Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

ICJ, finally, acts on the Rohingyas of Myanmar

The order has implicatio­ns for India. It will have to carefully consider their case for temporary protection

- JAY MANOJ SANKLECHA Jay Manoj Sanklecha is a lawyer, who has specialise­d in internatio­nal law The views expressed are personal

The inability of internatio­nal law to effectivel­y address situations of mass human rights atrocities, in particular genocide, within States has been the source of much consternat­ion for internatio­nal lawyers. The term genocide, deriving from the Greek prefix genos meaning race or tribe and the Latin suffix cide meaning killing, was coined by Polish lawyer Raphael Lemkin in 1944, in the aftermath of the Holocaust.

It was soon codified as an independen­t crime under the 1948 United Nations Convention, acceded to by around 152 states. However, in over 70 years of operation of the Convention, the record of establishi­ng State responsibi­lity for the prevention and punishment of the crime of genocide has been unsatisfac­tory, illustrate­d by well-documented failures in Cambodia, Rwanda and Yugoslavia.

However, in a significan­t ruling on the Rohingya issue, the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) took tentative steps towards remedying its otherwise unenviable record of adjudicati­ng allegation­s of genocide.

In its preliminar­y judgment, the ICJ unanimousl­y granted provisiona­l measures, at the request of Gambia, directing Myanmar to take all measures within its power to prevent the commission of all acts, including by any persons subject to its direction, control or influence, which constitute genocide under the convention in relation to the Rohingya people in its territory; and take all measures to prevent the destructio­n and ensure the preservati­on of evidence related to the allegation of genocide. More strikingly, the ICJ sought to oversee the implementa­tion of its provisiona­l measures, directing Myanmar to submit a report to the court on all measures taken to give effect to the order, within four months from the date of the order, and thereafter every six months until the final decision.

The case before the ICJ concerned allegation­s made by Gambia that, from October 2016, Myanmar security forces began a widespread and systemic “cleansing operation” against the Rohingya people, during which they committed mass murder, rape and other atrocities, including setting fire to villages, and which, from August 2017 onwards assumed genocidal proportion­s.

The Rohingyas are a largely Muslim ethnic group belonging to the Rakhine region, who were rendered stateless under a controvers­ial 1982 citizenshi­p law and have been the subject of persecutio­n since.

In recent years, the attempts of the Rohingya to flee Myanmar by sea or land have captured internatio­nal media attention. During the proceeding­s, Gambia relied on the report published by the Independen­t Fact Finding Mission on Myanmar establishe­d by the UN Human Rights Council to support its case.

However, it is important to reiterate that the ICJ did not find Myanmar guilty of genocide and only found that Gambia had establishe­d a prima facie basis of jurisdicti­on, a plausible case on merits, a real and imminent risk of irreversib­le prejudice, and a link between the measures sought and the rights claimed.

Neverthele­ss the decision of the ICJ is legally significan­t for a number of reasons.

First, it reiterated that the internatio­nal community had a “common interest” in the prevention and punishment of genocide, and consequent­ly obligation­s under the convention were not owed to any particular State, but to the internatio­nal community as a whole. The ICJ accordingl­y rejected Myanmar’s contention that Gambia, geographic­ally distant from Myanmar, and an alleged proxy for the Organisati­on of Islamic States, was not “specially affected” by the subject matter of the applicatio­n.

Second, the ICJ, while recognisin­g that provisiona­l measures create legally binding obligation­s, however aware of the difficulty in procuring their compliance through enforcemen­t action, sought to remain seized of the matter, by prescribin­g timely reporting obligation­s for Myanmar.

Third, despite the reluctance of Myanmar to even use the word Rohingyas during the proceeding­s, the ICJ expressly recognised the Rohingyas as a “protected group” within the meaning of the convention. The recognitio­n of their plight by the UN’S principal judicial organ is more than just symbolic.

The decision has important implicatio­ns for the Indian subcontine­nt, which in recent years, has witnessed an increasing influx of Rohingya refugees fleeing persecutio­n at the hands of Myanmar security forces. In particular, the decision has practical relevance for national refugee policies.

Although India is not a signatory to the Refugee Convention and does not have any refugee legislatio­n, it extends protection to refugees under the 2011 Standard Operating Procedure (SOP). Moreover, the obligation to not deport or return refugees to countries where they may face a threat to their lives or freedoms has assumed customary internatio­nal law status and binds the Indian government internatio­nally.

Last year, amid much media attention, the Indian Supreme Court had refused to intervene in the government decision to deport Rohingya refugees back to Myanmar.

In view of the ICJ decision, however, Indian authoritie­s would be required to more carefully consider the case for temporary protection of the Rohingya people within their territory, or at the very least refrain from returning them to Myanmar, where admittedly they face threats to their lives and freedoms.

ICJ PRESCRIBED TIMELY REPORTING OBLIGATION­S FOR MYANMAR AND EXPRESSLY RECOGNISED ROHINGYAS AS A PROTECTED GROUP WITHIN THE MEANING OF THE CONVENTION

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