State
Responsibility
Wrongful
acts under international law
Barrister
Hassan Faruk Al Imran
It
is a rule that if any one breaches law then he will be prosecuted, as
well as in international law if a state does any wrongful act then that
state would be liable for that act. At present the details of State
Responsibility and the consequence of internationally wrongful act is
laid down in 'Draft Article on Responsibility of State for Internationally
Wrongful Act', which was adopted by the International Law Commission
(ILC) at it's fifty-third session (2001) together with accompanying
commentaries. The completion of the draft article and its submission
to the General Assembly is one of the most significant milestones done
by Commission. In addition to these Draft Articles, the law of state
responsibility has been developed through case law. However, the articles
do not seek to set forth a state's primary obligations under international
law but focus on the secondary responsibility resulting from a state's
breach of an obligation.
The draft articles
are divided into four parts. Part one of the draft articles defines
the general conditions of an international wrongful act of the state;
Part 2 deals with legal consequences of the responsibility; Part 3 deals
with the implementation of the state responsibility, and Part 4 containing
a number of general provisions. The present draft articles cover the
whole field of state responsibility; therefore, they are not limited
to the breaches of obligations of bilateral character.
Article - 1 states
that a State would be responsible for breach of any international wrongful
act. An internationally wrongful act of a State may consist in one or
more actions or omissions or a combination of both. Whether there has
been an internationally wrongful act depends, first, on the requirements
of the obligation which is said to have been breached and, secondly,
on the framework conditions for such act, which are set out in Part
one. The principle of Article 1 was applied in many cases by International
Criminal Court (ICC), e.g. - the Corfu Channel Case, the Gabcikovo-Nagymars
case. In the Rainbow Warrior case the Arbitral Tribunal held that "
any violation of a state of any obligation, of what ever origin, gives
rise to state responsibility." Interestingly, in Reparation for
Injuries Case the International Court of Justice (ICJ) held that United
Nations (UN) is also a subject of international law.
Article 2 provides
two conditions of international wrongful act. Firstly, the conduct in
question must be attributable under international law and secondly,
that conduct constitutes a breach of an international obligation of
State. However, whether the responsibility is 'objective or subjective'
depends on the circumstances. The 'objective' or 'risk' theory of responsibility
means that once a breach of obligation is established, the state will
bear all the risk irrespective of any fault. The 'subjective' or 'fault
theory' defines that responsibility arises even if there is conduct
in violation of a binding obligation, unless the state is in someway
subjectively to blame. However, there is no general rule in this regard.
It is essential that the act or omission, which arises from responsibility,
causes a breach of an international obligation is binding on the state
at the time of the act or omission.
Article 3 deals
with two characteristics of internationally wrongful act. Firstly, international
wrongful act will be governed by international law; secondly, a State
cannot escape from that by internal law. Therefore, international responsibility
cannot be avoided by pleading that the disputed act is lawful in national
law.
Article
4 provides that a State will also liable by the conduct of its organ
also. By Article 4 'State organ' covers all individual or collective
entities, who acts on behalf of the State, e.g. legislative, executive,
judicial or any other function, whatever position it holds in the organisation
of the state and whatever its character as an organ of the central government
or of a territorial unit of the state. Therefore, if any organ of the
State supports any terrorist organisation then state will be responsible
for that act.
Article
5 deals with the attribution to the state of conduct of bodies, which
are not covered by Article 4. This article includes, e.g., public corporation,
public company, which exercise elements of governmental authority in
place of state organs. So, it is clear that if any of these bodies does
any internationally wrongful act then the state would be responsible.
One of the important points is mentioned in Article 8. It provides that
a state would be responsible if the person or group of persons is in
fact acting on the instruction of, or under the direction of, or control
of the state. Article 8 deals with two situations, Firstly, state would
be liable if private person or group acting under 'instruction of state'.
Secondly, the state would also be liable when private person or group
acting under 'direction or control' of the state. The word 'control'
and 'degree of control' is widely interpreted here. These include, for
example, individuals or group of private individuals who though not
specifically commissioned by the State, and not forming part of its
police or armed forces, are employed as auxiliaries or are sent as "volunteers"
to carry out particular missions aboard. Thus in the Iran case, ICJ
held that the initial attack on the US Embassy by militias would not
be imputable by Iran as they were not agent or organ of the state, however,
later Ayatollah Khomeini's ordered an organ of Iran to attack the Embassy
was regarded as a state action and as a result the state was internationally
responsible.
Article 9 states
that if a conduct carried out by a person or group of person in the
absence or default of official authorities then the state will be internationally
responsible for their act. However, this article applies to exceptional
situation, such as armed conflict or during revolution, where the regular
authorities are dissolved (e.g. the Yeager case).
Art 10 provides
that where an insurrectional movement is successful then the act of
such movements, which becomes the new government of the State, shall
be considered as acts of that State (e.g. Short v The Islamic Republic
of Iran). Article 11 provides: 'Conduct which is not attributable to
a State under the preceding articles shall nevertheless be considered
an act of that State under international law if and to the extent that
State acknowledges and adopts the conduct in question as its own'. Therefore,
if a State 'subsequently' acknowledges or adopts any conduct that is
done by any other party then the state responsibility question arises.
Article 12 provides that there is a breach of an international obligation
when an act of that state is not in conformity with what is required
of it by that obligation, regardless of its origin or character.
Another important
situation is considered in Art- 16. It says that where a State aids
or assists another State in commission of an internationally wrongful
act, then the State would be responsible. For example, by knowingly
provides financial support, or shielding them or giving them permission
to use their land. Therefore, if a State requests another state to assist
them by using that State's soil as they want to attack against third
State then there is also violation of international law under state
responsibility.
However,
as an exception, Article 21 provides: the wrongfulness of an act of
a state is precluded if the act constitutes a lawful measure of self-defence
taken in conformity with the Charter of the United Nations. In its Commentary,
it notes, "the existence of general principle admitting self defence
as an exception to the prohibitions against the use of force in international
relations is undisputed", since Article 51 of United Nations Charter
preserves a State's 'inherent rights' of self-defence in the face of
an armed attacked or threat. The title of chapter III of part II of
the draft Article is 'serious breach of obligations under peremptory
norms of general international law'. Art 40 provides for what kinds
of breach a State would be liable under international law. This article
has two criteria. First criteria relate to 'obligation' breached, i.e.
breach must arise under a peremptory norm of general international law.
The concept of peremptory norms is general practice. It is accepted
that prohibition of 'aggression' and 'genocide' is regarded as peremptory.
In this article the second criteria is 'serious breach'. Serious breach
involves a 'gross' or 'systematic' failure by the responsible state
to fulfil the obligation. However, Article 40 does not give any procedural
guidelines for serious breach and aggression; therefore, it is the General
Assembly and the Security Council's duty to give specific guidelines.
What are the consequences
of internationally wrongful acts? First, cessation; the state responsible
for the internationally wrongful act is under an obligation to cease
that act, if it is continuing, and to offer appropriate assurances and
guarantees of non-repetition if circumstances so require. Second, reparation;
In the Chorzow Factory case the ICJ held that, "the essential principle
contained in the actual nation of an illegal act is that reparation
must, as far as possible, wipe out all the consequences of the illegal
act and re-establish the situation which would, in all probability have
existed if that act had not been committed." Third, state's internationally
wrongful acts breaches the preparatory norms of international law (
jos cogens), which is considered international crime by international
community is. Examples of such international crimes are- aggression,
the establishment or maintenance by force of colonial domination, slavery,
genocide and massive pollution on the atmosphere or sea.
Finally, the Draft
Articles on State Responsibility for Internationally Wrongful Acts make
a significant change to international law. It is clear that there is
no difference between a terrorist organisation and the state, both are
same, who shields or control, aids or support them (either- directly
or indirectly). Now, force had been used against a State for aiding,
abetting or supporting international terrorist organisation, example
of state responsibility is recent Afghanistan attack, who supported
the international terrorist group Al-Qaeda.
Barrister
Hassan Faruk Al Imran LLB is an LLM student (International Law) University
of the West of England, Bristol, UK.