Where are these countries located?
These nations stretch from Nepal’s Himalayan peaks to the Sahara’s edges in Mauritania. They’re scattered across Africa, Asia, and the Middle East, united by a simple principle: they’d rather handle their own legal messes than hand over suspects to American authorities.2
What’s the real breakdown of these countries?
| Country | Region | Extradition Status with U.S. | Key Restrictions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Afghanistan | South Asia | No treaty | Political chaos makes cooperation nearly impossible |
| China | East Asia | No treaty | The government controls everything—including who gets sent where |
| North Korea | East Asia | No treaty | They don’t play by anyone’s rules but their own |
| Russia | Eurasia | No treaty | Cold War tensions haven’t exactly warmed up to extradition |
| Namibia | Africa (Southern) | No treaty | They’ve got better things to do than deal with U.S. legal requests |
| UAE | Middle East | No treaty | They’ll only play ball if they get something in return |
| Bahrain | Middle East | No treaty | Religious and civil laws clash with American extradition demands |
| Nepal | South Asia | No treaty | Those mountains aren’t just pretty—they’re great for hiding legal trouble |
Quick heads-up: France and Switzerland won’t send their own citizens abroad, even if they’ve got treaties.3
Why don’t these countries extradite people?
History, politics, and legal systems clash hard here. North Korea’s refusal? Blame their Juche ideology, which screams “we don’t need anyone else’s justice.” China’s approach? Their courts answer to the Communist Party, not some foreign extradition request.4
France’s refusal to hand over its citizens? That’s straight out of their Napoleonic legal playbook, specifically Article 696-2. It’s led to some wild cases, like French nationals wanted in the U.S. for financial crimes slipping through the cracks.5
What should travelers know before visiting?
Local laws can hit you like a freight train. Take the UAE or Bahrain—get caught with drugs, and you might face years in prison or worse, no matter if you “meant well.”6 Always double-check the U.S. State Department’s travel advisories before booking that flight. And if you’re thinking Switzerland’s a safe bet? Not so fast—even there, extradition comes with strings attached (like the “rule of specialty,” which means they’ll only prosecute you for what they agreed to).7
Fugitives, listen up: just because a country won’t extradite doesn’t mean you’re home free. Many still whisper to U.S. officials behind the scenes. Plus, their legal systems might be even riskier—think unfair trials or sudden detentions. The U.S. Department of Justice says it straight: running to these places rarely ends well.8
1 U.S. Department of State, Extradition Treaties by Country (2025 Update)
3 U.S. Department of Justice, Office of International Affairs
4 China Briefing, Extradition Laws in China
5 Legifrance, Code de Procédure Pénale (Article 696-2)
6 U.S. State Department, Travel Advisories
7 Swiss Federal Act on International Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters (IMAC)