Time for states to act on agreed responsibilities

The doctrine of a responsibility to protect remains a concept in search of committed champions, writes Louise Arbour

The doctrine of a responsibility to protect remains a concept in search of committed champions, writes Louise Arbour

Simply put the question is: what to do to prevent the unbridled and violent repression of peaceful protest in places like Burma or atrocities in Darfur; or the bloody and repeated flaring up of drawn- out conflicts as in Sri Lanka and in Colombia; or the perpetration of sexual violence that in countries like the Democratic Republic of Congo reaches pandemic proportions?

Although good-for-all recipes to avoid and respond to abuse and disaster remain elusive, world leaders have agreed that, at least for the most heinous crimes, some answers can be found in an emerging doctrine known as "the responsibility to protect".

That agreement was reached at the 2005 World Summit when all states acknowledged not only their obligation to protect their own people, but more crucially, that the international community has a duty to step in on behalf of civilians at risk of genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and ethnic cleansing whenever a government is either directly responsible for these crimes or incapable of stopping them.

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However, consensus on how to activate the doctrine's principles lags behind rhetorical exhortations. As a result, responsibility to protect remains a concept in search of committed champions and, most importantly, willing enforcers.

The doctrine is both sensible and firmly grounded in existing international law. It articulates that state sovereignty carries responsibilities as well as prerogatives and that the exercise of sovereign power entails a permanent duty to protect individuals against state-sponsored or state-tolerated atrocities.

Absent a state's ability or willingness to discharge such obligations and the onus of protection falls on the international community. It is then called on to assist or compel and - through appropriate authorisation - even coerce states to put in place the requisite web of protection.

Ultimately, the international community may exercise directly the protective function of the defaulting state. The norm appeals to the practical wisdom of confronting threats and ongoing abuses before a crisis worsens and cascades with unforeseeable consequences.

To this effect, the protection duty encompasses prevention, reaction, commitment to rebuild and to punish, spanning from early warning, to diplomatic pressure, to coercive measures, to conflict resolution and post-conflict reconstruction assistance as well as accountability.

By forestalling reflexive triggers for the use of force and by introducing elements of accountability for responses either given or omitted, the norm precludes both quick fixes and even quicker exit strategies.

The heart of the responsibility-to-protect doctrine already rests upon an undisputed obligation of international human rights law: the prevention and punishment of genocide.

As for identifying exactly when the responsibility to prevent and protect is engaged, a close look at a recent opinion by the International Court of Justice is helpful.

In Bosnia-Herzegovina v Serbia, the court held that when a state is enabled to act, by virtue of its proximity to the events, its knowledge - real or constructive - of the relevant facts and its capacity to influence the outcome, it has a "due diligence" obligation to employ all reasonable means to avert genocide.

This has interesting implications, not only for states in immediate geographic proximity to an impending genocide, but also, in my view, for the larger responsibility of the international community, acting through the organs of the United Nations.

In fact, if we were to apply an intelligent institutional design to match the three phases of responsibility to protect - prevention, reaction, rebuilding and punishment - natural institutional candidates would emerge.

Firstly, the Human Rights Council, the intergovernmental body that just over a year ago replaced the Commission on Human Rights, should be the pre-eminent forum for early warning and prevention.

Secondly, assuming that events constitute a threat to international peace and security, the reaction component of the responsibility-to-protect norm fits squarely within the range of diplomatic, dissuasive and coercive measures that the security council is empowered to deploy.

In that context, keeping in mind the analysis of the International Court of Justice, one has to wonder why vetoing an initiative designed to reduce the risk of or ending genocide would not constitute a violation of the genocide convention.

Thirdly, the Peace Building Commission - another new institution mandated to facilitate post-conflict recovery - should be ideally suited to lead the institutional reconstruction and development aspects of the responsibility-to-protect norm in the longer term.

Finally, international criminal justice has defined with increased sophistication the substance of crimes and lines of responsibility.

From the Security Council-created ad-hoc and special international tribunals, to the treaty-based International Criminal Court, to the exercise of universal jurisdiction by national courts, the legal responsibility to punish, clearly articulated in the genocide law, is increasingly finding appropriate forums - and at times even competing venues.

Far from being a leap into wishful thinking, the responsibility-to-protect norm is a practical response to today's human security challenges.

Instead of ritually claiming the status of impotent bystanders in the face of a sovereign power's abuse or force majeure, all states should clearly assess and act upon the scope of the responsibility that they willingly accepted as their own.

Louise Arbour is United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. She will deliver a lecture on this topic tomorrow at 10am at the law school of Trinity College Dublin at 39 Front Square