In July 2017, the UN International Law Commission (ILC) provisionally adopted Draft Article 7 on exceptions to immunity ratione materiae of state officials from foreign criminal jurisdiction, by a recorded vote of twenty-one votes in favor, eight votes against, and one abstention.Footnote 1 In the view of the majority of ILC members, immunity ratione materiae does not apply to the six international crimes listed in the draft article—genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, apartheid, torture, and enforced disappearance—either because of a limitation or because of an exception.Footnote 2 The unusual practice of adopting a draft article by recorded voteFootnote 3 demonstrated the deep controversy among the ILC members themselves. After all, exceptions to official immunity lie at the core of the project of “Immunity of State Officials from Foreign Criminal Jurisdiction” that was started a decade ago by the ILC.Footnote 4 This divisive Draft Article 7 naturally garnered criticism and equally deep controversy among states in discussions on the ILC's work report at UN General Assembly Sixth Committee in late October 2017.Footnote 5
This essay aims to analyze the methodology used by the majority of ILC members to reach their conclusions on exceptions to official immunity, and it points out that the evidence adduced by them in Draft Article 7 and its Commentary cannot pass scrutiny.
Methodological Flaws
Some ILC members, apparently in the minority, have already indicated in general some drawbacks and flaws in the methodology used in the study, such as a lack of state practice, the irrelevance of the practice of international criminal courts and state immunity proceedings, the limited significance of sporadic treaty practice, and the lack of explicit provisions depriving official immunity in established treaties on international crimes.Footnote 6 This author still feels compelled to illustrate those flaws with concrete examples and add some comments to explain the thin and fragile grounds on which the majority of ILC members base their assertions.
Although both the Special Rapporteur and the final work product of Draft Article 7 and its Commentary avoid the conclusion that the six exceptions to official immunity have been established as customary international law, they all strongly hint at such a conclusion or at least a trend in that direction. The Special Rapporteur, clearly with the support of the majority of ILC members, claimed that “the [state] practice showed a clear trend towards considering the commission of international crimes as a bar to the application of immunity ratione materiae of State officials from foreign criminal jurisdiction.”Footnote 7 The Commentary in this regard states that Draft Article 7 reflects “a discernible trend towards limiting the applicability of immunity,”Footnote 8 supported by ostensible long lists in footnotes on state practice in judicial decisions, national legislation, and jurisprudence of international courts. But a heavy barrage from some ILC members accused that “the Commission should not portray its work as possibly codifying customary international law.”Footnote 9 A minority of ILC members questioned whether there is such a trend at all.Footnote 10
No one who has read through the Commentary would fail to point out that the Commentary only cites nine court cases in Footnote 762 to support its broad claim of six exceptions to official immunity. In addition, the Commentary actually acknowledges that the domestic judicial decisions cited “do not all follow the same line of reasoning.”Footnote 11 National legislation and jurisprudence of international courts are presented in long lists in Footnotes 763 and 764,Footnote 12 without any concrete analysis of their content and context. If one applies the strict and rigorous methods as prescribed in the ILC's own study product on “Identification of Customary International Law”Footnote 13 to scrutinize the Commentary, there are only pretensions to those approaches or a sheer lack of any sound approach at all.
State Immunity Versus Official Immunity
Exceptions to official immunity are distinct from exceptions to state immunity. Although the UN Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and Their Property of 2004 provides in Article 2.1 that a “state” entitled to immunity includes “representatives of the State acting in that capacity,” generally speaking state immunity is distinguishable from official immunity. It is apparent that while a foreign state may not be accorded immunity in cases of exceptions as listed in the 2004 UN Convention, such as commercial transaction, personal injury, or damage to property, the officials that act as that state's agent may well be entitled to invoke official immunity in those cases. On the other hand, assuming the interpretation of the Torture Convention by the Pinochet III case is sound, a state official cannot claim immunity before foreign courts for acts of torture committed in his or her own country, but the state for which this official acts as agent is still entitled to invoke immunity in a civil case since no exception in the 2004 UN Convention applies to that state.
The U.S. Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act and the State Immunity Act of Canada cited in the Commentary as national legislative examples of a trend toward exceptions to official immunityFootnote 14 are all aimed at regulating state immunity rather than official immunity. Indeed, the U.S. Supreme Court specifically decided in Samantar in 2010 that official immunity is not covered by that statute.Footnote 15 How can such legislation help the ILC establish an exception to official immunity from foreign criminal jurisdiction? Alas, no further elaboration or analysis has been done by the Commentary to show the relevance of these legislative practices.
The Commentary also claims that Act No. 24488 of Argentina on foreign state immunity does not prohibit the Argentine courts from hearing “a claim against a State for violation of international human rights law.”Footnote 16 Even assuming that this is a correct interpretation of the Argentine legislation, how is this statute related to official immunity? Two other cases cited by the Commentary, Ferrini v. Germany and Jones v. Saudi Arabia,Footnote 17 both involve issues of state immunity, and their obiter dicta on exceptions to official immunity for serious international crimes either did not reflect extensive analysis or were simply a repetition of the previous Pinochet III interpretation of a treaty. Unfortunately, the Commentary isolated those obiter dicta remarks and took them at face value.
Immunity from International Jurisdiction Versus Immunity from Foreign State Jurisdiction
Even if official immunity is denied in proceedings before international courts and tribunals, such immunity from foreign criminal jurisdiction is still left intact. Otherwise, states would not be willing to agree to treaties like the Rome Statute that grant an international court jurisdiction over crimes, for fear that this treaty might grant other states equal jurisdiction over such crimes and ensuing chaos might sink the whole treaty project. Contrary to this common sense, the Commentary has a long list of national implementation legislation of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court by various states.Footnote 18 Minority members of the ILC rightfully pointed out the irrelevance of these practices.Footnote 19 Moreover, even if such national implementation legislation is relevant to the extent it relates to lifting official immunity for treaty crimes in proceedings before national courts, this is still treaty practice, far from being “a general practice accepted as law,”Footnote 20 which is what is required to establish customary international law.
The Irrelevance or Inadequacy of Treaty Practice
The Pinochet III case cited by the Commentary as an example of a trend toward exceptions to official immunityFootnote 21 is merely a case involving an interpretation of the Torture Convention. Even today there are still lingering problems in its reasoning and scant follow-on suits by courts of other countries.Footnote 22 For the Jones case decided in a UK court, the Commentary emphasizes that “although the House of Lords recognized immunity from civil jurisdiction, it reiterated that immunity from criminal jurisdiction is not applicable in the case of torture.”Footnote 23 But the Jones court was simply reiterating the judgment of Pinochet III and added nothing to what Pinochet III had already established as a case involving an interpretation of the Torture Convention.Footnote 24
Of course, treaty practice can be valuable in discerning a rule of customary international law. The ILC's own study on the identification of customary international law adopted sixteen draft conclusions on first reading in 2016.Footnote 25 Draft Conclusion 11 provided that “the fact that a rule is set forth in a number of treaties may, but does not necessarily, indicate that the treaty rule reflects a rule of customary international law.” To prove the existence of customary international law derived from a treaty rule, one has to prove that this treaty rule “(a) codified a rule of customary international law existing at the time when the treaty was concluded; (b) has led to the crystallization of a rule of customary international law that had started to emerge prior to the conclusion of the treaty; or (c) has given rise to a general practice that is accepted as law (opinio juris).” But the Commentary does not even bother to analyze the true value of such treaty practice as in Pinochet III or Jones, let alone to identify any rule of customary international law using approaches prescribed by the ILC's own work product.
One counterexample to the Commentary's use of Pinochet III is a recent decision in the Bashir case by the International Criminal Court. There, that court, in examining whether South Africa violated provisions of the Rome Statute by refusing to surrender President Bashir of Sudan to the Court when he visited South Africa, distinguished clearly between customary international law and treaty provisions as a source of law to decide on head of state immunity.Footnote 26 As a result, that court ruled that South Africa violated treaty obligations, while head of state immunity under customary international law remains unaffected.
Criminal Proceedings Versus Civil Proceedings
Many of the court cases and national legislation cited in the Commentary in support of the establishment of exceptions to official immunity are related to civil proceedings, rather than criminal proceedings, rendering them irrelevant to the issue of official immunity from foreign criminal jurisdiction. One example is the U.S. Torture Victim Protection Act,Footnote 27 which not only does not amend the U.S. Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act as asserted by the Commentary, but also lays down only civil action procedures in U.S. courts to enforce the prohibition against torture and extrajudicial killing committed by officials of foreign nations. Simply put, this legislation has nothing to do with criminal proceedings and thus is totally irrelevant to the issue of official immunity from foreign criminal jurisdiction.
Similarly, the Commentary uses some obiter dicta of the European Court of Human RightsFootnote 28 in the Jones case brought up from the UK court, in order to buttress the ILC's claim of a trend towards exceptions to official immunity. But those words of the European Court of Human Rights dealt with immunity issues in civil proceedings instead of criminal proceedings. A Greek civil caseFootnote 29 and an Italian civil case Footnote 30 were also cited for the same purpose, despite the fact that in both cases state immunity was pleaded and official immunity from foreign criminal jurisdiction was not at issue at all.Footnote 31 In a later development, Germany sued Italy before the ICJ for the denial by an Italian court of state immunity enjoyed by Germany and won this case.Footnote 32 But the Commentary failed to direct our attention to this development and the discounted value of those two cases cited.
Cases of Immunity Denial Versus Cases of Immunity Upholding
All in all, the Commentary only cites a few cases in which immunity ratione materiae of state officials is dealt with restrictively, which does not show widespread state practice. Moreover, in the Tibet case, in which the National High Court of Spain allowed a prosecution against Chinese President Hu Jintao to proceed following the end of President Hu's term as the head of state of China, this unilateral assertion of nonapplication of immunity for a former head of state was immediately rebutted by China the following day as “intervention in China's internal affairs.”Footnote 33
Furthermore, if viewed in a broader frame of reference, there is a strong tendency in the Commentary toward selective invocation of state practice of judicial decisions, giving lopsided weight to a handful of cases in which immunity was denied while ignoring much more numerous instances of state practice of judicial decisions that upheld immunity. The ILC minority pointed out that national court decisions upholding immunity ratione materiae are not given due regard.Footnote 34
Some ILC members prudently suggested that cases in which prosecutors declined to prosecute due to official immunity should be further explored.Footnote 35 One telling example would be China's situation where not a single criminal case has been prosecuted in courts involving the issue of immunity ratione materiae of foreign state officials. Does this or similar situations of East Asian countries count as state practice when assessing whether there is a trend toward limiting and withholding official immunity?
Majority Opinions Versus Minority Opinions
The Chinese delegate's statement at the Sixth Committee of the UN General Assembly observed that “the references to certain judicial decisions selectively highlight the minority opinions against immunity, whereas the majority opinions in favour of immunity are not given due attention.”Footnote 36 Probably this is directed against the ILC Commentary Footnote 764 where a minority's separate opinion of the ICJ in Arrest Warrant is cited to prove the trend toward limiting official immunity for international crimes.Footnote 37 In fact, the separate opinion only tangentially hinted at an emerging trend discussed in the publicists’ literature and several sporadic court cases.
More importantly, as is well known, the ICJ in Arrest Warrant confirmed the procedural nature of official immunity and endorsed expansive immunity for officials rather than limiting it, counter to the Commentary's assertion of a limiting trend. But the Commentary nowhere gives the attention which Arrest Warrant deserves in shedding light on any trend in areas of official immunity law, except a footnote acknowledging the procedural nature of immunity rules stressed by the minority of ILC members.Footnote 38
Arbitrary Selection of Listed Crimes
The Commentary exerts efforts to explain why these six crimes fall within heinous international crimes that have the effect of lifting official immunity from foreign criminal jurisdiction. For the first three (genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes), the jus cogens nature of their prohibition, the judicial practice of states “in relation to cases in which the issue of immunity ratione materiae has been raised,” and their inclusion in the Rome Statute of the International Criminal CourtFootnote 39 were rationales to include them. For the last three (apartheid, torture, and enforced disappearance), that they are the subject of treaties that establish a special legal regime, the lack of their incorporation in the Rome Statute, and the official nature of the crimes of torture and enforced disappearance are counted as rationales to merit their inclusion.Footnote 40
Even if these were all legitimate and reasonable rationales, why are some other crimes, like slavery, piracy, or terrorism, not included in this list since the same rationales are applicable to these other crimes? For example, terrorism is a crime that several states like the United States have already legislated on as precluding official immunity. Does slavery or piracy “not fully correspond to the definition of crimes under international law stricto sensu”? Is not piracy included in a treaty that establishes a special legal regime to tackle it? To say the least, the selection of crimes to which official immunity does not apply is arbitrary and not well-founded since no clear and practice-based criteria are presented here.
Lack of Consistency in Criteria About Whether or Not to List Corruption
The chapeau of Draft Article 7 uses the phrase “shall not apply” (meaning that immunity ratione materiae shall not apply in respect of listed crimes), instead of the phrase “immunity cannot be invoked” as employed in the UN Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and Their Property of 2004. The Commentary explains that this is because the former phrase is broader in scope and covers two different possible interpretations: that those listed crimes are not “performed in an official capacity” (absence of immunity at all), or are acts necessarily “performed in an official capacity” (exclusion of existing immunity).Footnote 41 Thus the listed crimes in Draft Article 7 contain criminal acts either performed in an official capacity or not performed in an official capacity. According to this criterion, the crime of corruption qualifies to be listed there. But the Commentary states that “the Commission decided not to include crimes of corruption in draft article 7, on the grounds that they do not constitute acts performed in an official capacity, but are acts carried out by a State official solely for his or her own benefit.”Footnote 42 This inconsistent reasoning creates confusion regarding the exact scope of Draft Article 7 and calls into doubt the consistency and coherence of this study.
Conclusion
As made clear in the above discussion, the state practice reflected in the cases and national legislation cited by the ILC are neither “widespread” nor “representative” to adequately identify any rule of customary international law.Footnote 43 It is unsurprising that so many states voiced their reservations during the discussion in the Sixth Committee at the 72nd Session of the UN General Assembly. It is not only China that categorically rejected Draft Article 7 as a reflection of customary international law.Footnote 44 The U.S. delegate remarked in the same vein that “the resulting language [Draft Article 7] cannot be said to represent customary international law or even the progressive development of existing law.”Footnote 45 Similar views were also expressed by a number of other delegates. The future of this draft article looks very bleak in terms of state support for its wider acceptance. More importantly, the serious flaws that permeate the methodology for this ILC study not only create doubts about the existence of any trend towards an exception to official immunity, but also call into question the ILC's own authority and legitimacy. Hopefully at its next session the ILC can improve on both the methodology and content of its study of this important topic in international law.