(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India
(Marxist)
Vol. XXXIV
No.
35
August
29,
2010
ICJ Kosovo
Ruling:
Dangerous Precedent
Yohannan
Chemerapally
THE advisory
opinion of
the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on July 22 which endorsed the
“independence” of Kosovo has come as a shock, not only to Serbia
but also
to a host of countries around the world which are battling secessionist
and
divisive forces. The learned judges of the international apex court
ruled in a
majority decision (10-4) that the unilateral declaration of
independence (UDI) by
Kosovo on February, 2008 was valid under international law. The ICJ has
however
been careful to clarify that its ruling only pertained to Kosovo’s
declaration
of independence, not on its status as an independent state. Hisashi
Owada, the
head of the ICJ said that international law contained “no prohibitions
on the
declaration of independence” and therefore Kosovo’s declaration of
independence
did not violate international law. Serbia had asked the ICJ
through
the auspices of the UN General Assembly to rule on the legality of UDI
by
Kosovo.
The advisory
decision of
the ICJ was immediately welcomed in many western capitals, especially
in Washington, London,
Paris and Berlin.
The governments there had played an important role in the break-up of Yugoslavia.
Kosovo
hosts one of the biggest NATO bases in the region. The US
state department
spokesman was quick to endorse the ICJ’s verdict. The US
secretary of
state, Hillary Clinton, called on the international community “to move
beyond
the issue of Kosovo’s status” and recognise its statehood. Currently
only 69
countries have extended recognition to Kosovo. The ICJ’s landmark
ruling could
help Kosovo cross the magic figure of 100 which would then let it
qualify for
formal UN membership. Kosovo’s prime minister, Fatmir Sejdiu, said that
the
ICJ’s decision “finally removes all doubts that countries that don’t
recognise
Kosovo still have”.
The Serbian
president,
Boris Tadic, on the other hand said that his country would never accept
the
non-binding verdict of the ICJ. He said that the ICJ opinion was
“difficult”
but Serbia
would “never accept the unilateral declaration of independence by
Kosovo”. Most
Serbs consider Kosovo as their spiritual heartland. The Serb minority
in Kosovo
have virtually established an autonomous enclave in the tiny breakaway
country.
The ICJ’s decision may embolden Kosovo to use military means to
establish
control over the Serb minority in the north. There have already been
clashes
there. The Serbs have stocked up on weapons to prepare for any
eventuality.
Serbia has offered
“enhanced
autonomy”, bordering on virtual independence to Kosovo. Belgrade wants
the UN general assembly to
vote on the issue when it meets in September. Serbia
had argued in the ICJ that
Kosovo’s UDI challenged its sovereignty and undermined international
law. Washington and the major EU
powers seem to be confident
that Belgrade’s
desire
to join the EU would make it eventually accept the reality of an
independent Kosovo. The Serbian president has said that a confrontation
with
the West on the issue would be counter-productive for the country’s
plans to
integrate with the EU.
Russia too said
that the ICJ’s
decision would have no influence over its policy on Kosovo. The Russian
foreign
office spokesman said that the solution of the (Kosovo) issue was only
possible
through dialogue between Belgrade
and Pristina (the capital of Kosovo). The Russian envoy to NATO, Dmitry
Rogozin
said that there was no question of Moscow
accepting the splitting of a country that is a UN member. Chechen
rebels are
still carrying out hit and run attacks in the Caucasus
and have not given up their dreams of secession. Till recently they had
the
implicit support of many western and West Asian countries.
China said that it
continues to
“respect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Serbia”.
Beijing
also stressed
“that respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity is the basic
principle
of international law and the basis of today’s global legal system”. The
reaction was an implicit criticism of the ICJ’s position on Kosovo’s
UDI which
has provided succour to the separatists in Tibet
and Xingjian. New Delhi’s response has
generally been low key, unlike Moscow
and Beijing, on the
issue as it does not want to unnecessarily anger its close strategic
ally
---the US.
The
Indian foreign ministry spokesman said that the government was still
studying the ICJ’s ruling and that there was no change in the
government’s
position. New Delhi
has not recognised Kosovo’s UDI.
Five EU
members, which are
themselves battling secessionist forces, have refused to recognise
Kosovo’s
independence. Spain
is facing challenges to its unity from the Basque and Catalan regions. Cyprus
has been
unilaterally partitioned with the Turkish Cypriots claiming the
northern half
of the island. Greece,
Slovakia and Romania
are also facing challenges
from restive minorities.Important
global powers like Russia,
China and India
fear that the ICJ’s ruling
will set up a dangerous precedent. China had in fact had for
the first
time since the sixties had made an oral presentation at the ICJ arguing
against
recognition being granted for an independent Kosovo. Breakaway regions
like
Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian dominated enclave inside Azerbaijan
are
now preparing to follow suit and declare independence.
The leaders
of many
breakaway regions in the world are viewing the ICJ’s ruling as green
signal to
declare formal independence. The leaders of Abkhazia and Southern Ossetia have said that the ICJ ruling
has given them the right to
seek self-determination too. These two
regions had broken away from Georgia
with Moscow’s
military
help. Kosovo too was created by US and NATO troops masquerading as
peace keepers during the last Balkan war, eleven years ago. After
bombing Yugoslavia
into
submission, Kosovo was declared a UN protectorate. In reality it was a
NATO
protectorate created on the basis of false propaganda that the Yugoslav
government under Slobodan Milosevic had perpetrated acts of genocide
there.
The EU then
put in motion
the “process of supervised independence” for the protectorate. During
the
conflict in Kosovo, the Canadian government had sponsored an
International
Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty, known as R2P. This
concept
has been wholeheartedly endorsed by the West. This doctrine maintains
that if a
state is unwilling or unable to uphold its duty of protection to its
people,
then this duty falls upon the international community.Russia
too justified its intervention in Abkhazia and Southern Ossetia in 2008
on the
basis of “humanitarian intervention” to protect the enclaves from
ethnic
cleansing by Georgia.
Moscow
showed
to the West that it too can play a similar game. The West is using the
R2P
rationale to interfere in Darfur and
other
parts of the world.
The ICJ’s
opinion should
be seen in this context. The Serbian foreign minister, Vuk Jeremic
recently
warned that there are about 50 Kosovos waiting to happen on the African
continent alone. The Pandora Box has been well and truly opened. The
ICJ had
taken a clear position on the issues of self determination and
territorial
integrity, for the first time in more than forty years. The ICJ stated
that
international law recognises “a right to self determination for the
people of
non-self governing territories” and that the “principles of territorial
integrity
applies only to the sphere of relations between states”. Edwin Bakker
an expert
on international law at the ClingendaelNetherlandsUniversity
told the Financial Times that the ruling will strengthen separatists
round the
globe. “Cases that have been confronted with very brutal repression may
feel
that their chances for an independent state have increased”. Bakker
also noted
that it was for the first time since the break-up of Pakistan
in the early seventies,
that a country has become independent, despite the strong opposition
from the
state it is separating from.
Observers are
of the view
that the strong language in the ICJ ruling will give additional legal
ammunition to separatist and independence movements. The ruling is sure
to
provide a fillip to long running struggles, like the one in Western Sahara, which the African Union views as
an unfinished agenda of
the decolonisation struggle. The other gainers will no doubt be those
groups
whose struggle for independence have been given the status of an
“international
dispute” like the long drawn out Kashmir dispute. Already some western
commentators are drawing parallels between Kashmir
and Kosovo. Edwin Bakker said that the cases comparable to Kosovo are
the
conflicts in Burma
(Karen,
Shan), Iraq
(Kurdistan) and India
(Kashmir).