International Legal and Truth Clarification Materials for Lawsuits Against Jiang (Part 2)
By a US Attorney in the lawsuit against Jiang
The Second Principle: The legitimacy argument
Immunity as a privilege invoked by sovereign nations and their leaders is
also based upon the "World Public Order," which comprises not only rules and
norms of international law, but also moral values and principles. It is a system
which, like all systems, requires something outside and beyond them for
legitimacy. (3) The doctrine of inalienable rights serves this function in the
United States. Jus Cogens serve the same function in the community of
Man. That an assault upon or elimination of the "legitimates" of any system
disrupts and destroys in time the system itself is ipso facto self-evident.
Therefore any assault on the prohibitions against slavery, genocide, crimes
against humanity, as assault upon the world order, cannot be endured by the
community of man (see below universal jurisdiction). Those guilty of such acts
are the enemy of all, and cannot invoke privileges or benefits therein.
Corollary: Universal Jurisdiction
The doctrine of Universal Jurisdiction is well articulated in the Princeton
Principles
and based on the above noted obligations erga omnes, all states are
obliged to ensure that all other (states and persons) do not violate these
norms. As the International Court of Justice notes, violations of these norms
constitute violations of obligations owed to all ("obligations erga omnes").
The Barcelona Traction, Light & Power Co. (Belgium v. Spain) 1970 I.C. J.
3, 32; (4) also see, Restatement third, supra, § 702 cmt. o. See also id
at § 404.
While US lawsuits against Jiang and other officials are based on the Alien
Tort Claim Act and Torture Victim Protection Act, most of our other legal cases
are based on the doctrine of universal jurisdiction. It has been tempered
considerably by such territorial requirements as a) injury occurred in
prosecuting state, b) defendants reside in or visited prosecuting state; c)
plaintiffs are citizens of prosecuting state. Lawsuits in China especially may
invoke this doctrine, as an alternative basis for jurisdiction.
Third Principle: Immunity is NOT Impunity
This is a principle articulated in international and U.S. law. What follows
is based on international law.
It is increasingly clear that, whatever the rule may be for current heads of
state, former heads of state no longer have complete immunity from civil and
criminal process. The ICJ decision recognized that immunity would not apply to a
foreign minister "in respect of acts committed prior or subsequent to his or her
period office, as well as in respect of acts committed during that period of
office in a private capacity."(para. 61) This follows from the procedural nature
of the immunity granted, which cannot apply once the person involved ceases to
carry out the functions that require immunity. Immunity will continue to protect
those official acts carried out during the person's term in office. The issue
then becomes whether the kinds of acts at issue in our cases constitute official
acts, for which immunity would continue to apply, or private acts, for which no
such immunity would exist. They do not.
Serious human rights abuses committed by a head of state (and other high
ranking officials) cannot be official acts and are therefore private or
individual acts not entitled to immunity.
These acts constitute not only violations of human rights treaties, but such
serious international crimes cannot be regarded as official acts because they
are neither normal State functions nor functions that a State alone (in contrast
to an individual) can perform.(5) This view is shared by all courts that have
directly considered the issue. In their decision of March 24, 1999, the British
House of Lords decided, 6-1, that ex-Chilean President Pinochet did not have
immunity for acts of torture committed while he was in office. Acts of torture
could not be official acts because torture is a violation of international law.
As Lord Hutton put it: The alleged acts of torture by Senator Pinochet were
carried out under colour of his position as head of state, but they cannot be
regarded as functions of a head of state under international law when
international law expressly prohibits torture as a measure which a state can
employ in any circumstances whatsoever and has made it an international crime.
(p. 638)
Most recently, the United States Supreme Court in Republic of Austria v
Altmann, 124 S.Ct. 2240, supported the above stated principle by citing many
cases available relevant to our "Jiang" case, Ex-King Farouk of Egypt v
Christiain Dior, 84 Clunet 717, 24 I.L.R. 228, 229 (CA Paris 1957), Ex
parte Pinochet Ugarte, 1 App. Cas. 147, 201-202 (1999), Nixon v
Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 731.
Notes:
(3) See Gödel on systems of mathematics, Plato on the world of ideas, Sausure
on linguistics.
(4) The International Court of Justice (ICJ) has the status of customary
international law and may be cited as support in lawsuits against Jiang and his
cohorts.
(5) This is eminently clear in US case law. In an early case affirming the
extradition of Marcos Perez Jimenez to Venezuela, its former head of state, the
Fifth Circuit held that the acts were done in violation of his position and not
in pursuance of it. They are as far from being an act of state as rape which
appellant concedes would not be an "Act of State."
Jimenez v. Aristeguieta, 311 F.2d 547, 558 (5th Cir. 1962), cert. denied, 373
U.S. 914 (1963).
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