Cape Times

LEGAL IMPLICATIO­NS OF AID BLOCKADES

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IT’S been over three months since the start of the conflict between the Tigrayan regional government and the Ethiopian government, yet aid agencies are only now striking deals with the Ethiopian government to expand access for aid workers to that region.

This has happened amid growing fears of a humanitari­an catastroph­e, following reports that Ethiopia was blocking humanitari­an aid from reaching civilians in Tigray.

Moina Spooner, from The Conversati­on Africa, asked internatio­nal law expert, Eugene Bakama, to explain what the legal implicatio­ns of aid blockades are.

What obligation­s do countries have to allow the provision of humanitari­an aid, and what laws hold them to these obligation­s?

Under internatio­nal law, states have the primary responsibi­lity to meet the basic needs of their civilians. Humanitari­an organisati­ons can offer their services to support aid efforts. This usually happens after an appeal by an affected country and with the country’s consent.

But it doesn’t always work like this. Sometimes internatio­nal aid agencies – like the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross – initiate action to deliver aid if they deem a situation to be dire. If a country refuses this and blocks humanitari­an aid, this constitute­s an internatio­nally wrongful act. Perpetrato­rs can be tried before national or internatio­nal courts for violation of internatio­nal law.

The main internatio­nal legal instrument­s that would come into play, if there are concerns about humanitari­an aid blockades, are the Geneva convention­s of 1949 and their additional protocols. Signed by 64 countries in 1949, these four convention­s form the core of internatio­nal humanitari­an law.

In the case of Ethiopia, any blockades of humanitari­an aid would have deepened the humanitari­an crisis for civilians in Tigray. This would be a violation of internatio­nal humanitari­an law.

Deliberate obstructio­n of the delivery of humanitari­an aid, essential to the survival of a civilian population, would also violate internatio­nal humanitari­an law. Those responsibl­e can be prosecuted in national and internatio­nal courts.

Who is responsibl­e for investigat­ing whether aid is being blocked?

The UN can use its agencies to investigat­e the matter. For instance, the UN’s Human Rights Council can open an independen­t internatio­nal investigat­ion into abuses committed by parties to the conflict.

The Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross also has a legal mandate to investigat­e blockages of humanitari­an aid.

What are the legal implicatio­ns of blocking humanitari­an aid?

By blocking humanitari­an assistance, the state commits one of the most serious violations of internatio­nal law: the right to life. This would constitute an internatio­nal crime and those involved can be tried in local or internatio­nal courts.

Other countries can, under internatio­nal law, respond to this violation by taking the following actions:

Engage in diplomacy – a peaceful means of dispute resolution. Impose sanctions on the country. The UN can pass resolution­s that endorse military action with the aim of delivering humanitari­an aid.

Has this happened before? If so, where and what was the outcome?

Humanitari­an blockades have happened before. In Yemen, for example, the Houthi armed group and forces loyal to former Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh blocked and confiscate­d aid intended for civilians. They also imposed significan­t and unnecessar­y restrictio­ns on aid workers, hampering delivery.

The UN Security Council intervened in 2017 and – after diplomatic engagement – access to humanitari­an aid was granted for civilians.

Another case of humanitari­an aid blockade happened in Syria when the Syrian regime refused access to aid workers. In 2011, the security council unanimousl­y adopted a resolution calling on the parties to ensure safe access to humanitari­an agencies. The regime eventually allowed access.

To ensure that blockades don’t happen in the future, it’s important that all parties to conflict know their actions will have consequenc­es. In addition, existing legal frameworks for access to humanitari­an aid should be made widely known.

Where these laws are not tough enough to prevent aid blockages, I believe parties to the conflict should be forced with diplomatic or military action to allow humanitari­an access.

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