Dubai has extradition treaties at least with Afghanistan, the UK, Australia, and Iran, if not others.
Extradition from Mexico for child support would not happen as there is no treaty governing that with any country.
Ireland has extradition treaties with nearly all countries. Most countries have written these treaties with the provision that they will not surrender their own citizens to a foreign country.
The Philippines has concluded extradition treaties with Indonesia (1976), Australia (1988), Canada (1989), Switzerland (1989), Micronesia (1990) the United States (1994), Hong Kong and South Korea. All these treaties follow the "non-list" type of double criminality approach, where there is no traditional listing of crimes, as this could lead to difficulties where the countries denominate crimes differently.
There is NOT a bilateral treaty between the United States and South Korea, however strong diplomatic and economic ties could be assumed to make this a moot point.
Yes. Going to Mexico is like fleeing into another US' state due to extradition treaties among both countries.
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Does_the_United_Arab_Emirates_have_an_extradition_treaty_with_Malaysia http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Does_the_United_Arab_Emirates_have_an_extradition_treaty_with_Malaysia
According to the Wikipedia article "Extradition law in the United States", Indonesia is one of about fifty countries that do not have an extradition treaty with the U.S. - Indonesia does not have an extradition treaty with the United States for most crimes, however they do allow extradition to the US for drug smuggling or other drug-related crimes.
The countries of Yemen and the United Arab Emirates.
Kuwait, Qatar, and Bahrain are the three Gulf countries that are smaller than the United Arab Emirates.
TREASON against the United States is a crime which can be committed outside the country for which you can be charged in the US. For other crimes committed on foreign soil, you can be charged in the US as a FUGITIVE and held pending extradition from those countries with whom we have extradition treaties.
Puerto Rico is a territory of the United States. Puerto Rico is exactly like any other U.S. State when it pertains to extradition to any other U.S. State.