Sunday, 30 October 2011

III. Rwanda

The Problem


On the 6th April 1994 President Habyarimana’s plane was shot down, the interim government blamed the Rwanda Patriotic Front (RFP) and within hours the ‘orchestrated campaign of killing began.’[56]  The Presidential Guard (PG) and the party militia killed 20,000 people in a week.[56] The PG trained party militia to kill and the Government distributed fire arms.[58] The massacres included the slaughter of 2,800 people in a Kibungo Church. [59] By the end of April the PG and militia began ‘cleaning up’ the surviving Tutsis.[60] In the 100 days of slaughter estimated death tolls include 80,000 (UN), 1 million (Rwandan Government) and nearly 2 million (2008 AERG estimate).[61] Up to 500,000 women were raped.[62] Approximately 2 million people fled their homes; central Rwanda had 500,000 displaced persons, 200,000 people sought refuge in RPF controlled areas, 250,000 fled to Tanzania, 8,500 to Zaire, 6,500-10,000 to Uganda and up to 47,000 to Burundi. [63] Refugee camp conditions were ‘atrocious’ and Hutu gangs continued to slaughter Tutsi’s in the camps. [64] In July RPF had gained control over a majority of the territory then declared a ceasefire and on the 19th the new Government of Unity was formed.[65]

Legal Option

Intervention with SC Authorisation

A peacekeeping force was present when the slaughter began; UNAMIR (United Nations Assistance Mission in Rwanda) under a Chapter VI mandate.[66] Support for UNAMIR was conditional upon cooperation and implementation of the Arusha Accords.[67] On the 20th April (14 days into the slaughter) the SG considered the options available to UNAMIR.[68] An option articulated was a HI, recognising that;

‘the situation could only be changed by immediate and massive reinforcement of UNAMIR and a change in its mandate so that it would be equipped and authorised to coerce the opposing forces into cease fire.’ [69]

This would require a Chapter VII mandate. The SG recognised the repercussions in neighbouring countries would create regional instability,[70] suggesting satisfaction of Article 39.  Rwanda’s UN representative and the President of Uganda urged for UNAMIR reinforcements.[71] Spain, New Zealand, Argentina and Czech Republic unsuccessfully proposed a resolution to mandate reinforcements.[72] SC authorisation was not a realistic prospect due to the position of the P5, notably the US and France. The new US Government Policy Presidential Directive 25 (PPD 25) restricted support for UN missions.[73] The PPD25 was generated from congressional hostility towards UN missions since the murder of 18 US soldiers in the UN peacekeeping mission in Somalia in 1993.[74] Chapter VII missions could only be supported if they advanced national interests, if international inaction would have to be deemed ‘unacceptable’[75] and it had political support. [76] US policy showed ‘geopolitical indifference’ to Africa and no national interest was at stake.[77] The PDD 25 ‘deterred the UN Secretariat from advocating stronger measures.[78] France was Rwanda’s ‘closest ally, militarily, politically and diplomatically.’[79] When the anti-Tutsi violence increased the French expanded their support for the abusive government and supplied arms until 3 months into the genocide.[80] France wanted to maintain its diplomatic relations with Rwanda and was unlikely to support a multilateral intervention. 

The SG proposed two further options; the withdrawal of the majority of UNAMIR personnel, but continuance of UNAMIR by 270 personnel or the complete withdrawal of UNAMIR.[81] The SG did not favour complete withdrawal, identifying the consequences; severe loss of life and repercussions in neighbouring countries. [82] These consequences should have also been given strong consideration in relation to majority withdrawal given the realities of what 270 personnel could realistically achieve. 

Other Possible Legal Arguments 

The Genocide Convention 

Members of the international community were aware of Article 3 crimes being committed prior to April. The International Community received many ‘warnings,’ including reports of the Government arming and training the militia, radio broadcasts inciting Tutsi extermination and Senior Officials in the PG reported the planned massacre.[83] The acts were genocide within Article 2 because they were commitment with intention to destroy the Tutsi ethnic group and the killings violated Article 2(a) and the rapes violated Article 2(b). States had a legal and moral obligation to stop the genocide and the use of force was the only realistic option of immediately halting the acts, placing a moral obligation on the SC. 

Unauthorised Intervention

A state or a coalition of states could have intervened by claiming the right of humanitarian intervention in customary law. This would have been be a controversial and uncertain legal argument but the state practice and opinion juris of the intervention on would have contributed to the creation of a customary right. States conducting the intervention could have possibly claimed implied SC authorisation, if the SC had determined the situation satisfied Article 39 and Article 41 measures were proving inadequate. A successful intervention requires immediate deployment of large troops; this was not realistic option because states with the capacity to intervene had little interest in contributing.  

Response 

The SG described the ‘widespread killings’ as having ‘political and ethnical dimensions.’[84] The Belgian contingents withdraw after the murder of ten peacekeepers, reducing force strength to 1,515,[85] then resolution 912 authorised the removal of UNAMIR except 270 personnel.[86] The SC were ‘appalled’ but emphasised the ‘crucial importance’ of the peace agreement.[87] The SG stressed measures had to be taken before a ceasefire was achieved and outlined UNAMIR II proposals;  Chapter VI mandate authorising 5,500 troops, with no enforcement action but with the ability to take action against threats to populations.[88] The SG stressed the atrocious effects on innocent civilians could not be ignored.[89] Resolution 918 expanded UNAMIRs mandate and authorised 5,5000 troops.[90] Resolution 918 used the language of the Genocide Convention but failed to us the word of ‘genocide’ and determined the situation a ‘threat to peace and security.’[91] Two months after the genocide began; the SC finally recognised the situation as genocide in resolution 925.[92] The SG only received one offer of fully equipped troops (Ethiopia) and several conditional offers, the US offered fifty armoured personnel carriers and France offered to pay for 200 equipped Senegalese men.[93] Governments are expected to make unconditional offers of fully equipped troops but states possessing the capacity failed to offer.[94]

In June the SC welcomed the offer of establishing a ‘temporary operation under national command’ to secure the protection of displaced persons, refugees and civilians and authorised Chapter VII action to take ‘all necessary means to achieve the humanitarian objectives.’[95] Initially proposed as a multilateral force only the French intervened: Operation Turquoise,[96] it established a ‘humanitarian protection zone’ over one fifth on Rwandan territory, which was assumed by UNAMIR in August and UNAMIR reached full strength in October 1995.[97]


Outcome

The Independent Inquiry (Inquiry) was mandated to establish the role of the UN during the genocide.[98]
The UN failed to acknowledge and respond to the genocide.[99] ‘The SC has a particular responsibility, morally if not explicitly under the Convention, to react against a situation of genocide.’[100] The International Panel of Eminent Personalities (Panel), (created by the Organisation of the African Unity) found the UN took for granted that the killings were a ‘by-product of the war’ failing to understand that an outright genocide was occurring independently of the war.[101] The US had amble information about the genocide, with direct knowledge humanitarian organisations, for example HRW[102] but genocide was not admitted to prevent a subsequent obligation of intervening.’[103] The SG labelled the failure to intervene ‘tragic’ considering most UN members are party to the Genocide Convention.[104]

The IC failed to contribute resources to UNAMIR; states lacked national interest and showed ‘double standards.’[105] The resources contributed to Operation Turquoise should have been contributed to UNAMIR. [106] Operation Turquoise was not a true humanitarian intervention because its ‘humanitarian motives’ were ‘highly suspect.’[107] The Panel found many members of the genocidaire regime, fled to the ‘humanitarian safe zone’ and French troops assisted their escape into Zaire.[108]

The Inquiry recommended the creation of an action plan for the prevention of genocide.[109] ‘Lessons from Rwanda and The UN and the Prevention of Genocide’ programme[110] was established by the GA in 2005. [111] The programme outlines a five point prevention plan; prevent armed conflict, protect civilians, end the culture of impunity, create early warning systems and ‘take swift actions including military force.’[112] The Inquiry concluded the UN ‘must be prepared to act to prevent acts of genocide or gross violations of human rights.’[113] In response to the Inquiry the SG outlined the UN’s commitment to ‘never again fail in protecting a civilian population from genocide or mass slaughter.’[114]



There was no humanitarian intervention in Rwanda. The IC failed to recognise the situation as genocide; states party to the Convention had a legal obligation to prevent the genocide and the SC had at least a moral obligation to act. The IC should intervene to protect civilians from genocide and gross violations of human rights. The UN committed to never again fail to protect.



[56] Amnesty ‘Annual Report for Rwanda 1995’ <http://www.amnestyusa.org/annualreport.php?id=ar&yr=1995&c=RWA> (last accessed 10/10/10)
[57] Human Rights Watch (HRW) ‘Genocide in Rwanda’ (May 1994) p.2 <http://www.hrw.org/en/reports/1994/05/01/genocide-rwanda> (last accessed 15/10/10>)
[58] Ibid
[59] Ibid p.4
[60] Ibid p.6
[61] Survivors Fund ‘Statistics on Rwanda’  <http://www.survivors-fund.org.uk/resources/history/statistics.php> (last accessed 12/11/10)
[62] Ibid
[63] HRW n.56 p.9
[64] Amnesty n.55
[65] Report of the Independent Inquiry into the actions of the United Nations during the 1994 genocide in Rwanda S/1999/1257 15 December 1999
[66] S/RES/872 5 October 1993 para.2-3
[67] S/RES/893 6 January 1995 para.3
[68] S/1994/470 20 April 1994
[69] Ibid para.13
[70] Ibid 
[71] Ibid para.14 
[72] L.Melvern A People Betrayed: The Role of the West in Rwanda’s Genocide (Zed Books, London 2000) p.214 
[73] The White House, Washington, May 3, 1994, no.20482, Presidential Decision Directive/NSC-25 <http://www.fas.org/urp/offdocs/pdd/pdd-25.pdf> (last accessed 6/4/11) 
[74] International Panel of Eminent Personalities ‘Rwanda: The Preventable Genocide’ (July 2000) para.12.33 <http://www.africa-union.org/official_documents/reports/Report_rowanda_genocide.pdf> (last accessed 12/12/10)
[75] PPD25 n.72 Annex I A,H
[76] Ibid Annex II E
[77] Panel n.73 para.12.32-12.33 
[78] Ibid para.12.36
[79] Ibid para.12.4
[80] Ibid 12.26,12.28
[81] SG n.67 para.16,19
[82] Ibid para.19
[83] A.Deforges ‘Leave None to Tell the Story’ (1999) see Warnings <http://www.hrw.org/legacy/reports/1999/rwanda/> (last accessed 1/11/10)
[84] SG n.67 para.2
[85] Ibid para5,7
[86] S/RES/912 21 April 1994 para.8
[87] Ibid para.10 
[88] S/1994/565 13 March 1994 para.4,11,16,15
[89] Ibid para.31
[90] S/RES/918 17 May 1994 para.3-5  
[91] Ibid  
[92] S/RES/925 8 June 1994  
[93] S/1994/728 20 June 1994 para.6 
[94] Ibid para.10             
[95] S/RES/929 22 June 1994 para.2,3 
[96] Panel n.73 para.15.66
[97] UNAMIR ‘Historical Background’ <http://www.un.org/en/peacekeeping/missions/past/unamirFT.htm> (last accessed 6/5/11)
[98] Inquiry n.64 set up by the SG under the authority of S/RES/935 1 July 1994 para.1 p.4#
[99] Ibid p.35  
[100] Ibid  
[101] Panel n.73 para.15.12  
[102] Ibid para.15.16 
[103] Ibid para.15.17 
[104] S/1994/924 3 August 1995 para.29
[105] Inquiry n.64 p.43-44
[106] Ibid p.49 
[107] B,Jones ‘Intervention without Borders’: Humanitarian Intervention in Rwanda’ 1990-94 Journal of International Studies Vol.24 (1995) No.2 pp.225  p.231  
[108] Panel n.73 para.15.68 
[109] Inquiry n.64 p.53
[110] Information and educational outreach programme run by the UN Department of Public Information <http://www.un.org/preventgenocide/rwanda/about.shtml > (last accessed 6/5/11) 
[111] UNGA/RES/60/225 23 December 2005 
[112] Prevention of Genocide n.109
[113] Inquiry n.64 p.53 emphasis added
[114] 16th Dec 1999  <http://www.un.org/News/ossg/sgsm_rwanda.htm>  (last accessed 5/4/11) emphasis added 

Saturday, 22 October 2011

II. Identifying the Law

International law concerns the rules and norms regulating the conduct of states.[2] Article 38 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) identifies the sources of international law; ‘international conventions,’ ‘international custom (as evidence of general practice accepted as law),’[3] ‘general principles of law’ and ‘judicial decisions’ and highly qualified academic publications.[4]


Humanitarian Intervention (HI) is;
‘the threat or use of force across state borders by a state (or group of states) aimed at  preventing or ending widespread and grave violations of fundamental human rights of individuals other than its own citizens, without the permission of the state within whose territory force is applied.’ [5]


HI is a ‘pressing legal challenge in international law,’ the challenge arising from the tension between human rights, sovereignty and security.[6] Human rights have gained increased importance globally[7] and international human rights law has developed out of necessity when states fail to protect their citizens.[8] Although legal instruments and enforcement mechanisms exist (for example International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and Optional Protocol 1[9]), they can only protect and punish ‘normal’ human rights violations (sporadic and individual)[10] thus leaving a void in the law for protecting citizens against mass human rights violations.[11]


The law relating to the use of force is outline in the United Nations (UN) Charter, an international convention which created the international organisation the UN.[12] The preamble outlines the ambitions of the UN to ‘save succeeding generations from the scourge of war’ and ‘to reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights.’ Article 1(1) declares the UN’s purpose, including, maintaining international peace and security by ‘taking effective collective measures’ to prevent and remove ‘threats to peace,’ acts of aggression or ‘other breaches to the peace.’ Article 2(1) requires states to respect ‘the principle of ‘sovereign equality’- this includes the right of a state to freely ‘choose and develop its political, social, economic and cultural systems.’[13] Article 2(4) prohibits the threat of or use of force against ‘the territorial integrity or political independence of any state, or in any other manner inconsistent with the purposes of the UN.’ The violation of Article 2(4) constitutes an act of aggression and aggression cannot be justified by any consideration, whatever its nature, including political or other considerations.[14] The ICJ in Nicaragua concluded this prohibition was custom, with the Declaration on Friendly Relations resolution providing opinio juris.[15] Article 2(7) outlines the principle of non-intervention in domestic affairs, further confirmed in the Declaration on Friendly Relations.[16] An exception to the prohibition on the use of force is force authorised under Chapter VII.[17] Under Article 39 the Security Council (SC) is responsible for determining the existence of a threat to or breach of the peace, or an act of aggression. Upon such a determination Article 41 permits the use of non-forceful measures, but if non-forceful measures are or would be inadequate, Article 42 permits the use of force. Force is to be exercised by member states.[18] Article 43(1) obliges member states to have forces available for maintaining international peace and security; qualified to special agreements. Thus states should have ‘combat ready units,’ however no special agreement has ever been concluded and states have failed to make advanced preparations.[19] Instead the UN developed the practice of authorising states and regional organisation use force ‘in sharply defined situations’ and states volunteer forces.[20] Chapter VIII of the Charter concerns regional organisations and Article 53 permits the use of force by regional organisations with SC authorisation.


The development of peacekeeping must be noted. Peacekeeping has no express basis in the UN Charter however it is a significant part of the UN’s work, highlighted by the current fifteen operations.[21] Traditionally peacekeeping was impartial, required state consent and only light force was permitted in self defence.[22] However in 1992 the Secretary General (SG) declared ‘peacemaking’ as preferable[23], whereby peacekeepers can use force to enforce ceasefires instead of the traditional monitoring only.[24] Resolution 814 on Somalia created the first Chapter VII peacekeeping mission.[25]


The SC is conferred ‘primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security’ by Article 24(1). The SC is composed of fifteen members, five of which are permanent (P5) (UK, US, China, France and Russia)[26] and the P5 must concurringly vote on SC resolutions, creating a veto power.[27] In the Namibia Advisory Opinion the ICJ confirmed that abstaining from voting does not constitute a veto.[28] Member states are legally bound to carry out SC decisions.[29] The SC explicitly authorised the use of force in the humanitarian catastrophes of Somalia[30] and Bosnia-Herzegovina.[31] Both missions were officially aimed at restoring peace and stability, with no explicit reference to protecting human rights. The SC’s powers to determine a threat under Article 39 have been extended by broadening perceptions of what constitutes a threat.[32] Alston asserts that mass human rights violations can legally constitute a threat because the preamble of the Charter ‘links peace and human rights’ making respect of human rights a precondition of peace.[33] Humanitarian concerns have been linked to international threats to peace and security to satisfy Article 39 by the SC. The SC noted that the humanitarian crises in Haiti ‘including mass displacement of population’ aggravated the threats to international peace and security and expressed concern of repercussions of refugee flows on the region.[34] In resolution 794 on Somalia the SC determined ‘the magnitude of the human tragedy’ equated to a threat.[35] Resolution 688, regarding Iraq, recognised the consequences of the repression, namely the mass refugee flows and cross border incursions, as creating a threat.[36] However in the event of SC failing to authorise a HI other justifications may be sought for intervening.


A further legal tool is The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide,[37] to which 137 nations are party.[38] Article 1 confirms genocide is a crime under international law and parties confirmed their intention to ‘prevent and punish it.’ Genocide is defined in Article 2 as ‘acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group.’  Intention equates to purposefulness, directly proven by orders or statements or ‘inferred from a systematic pattern of coordinated acts.’[39] The intention does not have to be to destroy the whole group but for government authorities intention to be satisfied a substantial part of that group must be affected.[40] National groups are connected by ‘a common country of nationality or national origin,’ members of an ethnic group are connected by ‘common cultural traditions, language of heritage,’ individuals of a racial group share the same ‘physical characteristics’ and a religious group ‘is defined by common religious creed, beliefs, doctrines, practices or rituals.’[41] Acts constituting genocide are[42];


a. ‘Killing members of the group,’ (‘includes direct killing and actions causing death’[43])
b. Causing them ‘serious bodily or mental harm,’ (including rape and sexual violence [44])
c. Inflicting deliberately ‘conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part,’ (including ‘the deliberate deprivation of resources needed for the group's physical survival’ for example clean water or and the ‘deprivation of the means to sustain life’ for example by confiscating harvests, or forcible relocation.[45])
d. Preventing births within the group
e. ‘Forcibly transferring children of that group.’


Article 3 declares committing genocide, incitement to commit, intention of committing and complicity during genocide are punishable crimes. Article 8 permits UN member states to call upon the SC and GA to take appropriate action ‘for the prevention and suppression of genocide or any action under Article 3.’ The Convention creates a legal obligation on parties to prevent genocide, however wide discretion is afford upon deciding a preventative method. Genocide has the potential to, and should, constitute as a threat to international peace and security and require coercive action for prevention; thus placing the situation in the concern and ambit of the SC.  The SC has discretion to decide the ‘appropriate action’ under Article 8.  The Convention places a legal and moral duty on states to prevent genocide and a moral duty on the SC to authorise a HI when the use of force is the only effective preventative method.


A further potential option is unauthorised humanitarian intervention. Unauthorised humanitarian interventions could only be legal if HI was an established exception to Article 2(4) in customary law. Customary law is created by state practice and opinion juris. In 1971 India invaded East Pakistan, the main justification was self defence but necessity of stopping the genocide and human rights violations, and justifications based on the UNs failure to prevent were also articulated.[46] India received resentment from the international community (IC) who thought India was advancing national interests.[47] Vietnam justified the intervention in Cambodia on the basis of providing humanitarian support,[48] however the French warned of setting a dangerous precedent.[49] Although the US recognised the need to balance sovereignty and human rights protection,[50] the IC was generally suspicious of Vietnam’s motives.[51] When the collation intervened in Iraq (1991) the legal argument was implied SC authorisation, for example the UK justified committing forces ‘in response to the refugee crisis’ and claimed consistency with the objectives SC Res 688.[52] In Nicaragua the ICJ said for custom to be established the practice does not have to ‘show absolute conformity’ but should be generally consistent.[53] For a right of HI to exist ‘fundamental modifications’ to the customary principle of non intervention would be necessary.[54] The ICJ concluded HI was not customary law because states failed to justify the interventions ‘by reference to a new right of intervention or new exception.[55] Nicaragua confirmed there was not an existing customary right to conduct unauthorised interventions however the law could be modified through state practice and opinio juris.



[2] R. Wallace and O. Martin-Ortega International Law (6th Edition, Sweet & Maxwell 2009) p.2
[3] found in the states settled practice and opinio juris- the belief that the action is a legal obligation see North Sea  Continental Shelf Cases (Federal Republic of Germany v Denmark and the Netherlands) ICJ Report 1969, p.3 para.77
[4] 15 UNCIO 26 June 1945  All four sources contribute to the assessment of whether the international community is failing in its responsibility to protect.
[5] J.Holzgrefe ‘The Humanitarian Intervention Debate’, in J.L Holzgrefe and R.O Keohane Humanitarian Intervention: Ethical, Legal and Political Dilemmas (Oxford University Press 2003
[6] E.Macdonald and P.Alston ‘Sovereignty, Human Rights, Security: Armed Intervention and the Foundational Problems of International Law’ in Alston.P and Macdonald.E Human Rights, Intervention and the Use of Force (OUP 2008) p.7
[7] Ibid
[8] H.Ruiz Fabri ‘Human Rights and State Sovereignty: Have the Boundaries been Significantly Redrawn?’ in Alston n.5 p.33
[9] Adopted General Assembly resolution 2200A (XXI) 16 December 1966
[10] Ruiz Farbi n.7 p.53
[11] Ibid
[12] 1945 862 UNTS 199 (adopted on 26 June 1945) available at www.un.org/aboutun/charter <last accessed 12/11/10>
[13] Declaration of Principles of International Law concerning Friendly Relations and Co-operation among States in Accordance with the Charter of the United Nations UNGA Res 2625 (XXV) 24 October 1970
[14] Definition of Acts of Aggression 1 UNGA Res 3314 (XXIX) 14 December 1974 Article 1 and Article 5(1)
[15] Nicaragua v United States of America (Merits) (1986) ICJ Rep. 4 para.188 Declaration on Friendly Relations n.12
[16] Ibid
[17] Action with Respect to Threats to the Peace, Breaches of the Peace, and Acts of Aggression. Note Pacific Settlement of Disputes is covered in Chapter VI
[18] Charter n.11Article 42
[19] Y. Dinstein War, Aggression and Self-Defence (4th Ed Cambridge University Press 2005) p.305-306
[20] Ibid p.101
[21] 2011; <http://www.un.org/en/peacekeeping/operations/current.shtml>(last accessed 16/03/11)
[22] C.Gray International Law and the Use of Force (3rd Ed. OUP 2008) p.282
[23] Agenda for Peace, ILM 1992 953 para.44
[24] Gray n.21 p.282-283
[25] S/RES/814  26 March 1993
[26] Charter n.11Article 23(1)
[27] Ibid Article 27
[28] Advisory Opinion on Legal Consequences for States of the Continued Presence of South Africa in Namibia (South West Africa) notwithstanding SC Res 276 (1970)  ICJ Rep 16 (1971) para.22
[29] Charter n.11 Article 25
[30] S/RES/794 3 December 1992 para.16
[31] S/RES/770 13 August 1992 para.1
[32] M.Shaw International Law (6th Ed  Cambridge University Press 2008) p.1237
[33] Ruiz Fabri n.7 p.49
[34] S/RES/841 16 June 1993
[35] S/RES/794 n.29
[36] S/RES/688 5 April 1991
[37] (1948) 78 UNTS 277 <available at http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/genocide.htm> (last accessed 13/2/11)
[38] for specific country membership see; <http://www.preventgenocide.org/law/convention/index.htm#ratifications> (last accessed 16/03/11)
[39] Genocide Watch ‘What is Genocide’   <http://www.genocidewatch.org/aboutgenocide/whatisit.html >(last accessed 10/11/10>)
[40] Ibid
[41] Ibid
[42] Genocide Convention n.36 Article 2(a-e)
[43] Genocide Watch n.38
[44] Ibid
[45] Ibid
[46] UNSCOR (XXVI) 1608 Mtg 6 December 1971 para.70,71
[47] Holzgrefe n.4 p.271
[48] UNSCOR (XXXIV) 2108th mtg 11 January 1978 p.5 para.56
[49] UNSCOR (XXCIV) 2109th mtg 12 January 1979 p4 para.36
[50] UNSCOR (XXXIV) 2110th mtg 13 January 1979 p.6-7 para.65-75
[51] Holzgrefe n.4 p.218
[52] 1992 British Memorandum Increased Role of UN 2 Dec 1992, quoted in O.Corten  Human Rights and Collective Security: is there an emerging right of humanitarian intervention in Alston n.5 p.101
[53] Nicaragua n.14 para.186
[54] Ibid para.207
[55] Ibid