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Traditional law






 

· Old law of state responsibility consisted of customary rules evolved out of practice of states and cases brought before arbitral tribunals. Very little treaty law on the subject.

 

Customary rules:

· If a state violated an obligation imposed by an international rule, it bore international responsibility for such violation.

· It had to make reparation for the breach

· OR the injured state was entitled to resort to self-help - forcible action (armed reprisals) or non-forcible measures (economic sanctions, diplomatic sanctions) – designed to impel the delinquent state to repair the wrong or penalize it.

 

Features of traditional rules on state responsibility:

· Rules were rudimentary.

o They did not specify what counted as international delinquency or what the consequences were.

o It was not specified whether one form of reparation was to be preferred over another, and if so why.

o Choice of class of reparation was left to the injured party.

o It was not clear whether intent or malice was required, or whether a state could be held responsible for the un-intentional and non-malicious acts committed by its state officials that violated international law (culpable negligence, no-Fault regime?).

· State responsibility amounted to a bilateral relation between the delinquent state and the injured state. Only if the two parties entered into negotiations could they establish a dispute settlement mechanism.

· Accountability for international wrongs hinged on collective responsibility. This meant states were held accountable for actions of individuals, and individuals were not responsible at international level.

o Exceptions to this absence of individual responsibility

- Piracy - seen as international crime committed by individuals in their private capacity)

- War crimes – offences committed in inter-state wars, normally by individuals acting as State officials. But liability applied only to soldiers and lower officers, not military leaders and commanders.

· Customary rules on legal consequences of wrongful acts were normally lumped together, both by states and publicists, with the substantive rules governing state behaviour (i.e. rules about treatment of foreigners).

o Because customary rules about state responsibility typically crystallized through disputes about treatment of foreigners.

o Tendency to confuse rules on state responsibility with breaches of int’l rules on rights of foreign nationals and their property.

 

9.3 The current regulation of State responsibility: an overview

 

The modern day regulation of state responsibility has been very much influenced by work of UN International Law Commission. They have drafted, a number of times, Draft Law on State Responsibility.

 

Salient traits of new law (as of 2001 publication of this book):

1. Law of state responsibility separated from set of substantive rules on treatment of foreigners.

Distinction between:

o primary rules of international law – customary or treaty rules laying down substantive obligations for states (treatment of foreigners, state immunities, etc)

o secondary rules of international law – establishing

- conditions on which a breach of a primary rule may be held to have occurred

- legal consequences of this breach

à This is law on state responsibility.

 

2. Current rules have clarified and given precision to some controversial issues

o Whether fault is necessary

o Nature of damage required for state to be considered ‘injured’

o Circumstances which exempt actor from wrongfulness

 

3. Agreement on distinction between two forms / categories of state responsibility

o Responsibility for ordinary breaches of international law

- Breaches of bilateral or multilateral treaties, which create state-to-state obligations. Breach of obligation remains a private matter between two states, victim and wrongdoer.

o Aggravated responsibility for breaches of fundamental general rules that enshrine essential values

- Arises when a state violates a general rule laying down a community obligation – a customary obligation erga omnes protecting fundamental values (peace, human rights, self-determination of peoples) OR

- When a state violates an obligation on all parties laid down in a multilateral treaty safeguarding those fundamental values and entitling any state, or any other party to the treaty, to demand cessation of a violation

- Material or moral damage is not absolutely necessary to invoke the state’s responsibility

- What matters is that the breach – it infringes a state’s right to compliance by any other state with the obligation (breach not fault produces injury)

- This creates a public (as opposed to private) relation of obligation between the wrongdoer and the whole community, which allows any contracting member of the community to invoke the responsibility of the wrongdoer, even if it is has not been injured itself.

- Means that states that invoke aggravated responsibility are not invoking a personal or individual interest but a community interest.

- All states entitled to demand compliance with the obligation can take remedial actions to make state stop its actions and make reparations.

 

4. Article 33 of Charter requires states to settle disputes by peaceful means before resorting to possible counter-measures.

o Injured state is no longer allowed to decide immediately to take forcible action or enforce its right using military or economic force.

o Successive steps required:

1. Request reparation

2. If no reparation is made or reparation is unsatisfactory, endeavour to settle peacefully, through negotiations, conciliation, arbitration or other means of settling disputes.

3. If all these steps fail, a state may take peaceful counter-measures.

 

5. Individual criminal liability has enormously expanded. Individuals (whether state officials or private actors) are accountable for serious breaches of int’l law.

o Now includes military leaders as well as senior politicians.

o Body of int’l criminal law has developed as a separate branch from int’l law on state responsibility.

 

6. It is possible for states to be held accountable for lawful actions.

o e.g. under Law of Sea Convention (art. 110), a warship of a state can stop and search a foreign merchant vessel on the high seas if there is reasonable doubt to suspect ship is engaged in piracy, slave trade, etc.

- BUT if the doubts prove unfounded, state has obligation to repay vessel for any harm caused.

o e.g. Nuclear energy exploitation – states may be liable to states or persons injured by their lawful but ultra-dangerous activities.

 

9.4 ‘Ordinary’ State responsibility

 

9.4.1 Preconditions of State Responsibility

 

Basic condition of state responsibility – commission of a wrongful act.

 

Determination of a wrongful act includes:

· Subjective elements

1. Conduct of individual contrary to int’l obligation can be ascribed / imputed to a state

2. In some instances, the fault of the state official performing the wrongful act

· Objective elements

1. The inconsistency of the particular conduct with an international obligation

2. Material or moral damage to another international subject

3. Absence of any of the circumstances which exempt state from charge of wrongfulness

 

(a) Subjective elements of international delinquency

 

1. Can conduct of individual contrary to int’l obligation be ascribed / imputed to a state?

 

· For a state to be responsible it is necessary to establish whether the conduct of an individual may be imputed (attributed) to it.

· Was the individual who committed the breach a State official under the national legal system of a particular state?

 

· Doesn’t matter whether s/he is an official of the central government or of a territorial unit

o “The conduct of any organ of a State must be regarded as an act of that State.”

ICJ, Immunity from Legal Process of Special Rapporteur of the Commission on Human Rights

· Individual must be acting in his official capacity, not as a private individual.

 

· Even if the state official committed the act outside his instructions or outside his remit, his actions are still imputed to the state.

Ø [ILC Draft Articles, 2000, Article 9]

o Youmans

- F - American nationals threatened by a mob of Mexican nationals. Mexican troops were sent to quell riot, but instead of protecting Americans they opened fire on the house and killed two Americans.

- H – Mexico-US General Claims Commission – Mexico found responsible

- “We do not consider that the participation of the soldiers in the murder can be regarded as acts of soldiers committed in their private capacity when it is clear that at the time of the commission of these acts the men were on duty under the immediate supervision and in the presence of a commanding officer.”

 

· Int’l rules also cover case where individuals who do not fulfil state functions in fact play an important role in exercise of governmental authority, in that they actually wield control over senior state officials.

 

· Actions of de facto state organs may also be attributed to state.

o These individuals do not have status of state officials but they act on behalf of state (through state’s instructions, under state’s overall control, or in fact behave as state officials)

o for example, secretary-general of a political party in a one-party state or a person that the world regards as leader of his state, regardless of lack of constitutionally authority (like Qaddafi in Libya).

o Rule to some extent codified in Article 5 of ILC Draft (2000) – concerning public entities that are not state organs under national law.

Ø GET RECENT TEXT HERE.

o ICJ, Nicaragua

- In the Nicaraguan civil war, were the actions of the contras (rebels) against central authorities attributable to US authorities?

Three classes of individuals:

- Members of the US government administration (CIA) and US armed forces à attributable to US

- Latin American operatives, paid by US, given instructions by US agents or officials, and acted under their supervision à attributable to US

- Contras – had to show that they had been under “effective control” of US, that US had issued them specific instructions concerning perpetration of unlawful acts

Two tests for attribution of wrongful acts

1 Whether or not individuals were state officials

2 If they were not, whether or not they were under state’s “effective control”

- They were paid or financed by state

- Their action had been coordinated or supervised by that state

- The state had issued specific instructions concerning their unlawful actions

Ø ILC (2000) upheld this decision, in Art. 6 (GET NEW TEXT).

o ICTY, Tadic (Merits)

- Were some individuals (Bosnian Serbs) fighting in a prima facie civil war (between Bosnian Serbs and authorities in Bosnia & Herzegovina) acting on behalf of a foreign country (Federal Republic of Yugoslavia), which would turn civil conflict into an international one?

Three tests (departure from Nicaragua) on whether an individual acts as a de facto state organ:

1 Whether single individuals or militarily unorganized groups act under specific instructions or subsequent public approval of a state

2 In case of armed groups of militarily organized groups, whether they are under the overall control of the state (without requirement that state issues specific instructions)

3 Whether individuals actually behave as state officials within the structure of a state

 

· Unlawful acts committed by individuals not acting as de facto state organs (attacks on foreigners or foreign authorities)

o state on whose territory the acts were committed incurs int’l responsibility only if it did not act with due diligence - it omitted to take necessary measures to prevent attacks on foreigners or their property OR after perpetration, it failed to search for and punish wrong-doers

o State is not responsible for acts of individuals, only responsible for its own conduct by omission

o ICJ, US Diplomatic and Consular Staff in Tehran case

- First stage of attack on US embassy – by militants who had no official status as state actors. BUT Iran held responsible for failure to protect the US premises

- Second state – Iranian government legally bound to end the occupation and pay reparation. Instead, it approved and endorsed occupation. This turned militants into agents of Iranian state, therefore Iran responsible as a state for their actions. Acknowledgement and approval by a state can have a retroactive effect.

 

2. Is fault of State official required for state responsibility to arise?

 

· Fault = psychological attitude of wrongdoer, consists of intention or recklessness

· Int’l courts do not normally ask whether state officials who have allegedly committed an int’l wrong have acted intentionally. Do not look at subjective intent of wrongdoer.

· Only consider the question of Fault if the state claims it did not act willingly, invoking force majeure

Ø ILC Draft 2000 – endorses this approach – of stating that there are some special circumstances in which state can plead absence of fault (art. 40) GET TEXT

 

b) Objective elements of international delinquency

 

1. Inconsistency of the particular conduct with an international obligation

 

· For conduct of a state to be inconsistent with an international obligation, it must be contrary to an obligation stemming from an applicable rule or principle of int’l law.

· For state responsibility to arise, the obligation must have been in force when it was breached.

· Wrongful conduct can be an act or an omission, can be instantaneous or continuing wrongs.

 

2. Material or moral damage to another international subject

 

· State that has a right corresponding to an obligation breached is legally entitled to call the wrongdoer to account

· Some say in addition to Breach as Injury, you need Material or Moral Injury

o Material damage – any prejudice caused by economic or patrimonial interests of a state or its nationals

o Moral damage – breach of state’s honour or dignity

· One school of thought – an int’l wrongful act may only be committed when in addition to breach of an obligation (legal injury) there is a material or moral injury

OR

· Legal injury is necessarily inherent in any breach of int’l rights of a state. It’s enough to invoke state responsibility just for breach of the int’l obligation itself, even absent any moral or material damage to the state. The material or moral damage can be considered when assessing damages.

Ø View taken in ILC Draft 2000

 

· BUT, in practice, moral or material damage is usually present in cases of ordinary state responsibility, because why else would states invoke a right of action against another bilateral party (one-to-one relation) unless there had been some injury.

· It is only in cases of aggravated state responsibility (breach of human rights norms, e.g.) that you see cases of injury defined as breach pure, because these are community, as opposed to one-to-one, rights and obligations.

 

· This regime applies for customary law. States can establish different rules through treaty. (e.g. WTO).

 

3. Circumstances which exempt state from charge of wrongfulness

 

Principal circumstances which preclude state wrongfulness

Ø Codified in ILC Draft Articles 2000

 

a) Consent of the state injured

o Consent to carry out activities that would otherwise be prohibited by int’l law renders those activities lawful (like agreeing to station foreign troops on your territory).

o However, consent is not valid if it permits activities contrary to jus cogens (genocide on your territory)

 

b) Compliance with peremptory norms

o Breach of an obligation imposed by need to comply with peremptory rules does not give rise to a wrongful act

o If state refuses to abide by a bilateral treaty imposing mutual military assistance at the request of another state, because the other state is acting with purpose of carrying out crimes against humanity

 

c) Self-defence - See chapter 14

 

d) Counter-measures in respect of an international wrong - See chapter 11

 

e) Force majeure

Ø Article 24(1) 2000 – definition

o Very hard to invoke

o Rainbow Warrior, Arbitral Tribunal

- France claimed that urgent medical reasons required repatriation of a French agent to France, without consent of New Zealand. France argued these medical reasons were force majeure.

- No – this is not force majeure – it must be invoked to justify involuntary, or at least unintentional conduct, relating to an irresistible force or unforeseen event

o Test – absolute and material impossibility

 

f) Distress

Ø Article 25(1) definition

o Illustrations of distress – unauthorized entry of aircraft into foreign territory to save life of passengers

o Rainbow Warrior – France’s actions were justified by distress (but not force majeure). BUT France responsible because it did not return agent to France once medical reasons had terminated

 

g) State of necessity

Ø Article 26(1) – definition

o Case Concerning the Gabcikovo-Nagymaros Project (Hungary Slovakia), ICJ 1997

- Hungary contended that in 1989 it had suspended a treaty obligation with Czechoslovakia to build a dam on Danube on account of “state of ecological necessity.”

Court dismissed Hungarian submissions:

- State of necessity, as reflected in ILC articles, is grounded in customary law.

- Perils invoked by Hungary were not sufficiently established or imminent

- Hungary had other means to resolve crisis it identified – like negotiations, rather than suspension or abandonment of its treaty obligations

o Distress - the wrongful act is justified by the urgent necessity to save the life of the person (performing the wrongful act) or the lives of other individuals entrusted to state.

o Necessity – aims at warranting a breach of international law imposed by the need to avert a serious danger to whole state or the population of a state.

 

· State may nevertheless have to pay compensation for any material harm or loss caused, even in circumstances where no responsibility is incurred.

Ø Article 27(b) of ILC Draft

 

· But compensation does not always have to be paid:

o Self-defence or counter-measures – actions are only taken to react to wrongful act of another state. Wouldn’t make sense to have injured (and self-defending) state compensate wrongdoer state for injuries caused by its counter-measures.

o Compensation should also be excluded for some other circumstances which nullify wrongfulness

- If a state has consented to an action by another state that would otherwise be unlawful, it should not be able to turn around and claim for compensation afterwards (because consenting state knew or should have known about foreseeable harm).

 

9.4.2 Consequences of the wrongful act

 

Obligations of the responsible state

· To cease the wrongdoing

· Offer appropriate assurances and guarantees of non-repetition (art. 30)

· Make full reparation for injury caused (art. 31)

· If it refuses to make reparation or pay compensation, it must accede to any bona fide attempt to peacefully settle the dispute made by the injured state

 

Reparation – hierarchy has been established

· Material damage – responsible state must provide restitution in kind (put injured state back to position it was before harm caused by wrongdoer) to the extent that restitution

o Is not materially impossible

o Would not involve a burden out of all proportion to benefit

Ø (ICL art. 36)

· If restitution is not possible or only provides partial recovery, state must make compensation

o Compensate for any financially assessable damage caused, including loss of profits in so far as it is established

· Moral damage – may be addressed by satisfaction (art 38(2)) - may consist of acknowledgement of breach, expression of regret, formal apology, punishment by national authorities, formal assurance of non-repetition

o But it cannot be out of proportion to the injury or take a form that is humiliating to responsible state. Can include symbolic payment of modest sums.

 

Rights, powers, and obligations of the injured state

· the right to claim cessation of wrongful act, assurances, and guarantees of non-repetition

· right to claim full reparation for material or moral damage caused

 

If it decides to invoke state responsibility, injured state must take following steps:

1. It must give notice of its claim to that state, specifying conduct that the responsible state should take and what form reparation should take (art. 44)

2. If responsible state does not comply, the injured state must try to settle the dispute by peaceful means (art. 53(2).

3. If the responsible state refuses to make reparations or enter into peaceful dispute settlement or acts in bad faith in response to offers of dispute settlement, injured state is entitled to resort to counter-measures (art. 53(2) and 52(4)).

 

9.5 ‘Aggravated’ State responsibility

 

This concept has come into being because:

· Rules exist that envisage reaction to international delinquencies, above and beyond the usual response

· Practice concerning response to large-scale violations of human rights shows that responses to breaches are permissible outside the ordinary rules

· Emergence of a world community based on values of peace, human rights, etc. that states cannot opt out of à hence states should allow a stronger reaction for breach of these values than an ordinary state responsibility situation

· This reaction should be ‘public and collective’ as opposed to the private and bilateral response of ordinary state responsibility.

 

First reading in ILC of Article 19 – proposal for “international crimes of states” – led to extensive debate; was eventually removed from draft articles due to state reluctance to be accused of crimes.

 

9.5.1 Subjective and objective elements of the wrongful act

 

Both ordinary and aggravated responsibility involve the legal regulation of subjective and objective elements of responsibility.

 

What differentiates aggravated responsibility from ordinary responsibility?

· Obligation breached must be a community obligation to give rise to state responsibility

o Community obligation:

- Concerning a fundamental value (peace, human rights, self-determination of peoples, environment)

- Owed to all the other members of the int’l community, or to the state bound by a multi-lateral treaty

o Comes with a community right – a right belonging to any other state (or any other contracting party if it’s a multi-lateral treaty)

o Community right may be exercised by any other state or contracting party, whether or not injured by breach

o The right is exercised on behalf of the international community, not in injured party’s self-interest.

· Fault:

o Breach of the obligation must be gross or systematic – not sporadic, isolated, or minor contravention.

o Due to gravity of breach and the fact that the obligation violated is of such fundamental importance, fault (serious negligence) is always an issue in aggravated responsibility. Psychological element is thus always present.

· Damage:

o In aggravated responsibility, a state is responsible towards all other states simply for breaching an international obligation even if the other state has not been materially or morally damaged.

o Legal injury, not factual injury, leads to state responsibility.

 

· Interdependent or integral obligations – more complicated:

o e.g. those in treaties on disarmament or environmental treaties

o these are obligations necessarily dependent on corresponding performance by all other parties

o So a breach of these obligations would clearly legally injure each of the contracting parties

o However, only some of the treaties give rise, in case of violation, to aggravated responsibility – like disarmament treaties, which do not entitle the other parties to suspend the treaty or withdraw in cases of violation, but solely to take collective or authorized sanctions.

 

9.5.2 The consequences of the wrongful act in cases of aggravated responsibility

 

Legal regime

· Under customary law, the offending state has obligations towards all other states.

· All other states have rights, power and obligations vis-à-vis delinquent state.

· (In contrast to ordinary state responsibility - one-to-one obligation between victim and wrongdoer)

 

Obligations incumbent on delinquent state

· Wrongdoer under all the obligations incumbent upon any author of int’l wrong under regime of ordinary state responsibility.

· However, these obligations are not owed only to injured state but to all other members of int’l community.

· Legal consequences move from bilateral to a community relation.

· Restitution, compensation, or satisfaction may be relevant when wrongful act has caused material or moral damage to a particular state (e.g. aggression, violations of Human rights of nationals of that state).

· In most cases of breach of community obligations, reparation may be inconsequential – how do you pay damages for genocide?

 

Rights, powers and obligations of other states

· Legal position of other states - any member of int’l community, whether or not damaged by wrong, provided it has the legal entitlement or right corresponding to obligation breached by responsible state.

· ILC has taken a minimalist approach and suggests that the response is based on actions of individual states, rather than a collective and public action.

· As a result, perpetration of these wrongs affronts community values, but response contemplated remains bilateralist and private in nature.

Ø Art 54

 

Obligations of states other than delinquent one:

· Not to recognize as lawful the situation created by the breach

· Not to render aid or assistance to the responsible state in maintaining the unlawful situation

· To co-operate as possible to bring breach to an end.

Ø Art. 42(2)

 

All states other than wrongdoer have these powers, rights, and claims:

· To invoke the aggravated responsibility of the delinquent state, by bringing their claim to the notice of that state

· To demand cessation of the wrong and request assurances and guarantees of non-repetition

· To claim reparation in a form consistent with nature of wrong.

· If the responsible state has not taken immediate action to discontinue the wrongful act or has not complied with the reparation sought by states, the right to bring the matter to the attention of competent international bodies (e.g. UN, OAS, OAU, Council of Europe).

o States must first steps within international organizations – showing response to wrongdoing as necessarily public and collective.

· If those bodies take no action or their actions do not bring about cessation or reparation, all states are empowered to take peaceful counter-measures on an individual basis.

· When states opt for individual counter-measures, these must be subject to same conditions as under ordinary responsibility.

· In particular state must

o Offer to negotiate or propose other means of peaceful settlement (mediation, conciliation, arbitration or judicial settlement)

o Duly notify responsible state of their intention to resort to counter-measures

o In case of armed aggression, states are entitled to resort to collective self-defence (subject to request or consent of victim of aggression).

 

*** The above measures do not affect or prejudice the possible operation of the UN security system. UN Security Council, faced with a gross violation of community obligations that amounts to a threat to peace, breach of peace, or act of aggression, may recommend measures that states are entitled to take (not use of force), under art. 41, or may authorize states to take forcible action.

o In other words, if SC thinks the international wrongful act is covered by Art. 39 of UN Charter, the Security Council takes over, and individual states may only take action to extent allowed by Charter.

 

· State which has been specifically damaged by wrongdoer’s actions (e.g. because state killed some of its nationals) may claim for reparation for those specific injuries.

· Other states may invoke state responsibility without need to show connection to nationality of victims, but wouldn’t be able to claim under that specific head of damages.

 

9.5.3 Trends in state practice

 

· The most frequent case of implementing aggravated state responsibility can be seen in cases where states resort to self-defence.

· States prefer to act through international bodies such as the UN Security Council or GA, rather than acting alone (e.g. South Africa, Iraq, Yugoslavia, Libya, Liberia, Haiti).

· This is good – it shows state confidence in international institutions.

 

· In a few instances states have resorted to counter-measures even in absence of a specific decision or recommendation of SC.

o Poland – when EC reduced import of Soviet products; Falklands/Malvinas, when EC suspended import of goods from Argentina

o Yugoslavia – NATO member states reacted using military force against massacres perpetrated on Yugoslavia’s own territory, in clear breach of UN Charter jus cogens principle banning use of force.

 

· But, states and international organizations have not yet fully used the enormous legal potential provided by rules on aggravated state responsibility.

· States remain unwilling to interference in matters of no direct interest or concern to them; states don’t want to follow community interests.

o ICTY, Furundzija – noted in obiter great importance of aggravated state responsibility as a tool in international law re torture.

 


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