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On The Principles Of Self-Determination And So-Called "Territorial I

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  • On The Principles Of Self-Determination And So-Called "Territorial I

    ON THE PRINCIPLES OF SELF-DETERMINATION AND SO-CALLED "TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY" IN PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL LAW (THE CASE OF NAGORNO-KARABAKH)

    NOYAN TAPAN
    15 JUNE, 2010
    YEREVAN

    Ara Papian Head of Modus Vivendi Center

    We are not going to negotiate over the right of the people of Artsakh
    (Karabakh) to self-determination. - Serzh Sargsyan, President of the
    Republic of Armenia, June 1, 2010

    It is for the people to determine the destiny of the territory and
    not the territory the destiny of the people. - Judge Hardy Dillard,
    International Court of Justice, Oct. 16, 1975

    The notions of "self-determination" and "territorial integrity"
    are often used with regard to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    Unfortunately, these legal terms are largely misused mostly due to
    political motives. One of the grave misinterpretations of the said
    notions was by Ambassador-to-be (or not to be) Matthew Bryza when
    he declared: "There's a legal principle of territorial integrity
    of states, there's a political principle of self-determination
    of peoples." As a matter of fact, it is just the opposite. There
    is a legal principle of self-determination and there is no such
    principle of territorial integrity. Article 2(4) of the UN Charter
    declares merely: "All Members shall refrain in their international
    relations from the threat 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 United Nations". Thus
    this has nothing to do with absolute "territorial integrity", (i.e.
    preservation of the territory of a state intact) but, according to
    authoritative interpretation of the United States Foreign Relations
    Law, it is simply the rule against intervention, a "prohibition of
    use of force" and purely calls to refrain from "the use of force by
    one state to conquer another state or overthrow its government."

    In order to have adequate understanding of the status, scope and
    content of the principles of "self-determination" and so called
    "territorial integrity" in contemporary international law, we need
    to elaborate more on the issue.

    SELF-DETERMINATION Self-determination: Historical Background
    Self-determination is an ancient political right that is cherished
    by every people. The word "self-determination" is derived from the
    German word "selbstbestimmungsrecht" and was frequently used by German
    radical philosophers in the middle of the nineteenth century. The
    political origins of the concept of self-determination can be traced
    back to the American Declaration of Independence of July 4, 1776. The
    American Revolution is considered to be "an outstanding example of the
    principle of self-determination." The principle of self-determination
    was further shaped by the leaders of the French Revolution. During the
    nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth, the principle
    of self-determination was interpreted by nationalist movements as
    meaning that each nation had the right to constitute an independent
    State and that only nationally-homogeneous States were legitimate.

    During World War I, President Wilson championed the principle of
    self-determination as it became crystallized in Wilson's Fourteen
    Points (January 8, 1918) and consequently was discussed in the
    early days of the League on Nations. The Mandate system was to some
    degree a compromise between outright colonialism and principles of
    self-determination. While discussion of the political right and
    principle of self-determination has a long history, the process
    of establishing it as a principle of international law is of more
    recent origin. Since the codification of International Law is today
    mostly achieved through an international convention drown up in a
    diplomatic conference or, occasionally, in the UN General Assembly
    or similar forum on the basis of a draft with commentary prepared by
    the International Law Commission or some other expert body, we must
    follow the development of the discussed notions through international
    instruments. It must be stressed that if the rules, incorporated in
    the form of articles in the conventions, reflect existing customary
    international law, they are binding on states regardless of their
    participation in the conventions.

    Self-determination: Development under the Aegis of the United
    Nations: 1. Incorporation into the UN Charter The principle of
    self-determination was invoked on many occasions during World War II.

    It was proclaimed in the Atlantic Charter (14 August 1941). The
    provisions of the Atlantic Charter were restated in the Washington
    Declaration of 1942, in the Moscow Declaration of 1943 and in other
    important instruments of the time. Owing to these declarations already
    at the days of establishment of the United Nations, the notion of
    self-determinations was seen as a principle of international law.

    Ultimately, "the principle of equal rights and self-determination of
    peoples" was incorporated into the United Nations Charter. The Charter
    [Article 1(2)] clearly enunciated the principle of self-determination:
    "The purposes of the United Nations are: To develop friendly relations
    among nations based on respect for the principle of equal rights and
    self-determinations of peoples" and self-determination is conceived
    as one among several possible "measures to strengthen universal peace."

    Chapter IX (International Economic and Social Co-operation, Article
    55) lists several goals the organization should promote: "With a view
    to the creation of conditions of stability and well-being which are
    necessary for peaceful and friendly relations among nations based
    on respect for the principle of equal rights and self-determination
    of peoples." Under Article 56, "all Members pledge themselves to
    take joint and separate action in cooperation with the Organization
    for the achievement of the purposes set forth in Article 55." The
    principle of self-determination, as it follows from Article 55
    of the UN Charter, is one of the fundamentals of peaceful and
    friendly international relations. In other words, there can be no
    such relations without the observance of this principle. The same
    article says it is the duty of the United Nations to promote respect
    for fundamental human rights (para. c) and, consequently, for the
    nations' right to self-determination. And since the establishment of
    friendly relations between peoples and the promotion of respect for
    human rights figure among the United Nation's most important tasks,
    it is obvious that this organization is entitled to raise the question
    of a people's self-determination. The Charter is dominant over all
    the other international documents. This provision is set down in
    Article 103 of the Charter, and is accepted by all the members of
    the UN. It is clear that the UN considers the self-determination
    of peoples (self-determination, not just the right of people for
    self-determination, i.e. the application of this right) as not only
    one of its basic principles but also as a basis for friendly relations
    and universal peace. Hence, rejection of self-determination hinders
    friendship and universal peace. In addition, Article 24, Point 2 holds:
    "In discharging these duties [the maintenance of international peace
    and security] the Security Council shall act in accordance with
    the Purposes and Principles of the United Nations." It means that,
    in the maintenance of international peace and security, the Security
    Council must be guided by self-determination of peoples because it is
    one of its principles. 2. Development through UN Practice The concept
    of self-determination was further developed by the United Nations.

    Through its resolutions the United Nations has expounded and developed
    the principle of self-determination. In Resolution 637A(VII) of
    December 16, 1952 the General Assembly declared that: "the right of
    peoples and nations to self-determination is a prerequisite to the
    full enjoyment of all fundamental human rights." The General Assembly
    recommended, inter alia, that "the States Members of the United Nations
    shall uphold the principle of self-determination of all peoples and
    nations." In 1960, the General Assembly adopted Resolution 1514(XV)
    entitled Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial
    Countries and Peoples which declares that: [para. 2]. "All peoples
    have the right to self-determination; by virtue of that right they
    freely determine their political status and freely pursue their
    economic, social and cultural development." The Declaration regards
    the principle of self-determination as a part of the obligations
    stemming from the Charter, and is not a "recommendation", but is in
    the form of an authoritative interpretation of the Charter. Later
    on, the principle was incorporated in a number of international
    instruments. In 1966 two conventions on human rights entered into
    force - the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and
    the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.

    The Covenants have a common Article 1 which states: "All peoples have
    the right of self-determination. By virtue of that right they freely
    determine their political status and freely pursue their economic,
    social and cultural development."

    Consequently the Declaration of Principles of International Law
    Concerning Friendly Relations and Co-operation among the States
    in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations [General
    assembly Resolution 2625 (XXV), 1970] confirmed the principle that
    self-determination is a right belonging to all peoples and that
    its implementation is required by the UN Charter: "By virtue of the
    principle of equal rights and self-determination of peoples enshrined
    in the Charter of the United Nations, all peoples have the right
    freely to determine, without external interference , their political
    status and to pursue their economic, social and cultural development,
    and every state has the duty to respect this right in accordance with
    the provisions of the Charter." M. Zahovic, rapporteur for the Special
    Committee on Principles of International Relations concerning Friendly
    Relations and Co-operation among the Nations, remarked: "Nearly all
    representatives who participated in the debate emphasised that the
    principle was no longer to be considered a mere moral or political
    postulate; it was rather settled principle of modern international
    law. Full recognition of the principle was a prerequisite for the
    maintenance of international peace and security, the development of
    friendly relations and cooperation among the States, and the promotion
    of economic, social and cultural progress throughout the world."

    Self-Determination: The Principle and Human Rights The principle of
    self-determination developed from a philosophical to political concept
    in international relations and has now matured into a fundamental
    principle of positive international law. It has developed recently as
    an aspect of human rights belonging to the group rather than to the
    individual and therefore rightly belongs to both Covenants of Human
    Rights, as it was mentioned. On 25 June 1993, representatives of 171
    States adopted by consensus the Vienna Declaration and Programme
    of Action of the World Conference on Human Rights (June 14-25,
    1993). The final document agreed to in Vienna, which was endorsed by
    the forty-eighth session of the General Assembly (resolution 48/121,
    of 1993), reaffirms the principles that have evolved during the
    past 45 years and further strengthens the foundation for additional
    progress in the area of human rights. The document recognizes
    interdependence between democracy, development and human rights,
    including the right to self-determination. The final document
    emphasizes that the Conference considers the denial of the right
    of self-determination as a violation of human rights and underlines
    the importance of the effective realization of this right [para. 2]:
    "The World Conference on Human Rights considers the denial of the right
    of self-determination as a violation of human rights and underlines
    the importance of the effective realization of this right". Armenia,
    Azerbaijan, Turkey, and co-sponsors of the OSCE Minsk group as well
    (Russian Federation, United States of America, France) are parties to
    this convention. International organizations which are concerned with
    human rights and world peace have given full recognition to the fact
    that respect for self-determination is a condition for world peace.

    Fundamental human rights are meaningful in the context of a people
    enjoying self-determination. The raison d'etre for the principle of
    self-determination is the enjoyment by all peoples, regardless of
    race, religion, or sex, of full democratic rights within the law,
    free from internal or external domination. It seeks to provide the
    opportunities for the political, economic, social, and cultural
    development of all peoples. The basic objective of the principle
    is to guarantee that all peoples have a government to their choice
    that responds to their political, economic, and cultural needs. Thus,
    denial of the right to self-determination is a human rights violation
    and constitutes a breach of international law.

    Self-determination: Development of the Principle Through Other
    Organizations

    The International Commission of Jurists (affiliated to the
    International Court of Justice) has held numerous conferences on the
    rule of law attempting to provide a clear and comprehensive definition
    of rule of law and better measures of implementation in the context of
    protecting human rights. Its first congress was held in Athens in 1955,
    where the participants gave effect to the Act of Athens which resolved:
    " (9) The recognition of the right to self-determination being one
    of the great achievements of our era and one of the fundamental
    principles of international law, its non-application is emphatically
    condemned. (10) Justice demands that a people or an ethnic or political
    minority be not deprived of their natural rights and especially of
    the fundamental rights of man and citizens or of equal treatment for
    reasons of race, colour, class, political conviction, caste or creed".

    The First World Conference of Lawyers on World Peace through Law,
    in their Declaration of General Principles for a World Rule of Law
    (Athens, July 6, 1963), adopted a resolution which stated: "In order
    to establish an effective international legal system under the rule
    of law which precludes resort to force, we declare that: (...) (6)
    A fundamental principle of the international rule of law is that
    of the right of self-determination of the peoples of the world,
    as proclaimed in the Charter of the United Nations."

    Self-determination: Development of the Principle Through the ICJ

    The principle of self-determination is exemplified in the decisions
    by the International Court of Justice (ICJ). For example, in the
    South-West Africa Cases (December 26, 1961, and July 18, 1966) Judge
    Nervo, dissenting, expressed the belief that the concept of equality
    and freedom "will inspire the vision and the conduct of peoples the
    world over until the goal of self-determination and independence
    is reached."

    The Advisory Opinion of the International Court relating to the Western
    Sahara Case (October 16, 1975) reconfirmed as well "the validity of the
    principle of self-determination" in the context of international law.

    Also in the decision of June 30, 1995, concerning the East Timor Case
    (Portugal v. Australia) the International Court reaffirmed that the
    principle of self-determination of peoples is recognized by the UN
    Charter and by its own jurisprudence as being "one of the essential
    principles of contemporary international law."[Para. 29]

    Self-Determination: Status, Scope and Content in Contemporary
    International Law.

    Both the United Nations and the majority of authors are alike in
    maintaining that the principle of self-determination is part of modern
    international law. Due to developments in the United Nations since
    1945, jurists now generally admit that self-determination is a legal
    principle. The principle has been confirmed, developed and given more
    tangible form by a consistent body of State practice and has been
    embodied among "the basic principles of international law" in the
    Friendly Relations Resolutions. The generality and political aspect of
    the principle do not deprive it of legal content. Furthermore, having
    no doubts that the principle of the self-determination of peoples
    is a legal principle, currently many declare self-determination to
    be a jus cogens (peremptory) norm of international law. Accordingly,
    no derogation is admissible from the principle of self-determination
    by means of a treaty or any similar international transaction.

    It must be underlined that the right of self-determination is the
    right to choose a form of political organization and relations with
    other groups. The choice may be independence as a state, association
    with other groups in a federal state, or autonomy or assimilation in a
    unitary (non-federal) state. A situation involving the international
    legal principle of self-determination cannot be excluded from
    the jurisdiction of the United Nations by a claim of domestic
    jurisdiction. International customary law is binding on all states
    regardless of consent; and in any event, states have bound themselves
    under the Charter to respect the principle. The claims of the states
    that the implementation of the principle of self-determination
    infringes on their rights or is contrary to their "constitutional
    processes" cannot be made a pretext for depriving other peoples of
    their right to self-determination. Presently self-determination as
    a principle is truly universal in scope. It is also unconditional
    because most of the UN members also hold that realization of the
    right to self-determination should not have any strings attached to it.

    All these conceptions were summarized in the statement by Hans
    Brunhart, Head of Government and Minister of Foreign Affairs of the
    Principality of Liechtenstein, during the Forty-Seventh Session of
    the General Assembly of the United Nations (September 23, 1992, UN Doc.

    A/47/PV.9) [para. 6]: "The right to self-determination as
    principle is now universally accepted. I would recall not only that
    self-determination is one of the foundations of the Charter, but also
    that most States represented in this Assembly are already under certain
    specific legal obligations in this area by virtue of Article 1 of each
    of the great human rights conventions of 1966. [i. e. the International
    Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant
    on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.] There it is formally and
    with legally binding effect acknowledged that: "All peoples have
    the right of self-determination. By virtue of that right they freely
    determine their political status and freely pursue their economic,
    social and cultural development."

    Despite all this, and with some notable exceptions, the practical and
    peaceful application of the principle of self-determination has often
    been lacking. Time and again have dominant powers hindered oppressed
    peoples from availing themselves of their right to self-determination
    despite the obligations assumed in signing the UN Charter. So how
    is one to establish that a people wants to be the master of its own
    destiny? There are different ways of establishing the will of the
    people demanding self-determination. The will of the people may be
    determined by a plebiscite. A plebiscite or, what amounts to the same
    thing, a referendum means the right of the majority of the population
    to determine the political and legal status of the territory it
    inhabits. The will of people may be expressed by parliament or by any
    other representative institutions elected by the self-determining
    people. By and large there are plebiscites without a popular vote
    on the questions concerned. In such cases, the population of the
    self-determining territory elects a representative organ which then
    expresses the people's will. If the elections to these organs and
    the vote in them are conducted on a democratic basis, this method
    of expressing the people's will is quite legitimate. This is the
    situation that we had lately (May 23, 2010) in Nagorno-Karabakh during
    the elections of the Parliament of the Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh
    (Artsakh). The will of the people may also be expressed in the
    form of mass protests (civil disobedience, demonstrations, rallies,
    newspaper articles, etc.). Lastly, it may find expression in armed
    uprisings or wars for national liberation. The latter is an extreme
    measure and people resorts to it only if forced to do so. A rule
    of customary international law has emerged, according to which the
    principle of self-determination includes a right of secession and, as
    a consequence, the legality of wars of national liberation and third
    party interventions on behalf of the secessionist movements. The
    use of force to achieve self-determination and for the assistance
    of national liberation movements has increasingly been claimed as
    legitimate in recent years, on the ground that it furthers the
    principles of the UN Charter. There is no rule of international
    law forbidding revolutions within a state, and the United Nation's
    Charter favors the self-determination of peoples. Self-determination
    may take the forms of rebellion to oust an unpopular government, of
    colonial revolt, of an irredentist movement to transfer territory,
    or of a movement for the unification or federation of independent
    states. It should be especially stressed that whatever way is chosen,
    no "central authority" or any other people can solve the problem for
    the self-determining people, for that would be contrary to the very
    principle of self-determination.

    While establishing the scope of self-determination, a question must be
    answered: Are the peoples and nations which have already implemented
    their right to self-determination subjects of this right? The
    answer is "Yes", inasmuch as the UN Charter recognizes the right to
    self-determination of all peoples and nations, without distinguishing
    between those which have attained statehood and those which have not.

    The question is answered analogically in the General Assembly
    resolution on the inclusion of the clause on human rights in
    the International Covenant on Human Rights. It has been strongly
    advocated that a nation which has been divided into States by outside
    interference and without the clear consent of the population still
    possess the inherent right of self-determination including the right
    of reunification.

    Furthermore, infringement of the right to self-determination has been
    used by the European Community as a potential ground for withholding
    recognition of an entity as a State and hence to deny the legitimacy
    of a government or a State which does not protect the right of
    self-determination. In the EC Declaration on the Guidelines on the
    Recognition of New States in Eastern Europe and in the Soviet Union
    (December 16, 1991), there is the requirement that a potential new
    State has constitutional guarantees of democracy and of "the rights of
    ethnic and national groups and minorities" before recognition by the
    EC States would be granted. Moreover, a new rule of international
    law holds that a State established in violation of the right of
    self-determination is a nullity in international law.

    Another question which concerns the self-determination of
    peoples is: Can the right of self-determination be applied to
    non-colonial entities? Certainly the main objective of the right of
    self-determination was to bring a speedy end to colonialism. However,
    since codification of that principle in the UN Charter, not one of
    the major international instruments which have dealt with the right
    of self-determination have limited the application of the right to
    colonial situations. For example, the common Article 1 of the two
    International Human Rights Conventions of 1966 (International Covenant
    on Civil and Political Rights and International Covenant on Economic,
    Social and Cultural Rights) applies the right to "all peoples" without
    any restriction as to their status, and the obligation rests on all
    States. Likewise, principle VIII of the Final Act of the Helsinki
    Conference 1975 includes: "by virtue of the principle of equal rights
    and self-determination of peoples, all peoples have the right, in
    full freedom, to determine, when and as they wish, their internal
    and external political status, without external interference, and to
    pursue as they wish their political, economic, social and cultural
    development". State practice also supports a broader application of
    the right of self-determination beyond strictly colonial confines.

    Indeed, the international Commission of Jurists, in its report on
    Bangladesh's secession, stated that: "if one of the constituent peoples
    of a State is denied equal rights and is discriminated against, it is
    submitted that their full right of self-determination will revive". In
    the Treaty on the Final Settlement with Respect to Germany (September
    12, 1990), which was signed by four of the five Permanent Members of
    the Security Council, it was expressly mentioned that the "German
    people, freely exercising their right of self-determination, have
    expressed their will to bring about the unity of Germany as a State",
    [Preamble, para. 11], despite the fact that neither East nor West
    Germany was a colony. It was also been applied by States in the context
    of the break-up of the former Soviet Union and former Yugoslavia.

    TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY AND POLITICAL INDEPENDENCE "Territorial
    Integrity": Evaluation and Content The notion of "territorial
    integrity" has been employed only three times in international
    instruments. All other cases are only references to these said
    documents. The concepts of territorial integrity and political
    independence emerged during the years immediately following the end
    of World War I. Article 10 of the Covenant of the League of Nations
    stipulated that: "the Members of the League undertake to respect and
    preserve as against external aggression the territorial integrity and
    existing political independence of all Members of the League". The
    same understanding of "territorial integrity" was reaffirmed in the
    UN Charter: "2(4). All Members shall refrain in their international
    relations from the threat 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 United Nations." The
    other important international instrument which is often referred
    to is the Helsinki Final Act (adopted on August 1, 1975) which
    requires the following: "The participating States will refrain in
    their mutual relations, as well as in their international relations
    in general, from the threat or use of force against the territorial
    integrity or political independence of any State ..." It is obvious
    that the Helsinki Final Act, likewise the UN Charter and League of
    Nations Covenant earlier, condemns merely the use of force against
    territorial integrity and does not unconditionally advocate for
    the absolute maintenance of territorial integrity. It makes clear
    that use of external force or threat of use against territorial
    integrity and political independence is unacceptable. Meanwhile, the
    Helsinki Final Act (Chapter 1) specifically holds that: " frontiers
    can be changed, in accordance with international law, by peaceful
    means and by agreement." It is apparent that ever since the first
    time that the notion of "territorial integrity" appeared within
    the domain of international law, it has been closely intertwined
    with the question of the use of external force. In other words, the
    principle of "territorial integrity" is traditionally interwoven with
    the fundamental principle of the prohibition of the threat or use of
    force and not with the absolute preservation of the territory of a
    state intact. As it was mentioned above, it is just the "prohibition
    of use of [external] force" and the renunciation of "the use of force
    by one state to conquer another state or overthrow its government."

    "Territorial Integrity": Scope, Limitation and Status under
    International Law. In modern political life there are repeated wrongful
    attempts to present "territorial integrity" as a general limitation
    on the right to self-determination. The basis for such limitation
    is false because the government of a State which does not represent
    the whole population on its territory without discrimination cannot
    succeed in limiting the right of self-determination on the basis that
    it would infringe that State's territorial integrity.

    Moreover, state practice shows that territorial integrity limitations
    on the right of self-determination are often ignored, as seen in
    the recognition of the independence of Bangladesh (from Pakistan),
    Singapore (from Malaysia) and Belize, "despite the claims of
    Guatemala". In addition, after the recognition by the international
    community of the disintegration of the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia,
    recognition of East Timor and Eritrea, recognition to a certain extent
    of Kosovo, Abkhazia and South Ossetia, it could now be the case that
    any government which is oppressive to peoples within its territory
    may no longer be able to rely on the general interest of territorial
    integrity as a limitation on the right of self-determination.

    Therefore there is a clear-cut understanding: only a government of a
    State which allows all its peoples to decide their political status
    and economic, social and cultural development freely has an interest
    of territorial integrity which can possibly, only possibly, limit the
    exercise of a right of self-determination. So territorial integrity,
    as a limitation on the exercise of the right of self-determination,
    can apply only to those States in which the government represents
    the whole population in accordance with the exercise of internal
    self-determination. Thus, there is an apparent conceptual link between
    democracy and self-determination. Democracy is often viewed as internal
    self-determination, and secession as external self-determination,
    that is, as the right of a people to govern itself, rather than be
    governed by another people. Moreover, it is clear that those deprived
    of the right of self-determination can seek forcible international
    support to uphold their right of self-determination and no State
    can use force against such groups. As it was referred above,
    the Declaration on Principles of International Law provides that
    "every State has the duty to refrain from any forcible action which
    deprives peoples ... of their right of self determination and freedom
    and independence". The increase in actions by the international
    community which could be classed as humanitarian intervention,
    such as in Somalia and with the creation of "safe havens" for the
    Kurds North of the 36th parallel in Iraq (1991-2003), indicates
    the reduced importance given by the international community to
    the territorial integrity of a State when human rights, including
    the right of self-determination, are grossly and systematically
    violated. The right of self-determination applies to all situations
    where peoples are subject to oppression by subjugation, domination
    and exploitation by others. It is applicable to all territories,
    colonial or not, and to all peoples. Indeed, many of the claims for
    self-determination arose because of unjust, State-based policies
    of discrimination and when the international legal order failed to
    respond to the legitimate aspirations of peoples. Self-Determination:
    Human Rights and the Right to Secession One of the supposed dangers
    of self-determination is that it might encourage secession. First
    of all, there is no rule of international law that condemns all
    secessions under all circumstances. Self-determination includes the
    right to secede. In a situation when the principle of territorial
    integrity is clearly incompatible with that of self-determination,
    the former must, under present international law, give way to the
    latter. For instance, if a majority or minority insists on committing
    an international crime, such as genocide, or enforces a wholesale
    denial of human rights as a deliberate policy against the other part,
    it is submitted that the oppressed party, minority or majority, may
    have recourse to the right of self-determination up to the point of
    secession. As Azerbaijan used force in answer to the free and peaceful
    expression of the will of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh (rallies,
    referendums, claims, appeals), took inadequate means of punishment,
    perpetrated massacres of the Armenian citizens of Azerbaijan in
    Sumgait, Baku, Kirovabad, and waged a ruthless war with Ukrainian,
    Afghan, Russian mercenaries and sustained defeat, it cannot expect
    that the people of Nagorno-Karabakh will renounce their lawful right
    and will not exercise their right of self-determination. Actually, the
    world community is under legal and moral obligation to recognize the
    political self-determination of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh, i.e.

    to recognize the Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh; if a de facto state has
    crystallized, refusal to recognize it may be tantamount to a denial
    of self-determination. Moreover, there is a clear understanding
    in international law: after the international requirements for the
    recognition of belligerency have been fulfilled (as it was done with
    regard to Nagorno-Karabakh by the Bishkek Protocol (May 5, 1994), and
    by the Cease-fire Agreement, (May 12, 1994)), a duty of recognition
    of belligerency necessarily follows, and refusal of recognition is
    interference with the right of political self-determination of the
    people of a State, and therefore constitutes illegal intervention.

    This obligation arises from the understanding that the principle and
    rules on self-determination are erga omnes, that is, they belong
    to that class of international legal obligations which are not
    "bilateral" or reciprocal, but are in favor of all members of the
    international community. In the Loizidou v. Turkey Case, a 1996
    judgment of the European Court of Human Rights, Judge Wildhaber
    identifies an emerging consensus that the right of self-determination,
    more specifically secession, should be interpreted as remedial for
    certain human rights abuses: "Until recently in international practice
    the right to self-determination was in practical terms identical to,
    and indeed restricted to, a right to decolonisation. In recent years
    a consensus has seemed to emerge that peoples may also exercise a
    right to self-determination if their human rights are consistently
    and flagrantly violated or if they are without representation
    at all or are massively underrepresented in an undemocratic and
    discriminatory way. If this description is correct then the right
    to self-determination is a tool which may be used to re-establish
    international standards of human rights and democracy". As Judge
    Wildhaber attests, there is increasing agreement among authors that
    the right of self-determination provides the remedy of secession to a
    group whose rights have been consistently and severely abused by the
    state. The self-determination of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh must
    certainly be assessed as an act of corrective justice as well. So a
    minority's entitlement to self-determination can and must be judged
    within a human rights framework. Self-determination postulates the
    right of a people organized in an established territory to determine
    its collective political destiny in a democratic fashion. It is legal
    nonsense to presume that self-determination should take place within
    previous administrative borders, without regard for the cultural,
    linguistic or ethnic identity of the people there. Internal boundaries
    in the former Soviet Union were often drawn in a way which ensured
    that many members of the titular nation were outside the boundaries
    of their (titular) republic, as it was with Nagorno-Karabakh. A
    politically disempowered distinct group in a specific region has
    the right to independence, regardless of whether or not they are
    organized in an administrative unit. There is no doubt that the people
    of Nagorno-Karabakh (not only the people of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    Autonomous Region) are entitled to independence as their choice of
    self-determination due to the extreme discrimination that they faced
    under Azerbaijan.

    Summary: · Self-determination is an ancient political right. Presently
    the right to self-determination is a well-established principle in
    public international law. The principle has been confirmed, developed
    and given more tangible form by a consistent body of State practice
    and has been embodied in various international instruments. · The
    principle of self-determination is exemplified in the decisions
    by the International Court of Justice (ICJ). · The principle of
    self-determination is one of the fundamentals of peaceful and
    friendly international relations. Respect for self-determination
    is a condition for world peace. Those deprived of the right of
    self-determination can seek forcible international support to
    uphold their right of self-determination. · Self-determination as
    a principle of international law is universal in scope. The right
    of self-determination applies to all situations where peoples are
    subject to oppression by subjugation, domination and exploitation
    by others - all peoples and nations, without distinguishing between
    those which have attained statehood and those which have not. · The
    principle of the self-determination of peoples is a legal principle
    and is a jus cogens (peremptory) norm of international law. · The
    right of self-determination is the right to choose a form of political
    organization and relations with other groups. Denial of the right of
    to self-determination is a human rights violation and constitutes a
    breach of international law. · The right of peoples and nations to
    self-determination is a prerequisite to the full enjoyment of all
    fundamental human rights. Therefore the General Assembly recommended
    that the member states of the United Nations uphold the principle of
    self-determination of all peoples and nations. · Article 2(4) of the
    UN Charter has nothing to do with absolute "territorial integrity",
    but is simply the rule against intervention, a "prohibition of use
    of force" and purely calls to refrain from "the use of force by
    one state to conquer another state or overthrow its government." ·
    Self-determination includes the right to secede. The people of
    Nagorno-Karabakh (not only the people of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    Autonomous Region) are entitled to independence as their choice
    of self-determination. · Self-determination postulates the right
    of a people organized in an established territory to determine its
    collective political destiny in a democratic fashion.




    From: A. Papazian
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