Last modified: 2006-01-21 by rob raeside
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The precise appearance of these flags is not prescribed. The versions shown above are in use, the last three being exported from .eps files on the ICRC web site.
Kindersley (1997) states (in the Tonga page) that the flag with the red cross coupee was adopted in 1863.
António Martins, 12 March 1999
The following summarizes the provisions of the 1949 Geneva Conventions that govern the use of the Red Cross, Red Crescent, and Red Lion and Sun flags. Geneva I governs land warfare, Geneva II governs warfare at sea. There are also Geneva III and IV, but they have no provisos concerning flags:
Geneva I, Art. 38, provides for use of the Swiss federal arms in reversed colors, the red cross on a white ground, as the emblem and distinctive sign of the Medical Service of armed forces. [This was originally provided for in article VII of the first Geneva Convention for the Amelioration of the Wounded in Armies in the Field, signed on August 22, 1864.] The red crescent or red lion and sun, in lieu of the red cross, will be recognized for use by countries that were already using those devices when the 1949 convention was adopted.
Geneva I, Art. 39, requires the emblem (red cross, etc.) to be displayed on the flags, armlets and on all equipment employed in the Medical Service. The same provision is also contained in Geneva II, Art. 41.
Geneva I, Art. 42, limits the display of "the distinctive flag of the Convention" to medical units and establishments entitled to be respected under the Convention and permits it to be displayed in conjunction with the national flag of the party to which the unit or establishment belongs. [The 1864 convention required it to be displayed with the national flag.] When medical units fall into the hands of the enemy, they display only the flag of the Convention.
Geneva I, Art. 43, requires medical units of neutral countries "which may have been authorized to lend their services to a belligerent" to fly the flag of the Convention and the national flag of the belligerent to which they have been lent, and permits them to fly their own national flag as well. Such neutral medical units may continue to fly their own national flags even if they are captured.
Geneva I, Art. 44, bans all uses of the Red Cross or equivalent emblems (including flags) other than to indicate or protect medical units and establishments and related personnel and material under the Geneva Conventions, except that national Red Cross/Red Crescent Societies may use the emblems in peacetime for other activities in conformity with the principles of the Red Cross movement. In wartime, they may use the emblems for their other activities only if they are clearly not implying the protection of the convention. International Red Cross organizations (such as the International Committee of the Red Cross) may use the Red Cross emblem at all times.
Geneva II, Art 43 requires hospital ships to "make themselves known by hoisting their national flag and further, if they belong to a neutral state, the flag of the Party to the conflict whose direction they have accepted. A white flag with a red cross shall be flown at the mainmast as high as possible." Hospital ships that are provisionally detained by the enemy haul down their national colors. Coastal lifeboats operating from a base occupied by the enemy may continue to fly their own national colours along with the Red Cross flag.
Geneva II, Art 44, limits the use of the distinguishing signs, including the flag, to indicating ships and vessels protected by the convention, whether in peace or war (except as otherwise agreed, e.g., by Geneva I).
Joe McMillan, 2 May 2000
The main authority to use the red cross/red crescent symbol is not by any international red cross organization (ICRC or IFRC) or national red cross society but by the parties to the Geneva conventions (or any party to a conflict, since the protocol includes civil wars within its ambit) to designate military medical facilities and units. In fact, in both wartime and peacetime the national red cross societies can use the symbol only with the approval of their governments. The same applies to the other symbols provided for under the conventions and the protocol: decisions on where to display them is the responsibility of the authorities of the governments who signed the convention or of the parties to a conflict.
Joe McMillan, 6 May 2000
The rules for this are laid down in the "Regulations on the use of the Emblem of
the Red Cross or the Red Crescent by the National Societies" (adopted by the
20th Red Cross and Red Crescent International Conference (Vienna, 1965) and
revised by the Council of Delegates (Budapest, 1991)):
CHAPTER I : GENERAL RULES
...
Article 5: "Design of the emblem"
...
The emblem used as a protective device shall always retain its original form,
i.e. nothing shall be added either to the cross, the crescent or the white
ground. A cross formed with two cross-pieces, one vertical and the other
horizontal crossing in the middle, shall be used. The shape and direction of the
crescent are not regulated. Neither the cross nor the crescent shall touch the
edges of the flag or the shield. The shade of the red is not specified. The
ground shall always be white.
...
Article 7: "Internal regulations of the National Society"
...
The National Society shall lay down the conditions governing the use of the
emblem in regulations or internal directives. The regulations or directives may
consist, for example, of:
...
B. Concerning the indicative use of the emblem:
...
- the dimensions and proportions of the emblem;
So, the direction of the crescent doesn't matter -- all versions are valid and
"protective". But national societies can decide for one version for "indicative"
use (i.e. for consistency of the "logo" within the national society). This has
no effect on the protective use, and is optional.
Ref.:
http://www.icrc.org/web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/iwpList92/25DBB9BFC6601427C1256B66005918DB
Melchior Franz, 13 March 2005
The red cross and the red crescent flags are not formalized to the construction
details - no ratio, no explanation how exactly the cross and the crescent should
look like, how bold they should be, etc. The intention is not to
formalize it, so that any reasonable depiction would be enough to provide
protection according to the agreements and international law - i.e., to
prevent someone from saying maliciously that the proportions were not "as
specified", so they did not have to respect the significance of the symbol.
Therefore, the RC flags are made and used in different ratios, 1:1, 2:3, 1:2 all
being quite usual. In practice the RC flag tends to be of equal ratio as the
flag of the country where it is displayed, but there is no such requirement.
Željko Heimer, 18 May 2005
Kindersley (1997) states (in the Tonga page) that the flag with the red cross coupee was adopted in 1863.
António Martins, 12 March 1999
The plain Red Cross or Red Crescent flag is primarily used to identify medical units of military forces as provided by the 1864 and subsequent Geneva conventions, although national governments may authorize Red Cross or Red Crescent societies to use the flags provided there is no possibility of confusion with the primary use of the flag. The convention also allows the various international Red Cross organizations (ICRC and IFRC) to use the symbols. Therefore, the plain Red Cross is not a unique identifier of the ICRC.
The basic right to use the Red Cross and Red Crescent flags does not derive
from either of these organizations. It is an inherent right of all states that
are parties to the Geneva Convention of 1949 and any other belligerent that
might be engaged in combat in accordance with the laws of armed conflict.
Joe McMillan, 1 April 2003
Vexillologist Léon Nyssen received a letter (in French) from ICRC quoting the
Acts of Geneva Convention of 1949:
"C'est de propos délibéré que l'on n'a pas voulu fixer la forme de la croix
rouge, ce qui eut ouvert la porte à des abus dangereux... Si la forme de la
croix avait été fixée de façon immuable, n'aurait-on pas cherché à justifier des
attaques contre les bâtiments protégés par la convention en prétextant que les
signes n'avaient pas les proportions prescrites?..."
A tentative translation:
"On purpose it has been desired not to determine the shape of the red cross,
which determination would have given way to dangerous abuses...If the shape of
the cross had been determined in an immutable way, would not one try to justify
attacks against buildings protected by the Convention, arguing that the symbols
did not have not the settled proportions?...
Armand du Payrat, 1 April 2003
Nowadays it is normal that the Red Cross symbol in ordered (i.e. peaceful)
conditions is modeled after the Swiss flag, more or less.
However, looking at old documentaries it seems to me that before, say 1950's,
the shape of the cross was usually much thinner (even to one third of the width
of the Swiss cross).
Željko Heimer, 1 April 2003
This version of the red cross matches the form of the Swiss
national flag.
Željko Heimer, 11 December 2005
The Red Crescent flag is used in Islamic nations.
The Red Crescent, the Muslim version of the Red Cross, is depicted as having
the upper and lower tips of the crescent to the viewers left. In French Naval
Commander du Payrat's publication "Album des Pavillons Nationaux et des Marques
Distinctives" the tips of the crescent are to the viewer's right. I observed
news photos from Iraq on more than one occasion showing what appear the be field
ambulances with the Red Crescent displayed on the side of the vehicle and the
crescent's tips are to the viewer's right.
Tru Pope, 22 July 2003
I believe that this is not strictly regulated by the ICRC, just as in the
cross emblem version where width and length of the crossbars is irrelevant. It
was intentionally left unspecified so that in combat no side might "make
mistakes" supported by slight (or big) deviations from a "perfect" pattern.
Željko Heimer, 23 July 2003
by Željko Heimer, 11 December 2005
This is the form of the crescent as provided by ICRC. Some national societies prefer a left-pointing crescent:
by Željko Heimer, 11 December 2005
In 1980 the Islamic Republic of Iran decided to give up the red lion and sun and use the red crescent in its place. This flag is therefore obsolete.
Looking at Victor Lomantsov's Vexillographia site (issue on the CD that he
courteously provided to me in Stockholm) I read about the Kazakh Red Cross and
Red Crescent society flag. That seems to employ the new symbol consisting of a
"red chevron" with the red cross and the red crescent in base of it. As my
Russian is not that good (and I have no patience reading it really carefully) I
am not sure if that is still a proposal, or if this new symbols is already being
used.
Some years ago I have been reading about this new symbol being discussed by the
ICRC, but as far as I was aware, the proposal was not yet formally adopted. Are
there any changes about that?
From memory, the red chevron symbol was proposed to replace the religious
symbols and would therefore remove the unwanted connotations and problems that
other religions see in the two internationally adopted symbols (three actually,
the third is the red lion-and-sun symbol not used any more). This would enable
inclusion of the Red Magen David society too, and would enable the other
religions to find their place in the scheme. The world-wide symbol is to be the
chevron only consisting of a 45 degrees rotated square that is "missing" the
lower quarter. In this quarter the local symbol may be added at will (or after
certain regulations) just as the Kazakh flag shows.
Željko Heimer, 13 September 2003
The ICRC website is still citing the proposed status of the emblem. As they
note, the emblem must first be recognized by the signatories to the Geneva
Convention as a symbol of the ICRC. World events appear to have delayed this
from becoming an official symbol to date.
Phil Nelson, 13 September 2003
As Phil pointed out, this still seems to be a proposal. The Singapore Red
Cross has an English language web page with illustrations of apparently two
designs. See
http://www.redcross.org.sg/IntSvc_EmblemIssue.htm
Thorsten, 13 September 2003
by Alvin Heims, 2 December 1999
Since Kazakhstan has large numbers of both Christians and Muslims, their
society is called "Red Cross and Red Crescent." I believe they are unique- and
since the "rules" are that only a cross *or* a crescent may be used, the society
has not been recognized. Ironically, this means that the flag of the Kazakhstan
society would be the same as (or close to) that of the
IFRC itself.
Nathan Lamm, 19 May 2005