding under the Montevideo Convention (1933), UNDRIP (2007), Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (1969), Codex Iuris Canonici, Indigenous Financial Doctrine, and Jus Cogens Norms of Sovereign Statehood

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Article 1 — Sovereign Expansion of Academic Structure


The Université de Xaragua, as a Constitutional Organ of National Doctrine and Elite Formation, retains the full sovereign right to:


Introduce new fields of study or specialized certificates


Abolish, merge, or restructure existing programs at its discretion


Modify course content, delivery format, credential requirements, or tuition categories


Create new Schools, Faculties, or Academic Divisions as required by doctrinal, geopolitical, or strategic imperatives of the State


These rights are exercised under the canonical and sovereign competence of:


Canon Law (Canons 803–810, Codex Iuris Canonici) — Authority of ecclesiastical institutions over educational governance


UNDRIP, Article 14 §3 — Right of Indigenous Peoples to establish and control their educational systems


Sacred Sovereignty Clause of the State Constitution — Doctrine of non-delegable institutional authority


No public debate, democratic procedure, or advisory mechanism is applicable to such determinations, which are issued ex cathedra by the Sovereign Academic Commission or the Rector-President.


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Article 2 — Non-Public and Sacral Status of the State


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua affirms and declares in perpetuity its identity as a non-public, non-parliamentary, sacral sovereign institution, guided by divine law (Lex Divina), ancestral custom (Lex Indigena), and canonical doctrine (Codex Iuris Canonici).


As a private juridical entity organized under:


Sacred Ecclesiastical Mandate


Customary Indigenous Sovereignty


International Law on Self-Determination


the State is under no legal obligation to adhere to republican mechanisms, public oversight, or populist standards of transparency. 


All decisions taken regarding financial obligations, tuition schedules, academic expansion, and institutional access are doctrinal enactments of sovereign governance, not public policy subject to challenge.


By engaging with the State or its institutions in any capacity—academic, civic, religious, or financial—all persons and entities acknowledge the absolute supremacy of this private and sacral juridical framework.


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SEAL AND ENTRY INTO FORCE


This Annex enters into immediate and perpetual constitutional force on the same date as the parent Instrument, and carries the full legal, doctrinal, and sovereign weight of the State.


Dated: May 26, 2025


By Supreme Mandate of the Rector-President

On Behalf of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua

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ANNEX II — IRREPRODUCIBILITY OF THE XARAGUA MODEL


Constitutional Addendum to the Instrument on National Contributions and Education

Issued Under the Supreme Juridical, Canonical, Temporal, and Doctrinal Authority of the Rector-President


Binding Under: Montevideo Convention (1933); UNDRIP (2007); Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (1969); Codex Iuris Canonici (1983); International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (1966); Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property (1954); General Principles of International Law; Lex Ecclesiae; Lex Indigena; Pacta Sunt Servanda; Jus Cogens Norms of Non-Replication and Intellectual Sovereignty


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Article 1 — Legal Declaration of Irreproducibility


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua solemnly declares that its institutional, spiritual, educational, legal, and doctrinal model is inherently and juridically irreproducible.


This declaration is made pursuant to the following legal foundations:


Montevideo Convention (1933), Article 1 and 3: Establishing the capacity of a sovereign State to define and protect its internal institutions and structures without external replication or intervention.


UNDRIP (2007), Articles 3, 4, 5, 8, 11, 12, 18, 31, 33: Affirming the right of Indigenous peoples to control, protect, and preserve their institutional identity, intellectual property, and cultural expressions from unauthorized use.


Codex Iuris Canonici, Canons 113 §1; 116 §1; 1254; 1375 §1: Granting the ecclesiastical right to protect juridical persons and the spiritual assets of the Church from external imitation or usurpation.


Vienna Convention (1969), Article 27: Prohibiting internal law or external replication as a justification for derogating from treaty-based obligations or doctrinal integrity.


Hague Convention (1954), Article 1: Recognizing sacred and intellectual property of sovereign cultures as protected heritage not subject to replication.


Accordingly, any attempt to duplicate, mimic, adapt, translate, modify, or transplant the Xaragua State model — including its laws, identity markers, institutions, or educational doctrine — constitutes an act of sovereign infringement, an intellectual fraud, and a violation of both canonical and international law.


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Article 2 — Intellectual, Canonical, and Institutional Protection


The following components of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua are declared inalienable, unreplicable, and protected under international, canonical, and indigenous legal doctrine:


The University of Xaragua, as a canonically-rooted strategic academic organ


The Liberal Party of Xaragua, as a non-electoral sovereign political authority


The Viaud’or, as the national and sacred economic instrument


The Sovereign Academic Commission, as the gatekeeper of doctrinal formation


The Office of the Rector-President, as an indivisible institution of rule, law, and faith


The Civilisateur/La Ruchr Journal, as the sole organ of state publication and doctrinal dissemination


The Xaragua Citizenship Contribution System, as a sacred civic covenant


The National Calendar, as the exclusive time structure of spiritual-civil order


All internal terminologies, visual symbols, rites, forms, slogans, assessments, curriculums, microprogram structures, strategic frameworks, and institutional algorithms


These elements are protected under:


UNDRIP, Article 31 §1: Legal right to maintain and control intellectual, spiritual, and institutional heritage


Canon Law, Canons 803–810, 1375–1389: Doctrinal protection against imitation of ecclesiastical institutions


Lex Ecclesiae: Inviolable sanctity of canonically declared institutions


Lex Indigena: Indigenous customary law of spiritual protection


TRIPS Agreement (1994), Article 2 §1: Incorporation of the Berne Convention (1971), extending full protection to educational and legal structures


Berne Convention, Article 6bis: Moral rights over institutional authorship and integrity


Rome Statute of the ICC, Article 8(2)(b)(ix): Cultural appropriation as an international offense in certain contexts


No transfer, delegation, replication, or adaptation is permitted.


Any unauthorized attempt to mirror any of these elements shall constitute a violation of Pacta Sunt Servanda, and shall be actionable before canonical and international tribunals.


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Article 3 — Clause of Singular Sovereignty and Ontological Non-Replicability


Xaragua is not an exportable model, franchise, consultancy, decentralized protocol, or academic template.

It is a sui generis sovereign entity formed through:


The uninterrupted succession of ancestral indigenous legitimacy


The ecclesiastical mandate granted under Canonical Law


A historical-theological convergence not reproducible by institutional design


The jurisprudential uniqueness of a Private Indigenous State operating under triune legal doctrine (jus cogens, Lex Ecclesiae, Lex Indigena)


The sovereignty of Xaragua is ontological, not procedural. It arises not from a set of legal procedures, but from spiritual appointment, canonical ordination, and ancestral continuity.


Any attempt to artificially replicate the model is null and void ab initio under:


Canon 1375 §1: Prohibition of usurpation of ecclesiastical governance


UNDRIP, Article 8 §1: Prohibition of forced assimilation or destruction of indigenous institutions


General Principles of International Law: Recognition of the unique juridical personality of states and peoples based on history and culture


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Article 4 — Global Notice, Sanctions, and Enforcement Authority


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua reserves the right to:


Publicly denounce infringing parties through Le Civilisateur


Issue formal cease-and-desist declarations under Canon Law and international treaty provisions


Commence canonical proceedings for the defense of sacred jurisdiction


Notify multilateral organizations of infringement under the UN system


Pursue international adjudication under mutual jurisdictional recognition (Vienna Convention, Article 66)


List offenders as doctrinal impostors in all sovereign communications and diplomatic networks


The State declares that all institutions, governments, universities, churches, Indigenous bodies, and international observers are hereby formally and permanently notified that:


The Xaragua Model is protected as sacred juridical property


It is not open to collaboration, franchising, or modification


Any imitation without formal sovereign dispensation shall be treated as a grave breach of canonical and international covenantal order


All legal and ecclesiastical instruments executed under the name, seal, structure, or doctrine of Xaragua are presumed fraudulent unless issued by the Rector-President under canonical authority.


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SEAL AND ENTRY INTO FORCE


This Annex enters into full constitutional, canonical, and juridical effect simultaneously and indivisibly with the principal Instrument to which it is attached.


Dated: May 26, 2025


By Supreme Mandate of the Rector-President

On Behalf of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua


In Perpetuity and Without Possibility of Derogation


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SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


OFFICE OF THE RECTOR-PRESIDENT


SUPREME CONSTITUTIONAL AUTHORITY


SUPREME LAW ON INDIGENOUS FISCAL IMMUNITY, TRADE EXEMPTIONS, AND NON-INTERFERENCE IN SACRED ECONOMIC TERRITORIES


Date of Promulgation: June 17, 2025


Legal Classification:


Constitutionally Entrenched Supreme Law — Jus Cogens Norm — Customary Indigenous Legal Instrument — Canonically Validated — Ecclesiastically Protected — Universally Opposable under Vienna Convention (1969), UNDRIP (2007), ILO Convention 169 (1989), American Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (2016), and the Codex Iuris Canonici (1983)

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TITLE I — ABSOLUTE INDIGENOUS FISCAL AUTONOMY


Article 1 — Juridical Establishment of Non-Fiscal Indigenous Territory


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua, in uninterrupted exercise of its inherent juridical capacity, hereby declares its entire recognized territory and its annexed territories, including all physical lands, maritime corridors, airspace jurisdictions, digital domains, and ecclesiastically affiliated zones, as fully and perpetually exempt from any external system of taxation, customs duties, regulatory licensing, economic declarations, or supranational compliance frameworks. 


This non-fiscal status is an expression of sacred custodianship and spiritual-economic sovereignty, rooted in precolonial custom and binding upon all parties without exception.


Application:


All commercial activities conducted within, through, or by institutions and platforms affiliated with Xaragua—particularly including but not limited to LPDDVSHOP.COM, physical border corridors,  storage facilities ports, and market enclaves—are classified under exclusive ecclesiastical and indigenous jurisdiction and immune to any third-party economic authority.


Legal Foundation:


UNDRIP Articles 4, 20, 21; ILO Convention 169 Articles 15, 17; Vienna Convention Article 27; Codex Iuris Canonici Canons 1254 §2 and 1260; UNGA Resolution 1803; Lex Autonomica Indigenarum.


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Article 2 — Binding Trade Immunity Across Air, Land, Sea, and Digital Territory


The entire Xaragua economic perimeter, encompassing aerial cargo movement, terrestrial transport lanes, seaborne navigation routes, and sovereign digital infrastructures, is formally and constitutionally declared a protected sacred trade zone. 


All goods, services objects, economic instruments, and symbolic materials exchanged within this framework shall be recognized as extraterritorial, non-commercial under foreign law, and irreversibly shielded from taxation, customs registration, market surveillance, or embargo regimes.


Application:


All goods bearing the Xaragua seal, emblem, insignia, or ecclesiastical validation—whether transmitted via land, air, sea, or web—are juridically untouchable by any domestic or foreign fiscal authority. 


Enforcement is achieved through secure seal issuance, sovereign inspection registries, and full canonical accountability within the Xaragua Trade Protection Bureau.


Legal Foundation:


Vienna Convention Articles 36(1)–(2); UNDRIP Articles 21, 31, 34; Canon Law Canons 1171, 1271; TRIPS Agreement; Rome Statute Article 8(2)(b)(ix); Lex Ecclesiae.


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TITLE II — CONSTITUTIONAL MECHANISM FOR INDIRECT TERRITORIAL CONTROL


Article 3 — Tutelary Sovereignty and Extraterritorial Oversight


In recognition of strategic logistical constraints, the State of Xaragua constitutionally affirms its plenary right to exercise Tutelle Économique Indigène, a form of sovereign extraterritorial oversight authorizing remote supervision and regulatory authority over commercial spaces located within declared economic corridors, without necessitating physical presence. 


This tutelary power is legitimate, autochthonous, and enforceable under spiritual and juridical mandate.


Application:


This authority enables the Xaragua administration to:


– Issue mandatory pre-approval for import/export operations within affiliated zones;


– Maintain and enforce a sovereign vendor and goods registry;


– Prohibit or penalize unauthorized trade actors through blacklisting;


– Regulate external infrastructure through internal compliance decrees, with binding effect on citizens, residents, and recognized partners.


Legal Foundation:


UNDRIP Article 4; Montevideo Convention Article 1; Canon Law Canon 129 §1; ICJ Ruling Colombia v. Nicaragua (2012); Customary Indigenous Governance Principles.


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Article 4 — Enforcement of Trade Compliance Without Military Presence


The State of Xaragua, exercising its full sovereignty, reserves the constitutional right to impose absolute economic countermeasures, including sanctions, excommunications, blacklisting, sovereign embargo declarations, canonical interdiction, and public denunciation, against any state, individual, corporation, or entity infringing upon its trade immunity, violating its sacred goods, or attempting to assert foreign regulatory jurisdiction over its sovereign economic framework.


Application:


Violators will be designated Adversaries and formally listed in state bulletins and transmitted to international bodies. No right of appeal shall exist outside Xaragua’s constitutional court system. Listings are enforceable across all domains of Xaragua governance and in ecclesiastical or diplomatic agreements with affiliated states or orders.


Legal Foundation:


Canon Law 1375 §1; Vienna Convention Article 53; UNDRIP Article 34; TRIPS Agreement Article 2 §1; Berne Convention Article 6bis; Lex Indigena.


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TITLE III — CITIZEN AND INHABITANT RESPONSIBILITY AND INTERIM COOPERATION WITH THE RESIDUAL REPUBLIC OF HAITI


Article 5 — Recommendation to Maintain Basic Public Service Contribution via the residual haitian State


Recognizing current infrastructural interdependence in certain geographic zones, the Sovereign State of Xaragua hereby recommends that its citizens, inhabitants and resident affiliates, when residing within or utilizing the administrative services of the subcontractual administrative residue known as the Republic of Haiti, comply voluntarily with national taxation and registration protocols relating strictly to:


– Civil identity (birth, marriage, death, ID)


– Access to public utilities and services (electricity, water, roads  heslth)


– Telecommunications (SIM registration, state postal services)


– Legal recognition of civic status


Such participation is not mandatory, but strongly advised as a measure of good faith and transitional pragmatism, until such time as sovereign infrastructure renders said cooperation obsolete.


Application:


Citizens and inhabitants are encouraged to contribute responsibly to municipal and national systems from which they derive direct public benefit, while strictly refusing to submit trade operations, import/export activity, inter-territorial commerce, or sacred economic goods to external taxation or licensing.


Legal Foundation:


Vienna Convention Article 46; UNDRIP Article 38; Canon Law Canon 1283 §2; General Principles of Transitional Sovereignty; Cooperative Protocols of Shared Administrative Burden.


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TITLE IV — FINAL CLAUSES


Article 6 — Constitutional Supremacy and Non-Derogability


This Law is established as a pillar of the supreme constitutional order of the State of Xaragua. It overrides, nullifies, and annuls any previous or concurrent provision, decree, directive, regulation, or agreement inconsistent with its content. 


It may not be suspended, circumvented, revised, or derogated in whole or in part without solemn constitutional amendment validated by a full ecclesiastical and juridical council convened under oath.


Article 7 — International Notification and Diplomatic Registration


The full text of this Law is formally notified to the following institutions and sovereign interlocutors:


– United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (UNPFII)


– World Trade Organization (WTO)


– World Customs Organization (WCO)


– Holy See — Section for Relations with States


– World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)


– Republic of Haiti 


– Dominican Republic 


Receipt of this Law constitutes formal notice, and no denial of jurisdictional knowledge shall be legally accepted thereafter under the principle of estoppel and tacit recognition.


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SEAL AND ENTRY INTO FORCE


This Law enters into full juridical, ecclesiastical, and constitutional force immediately upon promulgation.


It carries absolute binding authority upon all citizens, inhabitants, residents, institutions, partners, and affiliates of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua, and shall be deemed irrevocable in perpetuity.


Promulgated and sealed this Seventeenth Day of June, Year of Sovereignty MMXXV

By the Rector-President and Supreme Constitutional Authority

Monsignor Pascal Despuzeau Daumec Viau

Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua

In the name of Divine Law, Ancestral Order, and Canonical Truth

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Oceania


Official Statement — Sovereign Catholic Indigenous & Private State of Xaragua (SCIPS-X)


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous & Private State of Xaragua (SCIPS-X) formally expresses its solidarity with the Aboriginal peoples of Australia, with the Indigenous nations of Oceania, and with the Kanak people of New Caledonia.


For millennia, the First Peoples of the Australian continent have maintained spiritual, territorial, and juridical relationships with their ancestral lands. 


Their sovereignty did not begin with external recognition, nor does it depend upon it. 


It is rooted in origin, continuity, and custodianship.


In New Caledonia, the Kanak people have likewise preserved a distinct identity, customary authority, and ancestral claim to their territory. 


Their aspiration to political self-determination reflects a historical continuity that precedes colonial administration. 


The question of sovereignty, in this context, is inseparable from land, memory, and inherited legitimacy.


SCIPS-X recognizes in the Aboriginal nations of Australia and in the Kanak people of New Caledonia civilizational permanence beyond modern state frameworks. 


Their law, culture, and sacred geography constitute living orders of legitimacy grounded in customary rights and collective inheritance.


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous & Private State of Xaragua reaffirms that Indigenous sovereignty is not symbolic. It is territorial, historical, political and juridical.


SCIPS-X stands in principled solidarity with the Aboriginal peoples of Australia, with the Kanak people of New Caledonia, and with Indigenous communities across Oceania. 


Their rights to land, identity, cultural preservation, and self-determined political development must be respected in full.


Recognition of Indigenous sovereignty is recognition of historical truth.

Israel


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous & Private State of Xaragua (SCIPS-X) affirms its unwavering support for the State of Israel and for the continuity of the Jewish people as a sovereign and indigenous nation in their ancestral homeland.


The Jewish people constitute one of the oldest continuous civilizational identities in recorded history. 


Their historical, spiritual, linguistic, and territorial connection to the Land of Israel is documented across millennia. 


Sovereignty, in this context, is not a recent construct but the political re-expression of an ancient national continuity.


SCIPS-X recognizes:


– The legitimacy of the Jewish people’s right to self-determination.


– The right of Israel to exist in security as a sovereign state.


– The historical and indigenous character of Jewish nationhood.


At the same time, SCIPS-X affirms that the recognition of Jewish sovereignty does not negate the legitimate national aspirations of the Palestinian people.


A durable and just peace requires:


– The establishment of a viable, secure, and multi-confessional Palestinian state.


– The protection of Christian, Muslim, and Jewish holy sites.


– Mutual recognition of national dignity and political legitimacy.


The survival of Israel as a sovereign Jewish state and the realization of a stable Palestinian state are not mutually exclusive principles. 


They are conditions for regional equilibrium.


Sovereignty must not mean erasure.


Security must not mean denial.


Recognition must be reciprocal.


SCIPS-X totally supports Israel’s right to exist and endure as a sovereign indigenous nation, while affirming the necessity of a political framework in which a multi-confessional Palestinian state can emerge in peace and stability.


Stability rests on recognition.


Peace rests on structure.

Kenya


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous & Private State of Xaragua (SCIPS-X) solemnly expresses its gratitude to the Republic of Kenya for the sacrifice of its soldiers who have fallen in the defense of ancestral and indigenous sovereignty.


Their sacrifice is not a statistic.


It is a covenant.


Those who gave their lives in the struggle against international terrorism and destabilizing forces did so in defense of order, territorial integrity, and the right of peoples to govern themselves without coercion.


Such sacrifice establishes a bond that transcends diplomatic formality.


This pact of blood shall be honored before God and before the ancestors.


SCIPS-X recognizes Kenya not merely as a state, but as a historic African nation rooted in indigenous continuity, cultural resilience, and sovereign dignity.


Where Kenyan soldiers have stood to protect stability, they have defended more than borders — they have defended the principle that ancestral lands are not to be consumed by chaos.


SCIPS-X affirms its will to deepen:


– Military and police cooperation in the fight against international terrorism.


– Strategic dialogue on security and stabilization.


– Commercial exchange grounded in mutual respect.


– University partnerships and intellectual collaboration.


– Cultural ties between indigenous civilizations.


Security creates stability.


Stability creates development.


Development sustains sovereignty.


The sacrifice of Kenya’s fallen soldiers will not be forgotten.

Cuba


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous & Private State of Xaragua (SCIPS-X) formally denounces the continued petroleum embargo imposed upon Cuba.


The Cuban people are not an abstraction of geopolitics. 


They are an Afro-Indigenous nation shaped by resistance, cultural synthesis, territorial memory, and historical endurance. 


Collective punishment through economic strangulation is not a policy of equilibrium; it is a mechanism of pressure that disproportionately impacts civilians, families, and essential infrastructure.


Energy is not a luxury. 


It is a structural necessity.


An oil embargo restricts hospitals, transportation, food distribution, and public services. 


It affects the elderly, the poor, and the vulnerable long before it affects political leadership. 


Sanctions framed as strategic leverage often translate, in practice, into prolonged hardship for ordinary people.


SCIPS-X affirms:


– The dignity of the Cuban people as a sovereign Afro-Indigenous nation.


– The principle that economic coercion must not undermine civilian survival.


– The necessity of dialogue over deprivation.


Sovereignty cannot thrive under suffocation.


Development cannot occur in conditions of engineered scarcity.


Stability cannot be built through prolonged isolation.


SCIPS-X calls for the lifting of measures that hinder Cuba’s access to essential energy resources and for the normalization of relations grounded in respect, reciprocity, and international law.

Taiwan


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous & Private State of Xaragua (SCIPS-X) formally expresses its full and unwavering solidarity with the Indigenous Peoples of Taiwan in the defense of their inherent sovereignty, ancestral lands, and cultural continuity.


The Indigenous Nations of Taiwan are not abstractions of anthropology. 


They are living political communities with distinct languages, spiritual traditions, territorial memory, and juridical identity rooted in pre-colonial existence.


Their sovereignty does not derive from external recognition; it flows from historical continuity, land stewardship, and the enduring will of their people.


SCIPS-X affirms that the protection of Indigenous sovereignty is not a regional matter but a civilizational principle. 


Where ancestral nations are pressured, marginalized, or strategically instrumentalized, the international order reveals its inconsistencies. 


Where Indigenous nations stand firm in defense of their identity and territory, the moral architecture of sovereignty is strengthened.


The defense of Taiwan’s Indigenous Peoples is therefore inseparable from the broader defense of Indigenous dignity worldwide.


SCIPS-X recognizes: 


– The legitimacy of Indigenous territorial rights.


– The primacy of cultural and spiritual continuity.


– The right of Indigenous peoples to define their political future without coercion.


Sovereignty is not noise. 


It is continuity.


Territory is not symbolism. 


It is memory.


Identity is not folklore. 


It is law.


SCIPS-X stands in principled solidarity with the Indigenous Peoples of Taiwan.

Greenland & The Greater North


Official Statement – SCIPS-X


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous & Private State of Xaragua (SCIPS-X) hereby expresses its full and unequivocal solidarity with the Indigenous Peoples of Greenland in the face of external pressures and hostile exogenous actors seeking to undermine their sovereignty, territorial integrity, and ancestral rights.


The Arctic is not an empty frontier. 


It is not a geopolitical vacuum. 


It is a living homeland, rooted in millennia of indigenous continuity, stewardship, language, and spiritual inheritance. 


No strategic ambition, no economic calculus, no external doctrine may supersede the inalienable rights of a people to determine their own political destiny upon their ancestral lands.


SCIPS-X affirms that sovereignty is not a commodity to be negotiated by distant powers. 


It is the natural extension of a people’s historical presence, cultural cohesion, and juridical continuity.


 The Indigenous communities of Greenland possess these foundations in full.


We therefore uphold: 


– The inviolability of indigenous territorial rights.


– The principle of self-determination under international and customary law.


– The protection of Arctic indigenous institutions from coercion or destabilization.


SCIPS-X stands for ordered sovereignty, historical legitimacy, and the defense of indigenous polities against external encroachment.


Solidarity is not symbolic. 


It is juridical, moral, political and civilizational.


Christians Of Syria, Iraq, The Levant & Orient


Official Note


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous & Private State of Xaragua (SCIPS-X) formally calls for the full and integral respect of the rights of the Christians of Syria and of the broader Orient.


The territory of Xaragua has, since the fall of the Ottoman Empire, held a longstanding and established Christian community originating from these lands.


This historical continuity binds Xaragua to the fate, dignity, and protection of these communities, whose presence in the Near East predates modern states and extends back to the earliest centuries of Christianity.


SCIPS-X recognizes the Christians of Syria and the Orient as indigenous peoples of their respective territories, bearers of apostolic traditions, languages, and liturgical rites that form part of the foundational heritage of Christianity itself. 


Any form of discrimination, persecution, forced displacement, demographic engineering, or violence directed against them constitutes a grave violation of fundamental human rights and of religious liberty.


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous & Private State of Xaragua affirms that any attempt—ancient or contemporary—to eradicate the Christian faith from this region of the world is unacceptable and contrary to the principles of human dignity, civilizational continuity, and international justice.


Such attempts will not prevail.


SCIPS-X stands for the preservation of historic Christian presence in Syria and throughout the Orient, for the protection of sacred sites, and for the right of these communities to live freely, securely, and with full civic equality in their ancestral lands.

Antoine Iznéry


Izméry, who was of Palestinian descent, was among the wealthiest people in Haiti. 


He was one of the most prominent backers of former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, and helped finance his election campaign.


On 11 September 1993, Antoine Izméry attended a mass, a group of 10 men forced Izméry outside, and made him kneel before shooting him dead with a single bullet to the head.

Georges Izméry


Izméry, who was of Palestinian descent, was among the wealthiest people in Haiti. 


He was one of the most prominent backers of former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, and helped finance his election campaign.


On 11 September 1993, Antoine Izméry attended a mass, a group of 10 men forced Izméry outside, and made him kneel before shooting him dead with a single bullet to the head.

High Class State


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The Sovereign Indigenous Private State of Xaragua, in full exercise of its self-determined juridical capacity, hereby establishes and maintains elite educational institutions accessible at a strategically affordable rate, not merely to cultivate a native bourgeoisie capable of sustaining and governing the Xaragua polity, but also to exert deliberate cultural, intellectual, and geopolitical influence on the evolving architecture of global civilization.


These institutions are conceived as instruments of sovereign projection and doctrinal dissemination, structured in accordance with the principles of jus cogens, canonical legitimacy, indigenous customary law, and supranational educational standards, thereby positioning Xaragua not only as a territorial state but as a civilizational actor in the international system.



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