Some believe that Mexico agreed to the measure in a secret clause in the North American Free Trade Agreement whose terms have remained hidden from the Mexican people.
12.
The patriots had inserted a secret clause that established that these men would be handed over to the government and deported later on, due to the political instability that their freedom implied.
13.
As the other provinces would have refused to sign the treaty if they had known of the secret clause, De Witt arranged that this clause would bind only the States of Holland.
14.
The day after the decisive and concluding negotiations found place, where Norway accepted the union with Sweden, the Norwegian constitution was accepted and in a secret clause Christian Frederick accepted to abdicate and leave Norway.
15.
According to one of Makarczyk's later accounts, the treaty was also supposed to include a secret clause that allowed the League to recruit up to 100, 000 Liberians to the Polish Army in case of war.
16.
The Treaty of Leoben, followed by the more comprehensive Treaty of Campo Formio, gave France control of most of northern Italy and the Low Countries, and a secret clause promised the Republic of Venice to Austria.
17.
Many things are left out including the full details of the Treaty of Dover which contained a secret clause wherein Charles promised Louis XIV, his first cousin, to convert to Catholicism for an enormous sum of money.
18.
The treaty also contained a secret clause allowing Soviet forces unrestricted movement within Soviet-recognized Lithuanian territory for the duration of Soviet hostilities with Poland; this clause would lead to questions regarding the issue of Lithuanian neutrality in the ongoing Polish-Soviet War.
19.
There is no special secret clause of WP : BLP that says " ignore everything else written here if you really really want to censor someone's sexual orientation . " contribs ) 04 : 47, 30 March 2012 ( UTC)
20.
In the end the government dropped the case because it looked like it was going to get the born secret clause thrown out; it was becoming very hard to claim that information assembled in the open literature could constitute something classified.