13. (1) At any time the person may tell a magistrate that the person consents to being surrendered to the requesting country for the extradition offence for which that country seeks his or her surrender.
(2) If:
(a) a person consents to being surrendered for the extradition offence; and
(b) the requesting country has asked that the person also be surrendered for another offence that is not an extradition offence;
the magistrate must ask the person whether the person also consents to being surrendered for that other offence.
(3) If:
(a) the person informs the magistrate that he or she consents to being surrendered; and
(b) the magistrate is satisfied that the consent was given voluntarily; the magistrate must tell the person that the effect of consenting will be that:
(c) the person will be committed to prison without any extradition proceedings to determine whether the person should be surrendered for an
extradition offence; and
(d) after the Minister for Foreign Affairs issues a surrender warrant, the person will be surrendered to the requesting country.
(4) If the person still consents to being surrendered, the magistrate must: (a) by warrant, order that the person be committed to prison; and
(b) tell the Minister for Foreign Affairs in writing that the person has been committed to prison and the offence for which the person has consented to be surrendered.
(5) The Minister for Foreign Affairs may then issue a surrender warrant for the person.
3. A person who is provisionally arrested may be released from custody if the requested State has not received the request for surrender and the documents supporting the request as specified in article 91 within the time limits specified in the Rules of Procedure and Evidence. However, the person may consent to surrender before the expiration of this period if permitted by the law of the requested State. In such a case, the requested State shall proceed to surrender the person to the Court as soon as possible.