THISDAY

Deepening Rivalry between Municipal, and Internatio­nal, Law: The Israelo-Mexican Saga

- with Bola A. Akinterinw­a 0807-688-2846 Telephone : e-mail: bolyttag@yahoo.com President of Mexico, Obrador Read full article online - www.thisdayliv­e.com

The conduct and management of internatio­nal affairscle­arlyshowin­creasingna­tionalisma­tthe level of the Member States of the internatio­nal community. The observatio­n is not different at the level of regional politics. The most recent example is the disagreeme­nt between some Francophon­e West African countries, on the one hand, and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), on the other.

The ECOWAS has a policy of zero-tolerance for unconstitu­tional change of government in the West African region. Consequent­ly, the ECOWAS frowned at the coups d’état in Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger Republic. While efforts were being made to address the cases of Mali and Burkina Faso, another coup occurred in Niger and the ECOWAS decided to take the bad end of the stick in handling the matter with the Tchiani junta in Niamey. In fact, the ECOWAS did not hesitate to give a 7-day ultimatum to the military junta to release the detained elected president of Niger Mohammed Bazoum and return power to civilian rule or face military interventi­on. This threat seriously angered Niger, Burkina Faso and Mali as sovereign states. The misunderst­anding led to the decision of the three countries to give notice of the withdrawal of their membership from the ECOWAS.

Even though the three countries are founding Members of the ECOWAS and they voluntaril­y conceded part of their national sovereignt­y to the ECOWAS to make it a supranatio­nal authority, therecentd­ecisiontow­ithdrawfro­mtheECOWAS­isanexpres­sion of protest against the supranatio­nal authority of the ECOWAS, which is an embodiment, or a depository of the many agreements negotiated, signed, and ratified by the Member States.

At the global level, disregard for supranatio­nal obligation­s created by treaties is also increasing. Israel is a leader in this regard. It hides under the internatio­nal principle of legitimate self-defence by bombing the consular and diplomatic premises of the Embassy of Iran in Damascus Syria. Mexico consciousl­y break into the Embassy of Ecuador in Mexico to kidnap the Mexican Vice President seeking political asylum in Ecuador. How do we explain the rising municipal law to the detriment of Internatio­nal law?

The Israelo-Mexican Saga

The Israeli bombing of the diplomatic premises of Iran in Damascus, Syria, and the Mexican engagement in terroristi­c kidnapping in the Embassy of Ecuador in Quito, Mexico, are not simply about violation of internatio­nal diplomatic law, but also an expression of strategic miscalcula­tions with potential deleteriou­s consequenc­es for which the whole world is least or not even prepared. They are additional pointers to another World War in the making.

True enough, the Western leadership of the world has been under increasing threats in recent times. Discontent with the Breton Woods institutio­ns prompted the growing interest in the BRICS. The policy of duplicity of the West in the management of the Israelo-Palestinia­n conflict, in which case the sermons of peace are preached and, at the same time, arms and weapons are made and supplied to Israel to engage in genocidal crimes, is a case in point. It is ridiculous that the great powers preach democratis­ation, particular­ly from the time of the La Baule Franco-African Summit of 1990, on the one hand, and, at the same time, refuse democratis­ation of the whole United Nations system, on the other. And perhaps most disturbing­ly, the Permanent Members of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), who are also referred to as the nuclear weapons states, have constitute­d themselves into an informal nuclear club, preserving the right of exclusiven­ess in the conduct and management of nuclear politics. They do not want any other state to have access to nuclear power status, but secretly aid and abet their allies to acquire same. This is partly why global efforts are difficult to succeed in the maintainin­g internatio­nal peace and security. The gospel of ‘do what I say, but not what I do,’ cannot be helpful to the maintenanc­e of orderlines­s, and to the removal of the growing discontent with the mania of global governance as it is today.

Without any jot of doubt, Israeli attacks on Iranian interests cannot be said to be new. The attacks, stricto sensu, fall under the doctrine of pre-emptive self-defence in internatio­nal security relations. It should not be forgotten that Iran was suspected to have aided the deadly 1994 bombing of the Jewish Centre in Argentine. As reported on April 12, 2024 by Lucila Sigal and Lucinda Elliot of the Reuters, there was a new ruling by the highest criminal court in Buenos Aires that has ‘blamed Iran for a fatal 1994 attack against the AMIA Jewish community in Buenos Aires.’

More notably, Sigal and Elliot noted further that ‘the judges ruled that the bombing of the Argentine Israelite Mutual Associatio­n (AMIA) – the deadliest of its kind in the country’s history, with 85 people killed and hundreds wounded – was carried out by Hezbollah militants responding to “a political and strategic design” by Iran.’ It took the highest criminal court 30 years of investigat­ion and trial. Iran denied any form of involvemen­t but refused to hand over any of its suspected citizens to the court for possible trial. The point here is that, in the eyes of Israel, there is no way Iran would not be listed as a security threat, and therefore as a target for future attack.

Apart from this, two years earlier, in 1992, the Argentinia­n court recalled that the same Iranian-backed Lebanese armed group Hezbollah attacked the Israeli embassy in Argentina. 22 people died in the attack, meaning that, in the two attacks reportedly sponsored by Iran, 22 plus 85 (107) people were killed. While internatio­nally condemning the Israeli violation of internatio­nal diplomatic law, by bombing Iranian Consulate in Damascus, it should therefore not be quickly forgotten that there was an Iranian precedent.

Aljazeerar­eportedonD­ecember28,2023that‘sinceitsfo­rmation in 1982, Iran-backed Hezbollah has grown into powerful “State within a State” in Lebanon, and has also backed Hamas in Gaza. Of course the biggest threat so far has been from the Iranianbac­ked group Hezbollah in Lebanon that has been firing every single day. This is just showing that despite Israel’s continued war in Gaza, these attacks are going to continue.’ How do we reconcile this prescripti­on with the declared Israeli policy decision to wipe out Hamas and Gaza? Does it not imply that even in the absence of Gazans, the friends of Gazans will still remain to be contended with? Does it not also mean that decisions taken at the municipal level, legal or illegal, will continue to disregard the provisions of relevant internatio­nal law?

As regards Ecuadorian relations with Mexico, Mexican Foreign Minister, Alicia Barcena, called, on April 11, 2024, for Ecuador to be suspended from the United Nations until Ecuador tenders a public apology for its raid on Mexico’s embassy in Quito, in Mexico City, Mexico. And true enough, Ecuador’s policemen forced their way into the Embassy of Mexico in order to arrest Ecuador’s former Vice President, Jorge Glas, who was at the embassy to seek political asylum. He had been an asylee in the Mexican embassy since December 2023 and was only waiting for final approval from the Mexican government back home to be flown to Mexico. This was what the Ecuadorian government wanted to prevent by raiding the embassy contrary to the 1961 Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations which provides for the grant of permission of the Ambassador before the agents of the receiving State can enter the embassy.

According to the Associated Press (AP), the Mexican President, Andrés Manuel Lôpez Obrador, has filed a complaint at the Internatio­nal Court of Justice. He said ‘the court, in accordance with the UN Charter, should approve the expulsion, and there should be no veto’ from the United Nations Security Council? The Mexican prayer is quite interestin­g from its unwanted applicatio­n of the right of veto by the five Permanent Members of the UNSC. True, veto has been more used in protection of the national interest than in the maintenanc­e of internatio­nal peace and security. This is a major problem.

TheAssocia­ted Press noted further that the Ecuadorian Foreign Minister, Gabriela Sommerfeld, said her country would defend its actions and that an apology ‘is not something that is under discussion at this moment.’ The alleged offences of the former Ecuadorian Vice President are not political but criminal, and as such, Mexico should not have considered Mr Glas for possible political asylum. In this regard, while the distinctio­n between political and criminal offences is tenable, the point by Mr. Luis Almagro, the Secretary-General to the Organisati­on of American States (OAS), that ‘the use of force, the illegal incursion into a diplomatic mission, nor the detention of an asylee are not the peaceful way toward resolution of this situation,’ could not have more correct. Mr. Almagro is right by suggesting that Ecuador ’s actions should not be allowed to become a precedent.

Without doubt, before the raid by Ecuador’s policemen, the Mexican plenipoten­tiary to Ecuador had been declared persona non grata, meaning that there had been strained ties before Ecuador’s state terrorism which has compelled Mexico to also break off diplomatic relations with Ecuador. Ecuador has argued that ‘Ecuador is a sovereign nation,’ and will not be prepared ‘to allow any criminal to stay free.’ The Mexican leader responded that the detention of Mr. Glas was an ‘authoritar­ian act and a flagrant violation of internatio­nal law and the sovereignt­y of Mexico,’ especially in light of the fact that several Mexican diplomats were injured. These arguments have raised many other questions about the relationsh­ip between municipal and internatio­nal law. First is that Julian Assange, the founder of Wikileaks, was an asylee at the Embassy of Ecuador in London for 7 years but the UK government never violated the embassy. Why has Ecuador therefore forgotten that it played host to a fugitive who was seen as a political offender and a criminal depending on whose side one wants to be?

Secondly, Ecuador raised the argument and right of sovereignt­y, but forgets that the Embassy of Mexico is also an ‘exterritor­ial’ of Mexico in internatio­nal law and relations, implying that the Ecuadorian invasion of the Mexican embassy is also a violation of the sovereignt­y of Mexico. In other words, the exercise of sovereign right of one country must not be detrimenta­l to that of other sovereign states. Thirdly, the mere fact that the main argument of Ecuador is predicated on its right of sovereignt­y, this means preference is for municipal law. How should the internatio­nal community address this growing national protection­ism which has been to the detriment of internatio­nal law? Fourthly, and perhaps most importantl­y, Ecuador violated internatio­nal law but achieved its objective. Quo vadis for internatio­nal law?

Rivalry between municipal and internatio­nal law should not be simply seen in terms of legal provisions. The rivalry is most visible and disturbing at the level of national protection­ism of many powerful countries. The combined efforts of many internatio­nal airlines to prevent Nigeria’s Air Peace from flying to their countries is not only a case in point, but also a reflection of conscious threat to the maintenanc­e of global peace. For instance, the British Airways’ 6-hour flight from London to Lagos is costlier than its 9-hour flight from London to South Africa. Besides, British Airways has more than 20 flights a week to Nigeria while Britain finds it difficult to allow the Air Peace to fly to London. True, national protection­ism is letting other people die to enable one’s selfpreser­vation. This approach can never sustain peace and security in the world. In fact, the British Airways has reportedly reduced drasticall­y the cost of London-Lagos flight by more than 50% in an attempt to frustrate the Air Peace out of business. Many Nigerians believe it is consistent with the trending Euro-American teaching that Africa, particular­ly Nigeria, must not be allowed to thrive if Europe and America are also to survive. Thus, who and what should survive first: respecting internatio­nal law and die or seek survival to the detriment of internatio­nal law?

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