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This chapter discusses the immunities of individuals in relation to criminal prosecution for international crimes. It introduces the main two types of immunity: functional immunity and personal immunity. It discusses diplomatic immunity as a particular illustration. The chapter then discusses limits on functional immunity, with the Pinochet decision and other precedents. It then discusses the harder situation of personal immunity, as explained by the International Court of Justice in the Arrest Warrant Decision. It reviews various ways that states have relinquished immunity, including through Security Council resolutions under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, or through ratification of the ICC Statute. The chapter surveys the many issues about whether Security Council referrals to the ICC, coupled with a duty to cooperate fully, have the same effect of removing immunity. The chapter then discusses the legal position advanced by the Sierra Leone Special Court in the Taylor case, and endorsed by the ICC Appeals Chamber in the Al Bashir case, that there are no immunities before international courts, by virtue of their special nature. The chapter canvasses criticism of the theory as well arguments in favour of it.
Diplomacy is a highly complex, multifaceted and often unpredictable profession. By definition, it seeks to overcome differences between and among countries, and those distinctions run the risk of turning into discord, or even conflict, without a playing field that has mutually accepted rules and norms. This is the role of diplomatic protocol, a system of standards, rules and regulations governing the conduct of international relations. It brings order and predictability to the work of diplomats by providing a roadmap or framework, so they can focus on the substance of negotiations and high-stakes decisions. It has been called “the oil in the gears of diplomacy” and credited with creating a “safe space that allows diplomacy to succeed.” While tradition has always had a special place in diplomacy, protocol’s role is hardly limited to old-fashioned pomp and circumstance. It has practical aspects meant to make diplomatic work more effective.
In the late 1980s, a winding series of drug trafficking charges against the then de facto leader of Panama, General Manuel Noriega, led the US government to seek his arrest, following a controversial military intervention into Panama, and trial before a US court. The rejection of his entitlement to foreign official immunity by the US District Court for the Southern District of Florida (a verdict affirmed by the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals) culminated in an unprecedented decision at the time – long-term imprisonment of the Panamanian strongman in the United States. Not only did the Noriega court pave the way for subsequent prosecutions of top-tier state officials involved in drug trafficking in the United States, but it also brightly reverberated in the scholarly writing of successive decades concerning matters of head-of-state immunity. It also gained international notoriety and was hailed to be a “triumph for diplomacy and a triumph for justice.”
The then ICJ Judge Awn Shawkat Al-Khasawneh defined immunity “[as] … an exception from the general rule that man is responsible legally and morally for his actions.”1 While it is widely acknowledged that serving high-ranking public officials enjoy immunity from the jurisdiction of foreign courts in most circumstances, there is an ongoing debate regarding how far the immunity entitlement extends and whether there are exceptions to it, particularly in cases of serious criminal wrongs. The present chapter reviews the conceptual, doctrinal, and theoretical foundations of the immunities of foreign officials, and their subjective, material, and temporal scopes. It also examines the rules that govern situations when foreign official immunity may not apply or may apply only to official acts, and the conditions for either of these outcomes. The chapter draws from recent developments in international criminal law, international human rights law, and transnational criminal law, and builds on the influential contribution of the ILC on the topic “Immunity of State Officials from Foreign Criminal Jurisdiction” included in the long-term program of work of the commission in 2006.
The previous chapter described the extent of a state’s physical territory; this chapter looks at how far a state’s legal power extends. As will be seen, international law places certain limits on the right of a state to make, apply and enforce its laws – its jurisdiction – and these limits are considered in Section 6.2. International law also recognises two principal bars to the exercise of that jurisdiction: diplomatic immunity and state immunity; these are covered in Sections 6.3 and 6.4. Two other bars to jurisdiction, namely special mission immunity and the foreign act of state doctrine, are also briefly covered in Sections 6.6 and 6.7.
How do states create agreements with one another, and how do they ensure they are followed? The first half of this chapter details the process by which states make, maintain, and rescind treaties. We elaborate on the treaty process set forth in the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, and explain different treaty types (e.g., bilateral vs. multilateral, self-executing vs. non-self-executing). Reservations—portions of a treaty a state does not wish to join—are also discussed, as well as their ramifications. The second half of the chapter establishes the centrality of diplomats to the creation and execution of much of international law, including treaties. We elaborate on diplomatic and consular functions as well as diplomatic immunity and asylum. Diplomats are noted as change agents in the international system, but the potential for abuse of that immunity is always present.
International law on immunities consists of a body of procedural rules that limit when a state may exercise jurisdiction within its territory. These procedural rules could prevent a domestic court from exercising jurisdiction in a case involving a foreign state, a foreign state official, or an international organization. These rules could also prevent a police officer from exercising jurisdiction by arresting and detaining a foreign diplomat or a minister of foreign affairs. International law bars the exercise of jurisdiction in such situations, either because the exercise of jurisdiction would threaten the equality of sovereign states or because the capacity of the individual or organization to carry out their functions would be compromised. This chapter begins with the law on state immunity, which has evolved over the centuries from an absolute doctrine to a more restrictive one, which permits exceptions, in particular when states engage in commercial activities. The chapter introduces the immunities that apply to all individuals who serve as state officials, whether they serve as relatively low-level civil servants or as the president or prime minister. The chapter also deals with two special regimes, one governing diplomatic and consular agents who serve abroad, and the other governing international organizations.
International law on immunities consists of a body of procedural rules that limit when a state may exercise jurisdiction within its territory. These procedural rules could prevent a domestic court from exercising jurisdiction in a case involving a foreign state, a foreign state official, or an international organization. These rules could also prevent a police officer from exercising jurisdiction by arresting and detaining a foreign diplomat or a minister of foreign affairs. International law bars the exercise of jurisdiction in such situations, either because the exercise of jurisdiction would threaten the equality of sovereign states or because the capacity of the individual or organization to carry out their functions would be compromised. This chapter begins with the law on state immunity, which has evolved over the centuries from an absolute doctrine to a more restrictive one, which permits exceptions, in particular when states engage in commercial activities. The chapter introduces the immunities that apply to all individuals who serve as state officials, whether they serve as relatively low-level civil servants or as the president or prime minister. The chapter also deals with two special regimes, one governing diplomatic and consular agents who serve abroad, and the other governing international organizations.
This article explores the scope and nature of diplomatic immunity ratione materiae under the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations (VCDR) by comparing this immunity with state immunity and immunity ratione materiae of ordinary state officials in general international law. It is argued that diplomatic immunity ratione materiae is distinct from immunity ratione materiae of ordinary state officials because ‘functions’ of a mission member should not be treated as ‘state functions’ in general but should be understood within the framework of Article 3(1) of the VCDR, which sets out the functions of a diplomatic mission as a whole. This means that the immunity cannot be upheld for serious violation of international law. On the other hand, diplomatic immunity ratione materiae is also different from state immunity both in scope and in nature. Therefore, the immunity must be understood as a unique concept which includes both the substantive issue of non-personal-liability and the procedural issue of immunity from jurisdiction. This hybrid nature of diplomatic immunity ratione materiae is the corollary of the functional emphasis of the Vienna Convention.
International law prohibits slavery and slavery-like practices under treaties that have been in force for more than a century. Yet, contemporary forms of slavery are one of the prevailing challenges for the international community, with 40.3 million people in modern slavery on any given day in 2016. The State has been largely overlooked as a perpetrator or accomplice in the global movement to eradicate modern slavery. The hand of the State can however be found in contemporary cases of modern slavery. This article identifies five scenarios of State involvement in modern slavery and aims to uncover and bridge the responsibility gap.
On August 18, 2016, the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Colombia (Constitutional Court or Court) rendered a significant decision in the Garcia de Borissow and Others case on issues of immunity from execution, diplomatic protection, and objections to customary international law in its review of two combined cases brought by former local employees against the embassies of the Lebanese Republic and the United States of America in Bogotá. While upholding the diplomatic missions’ immunity from execution of lower court judgments awarding monetary sums, the Constitutional Court instructed the Colombian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Foreign Ministry) to pursue recovery of such amounts either by diplomatic means or through enforcement of those judgments in Lebanese and American courts. The decision is both unique and problematic as a matter of international and domestic law.
The issues of State and diplomatic immunity in cases involving persons employed by foreign States in embassies or consulates or engaged directly by diplomats remain controversial. The focus of this article is on recent developments in European law, in particular under the European Convention on Human Rights, the Brussels I Regulation and the Charter of the European Union, the effect of which has been to enhance the rights of employees of foreign States. Analysis is also made of the United Nations Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and their Property and the current domestic practice of States with the aim of identifying the present international law standard on State immunity and embassy and consular employment. Employees of diplomats, however, remain inadequately protected and this article considers possible strategies for improving their position.
The third decision of the House of Lords in the Pinochet matter is significant, because the House of Lords upheld the majority view taken in the first decision: heads of state can, under certain circumstances, be held responsible for gross violations of human rights in the criminal courts of a foreign country. The decision is based on three main pillars. The Lords had, first, to clarify what constitutes an extradition crime under the Extradition Act 1989; second, to construct torture as an international crime; and, finally, to reject the plea of immunity of a former head of state in the context of the international crime of torture.
This decision of the House of Lords is significant because it is the first decision of a major court of an important country refusing to grant a former head of state immunity from adjudication in the context of alleged gross violations of human rights. It is shown that state immunity, diplomatic immunity and head of state immunity are to be distinguished and the rules pertaining to head of state immunity are explained. Whereas the author agrees with the result of Lords' decision, he disagrees with the reasoning because the majority circumvented the immunity question by artificially qualifying the alleged human rights violations of General Pinochet as private acts.
State immunity — Jurisdictional immunity — Employment dispute — Embassy employee — National of receiving State employed as chauffeur — Action for damages for wrongful dismissal — Whether foreign State entitled to jurisdictional immunity — Nature of employment relationship — Distinction between sovereign and non-sovereign activities
Diplomatic immunity — Locally recruited employees — Action for damages for wrongful dismissal — Whether defendant State entitled to immunity — The law of Belgium
Sovereign immunity — Immovable property — House leased by foreign State as residence for senior diplomatic agent — Action to enforce covenant in lease — Whether State immune from suit — State Immunity Act 1978, Sections 6(1) and 16(1)
Diplomatic immunity — Diplomatic agent and his wife — Exception to immunity in respect of ‘real action’ — Diplomatic Privileges Act 1964 — Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, 1961 — The law of England