ebook img

Title Extraterritorial abduction under the framework of international law PDF

301 Pages·2017·2.02 MB·English
by  
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Title Extraterritorial abduction under the framework of international law

Provided by the author(s) and NUI Galway in accordance with publisher policies. Please cite the published version when available. Extraterritorial abduction under the framework of international Title law: Does irregular mean unlawful? Author(s) McDermott, Helen Publication 2014-05-09 Date Item record http://hdl.handle.net/10379/4486 Downloaded 2019-03-27T23:52:44Z Some rights reserved. For more information, please see the item record link above. EXTRATERRITORIAL ABDUCTION UNDER THE FRAMEWORK OF INTERNATIONAL LAW: DOES IRREGULAR MEAN UNLAWFUL? A Thesis Submitted for the Degree of Ph.D. to the National University of Ireland, Galway by: Helen McDermott, B.A. (NUIG), LL.B. (NUIG), LL.M. (Irish Centre for Human Rights, NUIG). Supervised by: Dr. Shane Darcy February 2014 Irish Centre for Human Rights School of Law College of Business, Public Policy and Law National University of Ireland Galway TABLE OF CONTENTS Declaration of Originality…………………………………………….1 Acknowledgments…………………………………………………….2 INTRODUCTION 1. Research Question and Contribution……………………………5 2. Outline of Study…………………………………………………9 Chapter 1: State Cooperation in the Transfer of Suspects Introduction……………....…………………………………………20 1. History of Extradition.……..…………………………………..22 1.1 Antiquity…………………………………………………….23 1.2 Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries…….…..……………..24 1.3 Modern Day………………………………………………....25 1.3.1 Counterterrorism…………………………………….27 1.3.2 International Criminal Justice……………………….31 2. The Basis of International Cooperation………………………..35 2.1 Theories on International Relations…...…………………….37 2.2 The Obligation to Act in Good Faith………………………..40 2.3 Extraterritorial Jurisdiction………………………………….43 2.4 The Duty to Extradite or Prosecute…………………………46 3. Difficulties with the Existing Framework………………………51 3.1 The Political Offence Exception……………………………51 3.2 Dual Criminality……………………………………………56 3.3 Evidentiary Requirements…...……………………………..57 3.4 Non- Extradition of Nationals……………………………...59 4. The Extradition Relationship between Colombia and the United States…..……………………………………...61 Conclusion…….…………………………………………………...64 Chapter 2: Kidnapping Introduction…………………………………………………………..67 1. The Modalities of Forcible Abduction…………………………..71 2. Kidnapping under Public International Law…………………….78 2.1 The Threshold of Force………………………………………80 2.2 Against the Territorial Integrity and Political Independence...83 2.3 Self-Defense……..…………………………………………...88 3. The Application International Humanitarian Law to Kidnapping………………………………………………….95 3.1 Classification of The Afghan Conflict….……………………96 3.1.1 Al-Qaeda as an Armed Group………………………..98 3.2 Territorial Scope of Armed Conflict………………………...101 3.3 Categories of Individuals in an Armed Conflict…………….104 3.3.1 Loss of Civilian Immunity…………………………..107 3.4. The Relocation of Fighters………………………..........109 4. Kidnapping under International Human Rights Law…………..116 4.1 The Human Rights Committee……………………………...120 4.2 The European Court of Human Rights……………………...121 4.3 Extraterritorial Applicability of Human Rights Law…….….125 Conclusion…………………………………………………………..129 Chapter 3: Luring Introduction………………………………………………………….132 1. Modalities………….…………………………………………….134 2. Luring under Public International Law………………………….138 2.1 The Principle of Non-Intervention…….…………………….141 2.1.1 Luring as Intervention……………………………….144 2.1.2 The Threshold for Non-Intervention…………...........148 3. Luring under International Human Rights Law…………………150 3.1 The Right to Liberty and Security of the Person……………152 3.1.1 Deprivation of Liberty……………………………….153 3.1.2 Arbitrary Arrest and Detention………………............156 Conclusion…………………………………………………………...161 Chapter 4: Disguised or De Facto Extradition Introduction……………………………………………………………163 1. Modalities...………………………………………………………165 1.1 Immigration Control……………………………………...168 1.2 Deportation and Exclusion……………………………….171 2. Disguised or De Facto Extradition under International 3. Human Rights Law………………………………………………178 2.1 European Court of Human Rights……………………….179 2.2 The Principle of Non Refoulement………………………183 2.3 Diplomatic Assurances…………………………………..187 Conclusion………………………………………………………….....192 Chapter 5: Legal Consequences of Extraterritorial Abduction Introduction……………………………………………………….......195 1. Jurisdiction……………………………………………………....197 1.1 Domestic Courts………………………………………....197 1.2 International Courts……………………………………...208 2. State Responsibility for Extraterritorial Abduction……………..225 2.1 Attribution of Conduct…………………………………..227 2.1.1 Direction or Control……………………………..229 2.1.2 Acknowledges and Adopts………………………232 2.2 Private Individuals…………………………………………….....234 3. Consent Precluding Responsibility………………………………237 4. Reparations and Remedies………………………………………..240 4.1 Human Rights Violations………………………………..247 Conclusion…………………………………………………………....251 CONCLUSION………………………………………………………253 Bibliography………………………………………………………......263 Table of Selected Cases……………………………………………….280 DECLARATION OF ORIGINALITY I, Helen McDermott, do hereby declare that the work submitted for examination is my own and that due credit has been given to all sources of information contained herein. With this declaration, I certify that I have not obtained a degree at National University of Ireland Galway or elsewhere on the basis of this work. I acknowledge that I have read and understood the Code of Practice dealing with Plagiarism and the University Code of Conduct of the National University of Ireland Galway and that I am bound by them. Signature: ____________________________________ Date: ____________________________________ 1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to offer particular thanks to my supervisor, Dr. Shane Darcy, for his support, encouragement and advice. This work would not have been possible without the benefit of his guidance and careful supervision. I also wish to convey my deepest gratitude to the Irish Centre for Human Rights for the financial support that I received in the form of a Doctoral Fellowship. I am greatly indebted to all of my friends from the Irish Centre for Human Rights who discussed and offered feedback on chapters of the work especially Alexis Bushnell, Amina Adanan, Yingxi Bi and Yvonne McDermott. I would also like to thank Annabel Brody, Ciara McLaughlin and Kate Doran for their camaraderie and encouragement. A special word of thanks is owed to my brother, John, my sister Eileen, and my parents, John and Margaret. My parents have never wavered in their faith in me. I thank them for their support, love and encouragement throughout this project and it is my great pleasure to dedicate this thesis to them. 2 INTRODUCTION Do the interests of justice and the fight against terrorism justify extraterritorial abductions by states of persons they wish to interrogate or submit to trial? From the kidnapping of Eichmann in Argentina in 1960 to the snatching of Abu Anas al-Libi in Libya in 2013, irregular forms of apprehension continue to be employed as a tool to satisfy state interests in the prosecution and suppression of international crimes and terrorism- related offences.1 This dissertation explores and analyses the use and legality of such practices through the lens of international law. States have gone to great lengths to develop and improve systems of cooperation in the prosecution of international and transnational crime. Numerous bilateral and multilateral instruments have been negotiated to facilitate the transfer of criminal suspects between states, international institutions have been set up to prosecute international criminals and states have recognized a right, and in some cases an obligation, to submit the perpetrators of grave offences to their judicial systems regardless of where those acts were committed. Despite these efforts, the formal transfer of individuals from one jurisdiction to another is oftentimes frustrated; a treaty may not exist between the territorial state and the requesting state; the crime or suspect in question may be non-extraditable or it may be the policy of the requested government not to extradite nationals.2 Other factors that can 1 The Attorney-General of the Government of Israel v. Adolf Eichmann, District Court of Jerusalem, ‘Judgment’, 12 December 1961, Criminal Case No. 40/61 (36 International Law Reports 1968, pp. 18-276); Adolf Eichmann v. The Attorney-General of the Government of Israel, Supreme Court of Israel, ‘Judgment’, 29 May 1962, Criminal Appeal No. 336/61 (36 International Law Reports 1968, pp. 277-342); ‘US capture Libyan al-Qaida leader Anas al- Liby officials say’, The Guardian, (6 October 2013), available at: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/oct/06/us-capture-al-qaida-leader-anas-liby-libya. 2 ‘Lebanon- 2 Year Sentence in Plot to Blow up Hudson River Tunnels’, The New York Times, (17 February 2012) available at: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/18/world/middleeast/lebanon-2-year-sentence-in-plot-to- blow-up-hudson-river-tunnels.html; The United States does not have extradition agreements with many states in which those suspected of terrorism are often located- Afghanistan, Libya, Lebanon, Somalia and Syria. See Title 18 United States Code §3181; Charles Kallenbach, ‘Plomo O Plata Irregular Rendition as a Means of Gaining Jurisdiction over Colombian Drug Kingpins’, 23 International Law and Politics (1990) 3 impede the formal process include, a risk that suspects will be alerted to the request giving them time to flee; the host state may not possess an effective police force and so may not be capable of locating persons within their borders or the requested state may simply be reluctant to comply with transfer requests.3 When extradition fails or is unavailable, a state seeking to gain custody of a suspect is left with two options; it can consider the case closed or, it can employ methods outside the formal framework. In situations where the individual in question is wanted for serious crimes, the latter alternative may very well be the chosen option. Irregular methods of extraterritorial apprehension can be divided into three categories, kidnapping, luring and disguised or de facto extradition. The apprehension of individuals outside an extradition framework would suggest that formal mechanisms for the transfer of suspects from one state to another or to an international court or tribunal are unable to satisfy the demands of bringing criminals to justice, and/or that states are unwillingly to be bound by such frameworks. Recognizing the importance of efforts to safeguard national and international security and to ensure justice for international crimes and terrorism-related offences, a question arises as to whether irregular methods of apprehension are legal under international law. In circumstances where formal procedures of extradition or surrender exist and are capable of satisfying these demands, the answer may seem obvious but consideration must be given to the fact that in some cases, extraterritorial abduction may constitute the only means by which those responsible for serious crime can be brought before a court. One cannot deny the right of a state to protect itself from conduct that threatens peace and security and to take steps towards the prosecution and suppression of serious crime. In fact, the Security Council has called on 169, at 170; Michael Plachta, ‘(Non-) Extradition of Nationals: A Neverending Story’, 13 Emory International Law Journal (1999) 77. 3 The Lebanese government has often refused extradition requests from the United States; See Gregory McNeal and B.J. Field, ‘Snatch and Grab Ops: Justifying Extraterritorial Abduction’ 16 Transnational Law and Contemporary Problems, (2007) 491, at 492. 4 states to take measures to this effect.4 In saying that, the exercise of this right is not synonymous with an unbridled discretion to track down and apprehend perpetrators of serious crime wherever located. Regardless of the legitimacy of a state’s interest in the fight against terrorism and the prosecution of international crime, international law demands that the methods chosen to realize these objectives conform to certain principles and rules. Accordingly, state interests, however strong, do not extinguish their international legal obligations. This thesis provides a comprehensive examination and assessment of the lawfulness of extraterritorial abduction under the framework of international law and a critical analysis of the practical legal consequences of its use. 1. RESEARCH QUESTION AND CONTRIBUTION The research question underpinning this project is whether extraterritorial apprehensions conducted outside formal procedures violate international law; in other words does irregular mean illegal? To answer this, the thesis identifies the international legal frameworks that apply to the different forms of the practice, clarifies the principles and rules triggered within each framework and considers the way in which national and international courts and tribunals have dealt with the issue. The development of a sound and comprehensive answer to the research question posed demands consideration of a series of pertinent issues that underlie the issue of extraterritorial abduction. A determination as to the motivations for extraterritorial abduction begins with an examination of formal systems of extradition and surrender. This analysis raises the following questions: what is the basis of state cooperation in the transfer of suspects between jurisdictions? What aspects of the formal mechanisms established for the transfer of suspects lead to the employment of extraterritorial abduction? An understanding of the factors that contribute to 4 Security Council Resolution 1373 (2001); Security Council Resolution 1438 (2002); Security Council Resolution 1440 (2002); Security Council Resolution 1530 (2004); Security Council Resolution 1611 (2005).   5

Description:
throughout this project and it is my great pleasure to dedicate this thesis to them. Edward Snowden. The United States requested Edward Snowden's extradition from Hong Kong, cooperation from countries in denying him Administrative Maximum Facility in Colorado (ADX Florence) or by the.
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.