LORD STEYN My Lords,
The way in which this appeal comes before the House must be
kept in mind. Spain took preliminary steps under the Extradition Act 1989 to obtain the
extradition of General Pinochet, the former Head of State of Chile, in respect of crimes
which he allegedly committed between 11 September 1973 and March 1990 when he ceased to be
the President of Chile. General Pinochet applied to the Divisional Court for a ruling that
he is entitled to immunity as a former Head of State from criminal and civil process in
the English courts. He obtained a ruling to that effect. If that ruling is correct, the
extradition proceedings are at an end. The issues came to the Divisional Court in advance
of the receipt of a particularized request for extradition by Spain. Such a request has
now been received. Counsel for General Pinochet has argued that the House ought to refuse
to admit the request in evidence. In my view it would be wrong to ignore the material put
forward in Spain's formal request for extradition. This case ought to be decided on the
basis of all the relevant materials before the House. And that involves also taking into
account the further evidence lodged on behalf of General Pinochet.
In an appeal in which no fewer than 16 barristers were involved
over six days it is not surprising that issues proliferated. Some of the issues do not
need to be decided. For example, there was as an issue as to the date upon which General
Pinochet became the Head of State of Chile. He undoubtedly became the Head of State at
least by 26 June 1974; and I will assume that from the date of the coup d'etat on 11
September 1973 he was the Head of State. Rather than attempt to track down every other
hare that has been started, I will concentrate my observations on three central issues,
namely (1) the nature of the charges brought by Spain against General Pinochet; (2) the
question whether he is entitled to former Head of State immunity under the applicable
statutory provisions; (3) if he is not entitled to such immunity, the different question
whether under the common law act of state doctrine the House ought to declare that the
matters involved are not justiciable in our courts. This is not the order in which counsel
addressed the issues but the advantage of so considering the issues is considerable. One
can only properly focus on the legal issues before the House when there is clarity about
the nature of the charges in respect of which General Pinochet seeks to establish immunity
or seeks to rely on the act of state doctrine. Logically, immunity must be examined before
act of state. The act of state issue will only arise if the court decides that the
defendant does not have immunity. And I shall attempt to show that the construction of the
relevant statutory provisions relating to immunity has a bearing on the answer to the
separate question of act of state.
The case against General Pinochet
In the Divisional Court the Lord Chief Justice summarized the
position by saying that the thrust of the warrant "makes it plain that the applicant
is charged not with personally torturing or murdering victims or ordering their
disappearance, but with using the power of the State to that end". Relying on the
information contained in the request for extradition, it is necessary to expand the
cryptic account of the facts in the warrant. The request alleges a systematic campaign of
repression against various groups in Chile after the military coup on 11 September 1973.
The case is that of the order of 4,000 individuals were killed or simply disappeared. Such
killings and disappearances mostly took place in Chile but some also took place in various
countries abroad. Such acts were committed during the period from 11 September 1973 until
1990. The climax of the repression was reached in 1974 and 1975. The principal
instrumentality of the oppression was the Direction de Inteligencia Nacional (DINA), the
secret police. The subsequent re-naming of this organization is immaterial. The case is
that agents of DINA, who were specially trained in torture techniques, tortured victims on
a vast scale in secret torture chambers in Santiago and elsewhere in Chile. The torturers
were invariably dressed in civilian clothes. Hooded doctors were present during torture
sessions. The case is not one of interrogators acting in excess of zeal. The case goes
much further. The request explains:
- "The most usual method was "the grill" consisting of a metal table
on which the victim was laid naked and his extremities tied and electrical shocks were
applied to the lips, genitals, wounds or metal prosthesis; also two persons, relatives or
friends, were placed in two metal drawers one on top of the other so that when the one
above was tortured the psychological impact was felt by the other; on other occasions the
victim was suspended from a bar by the wrists and/or the knees, and over a prolonged
period while held in this situation electric current was applied to him, cutting wounds
were inflicted or he was beaten; or the "dry submarine" method was applied, i.e.
placing a bag on the head until close to suffocation, also drugs were used and boiling
water was thrown on various detainees to punish them as a foretaste for the death which
they would later suffer."
As the Divisional Court observed it is not alleged that General Pinochet personally
committed any of these acts by his own hand. The case is, however, that agents of DINA
committed the acts of torture and that DINA was directly answerable to General Pinochet
rather than to the military junta. And the case is that DINA undertook and arranged the
killings, disappearances and torturing of victims on the orders of General Pinochet. In
other words, what is alleged against General Pinochet is not constructive criminal
responsibility. The case is that he ordered and procured the criminal acts which the
warrant and request for extradition specify. óKóóKThe allegations have not been tested
in a court of law. The House is not required to examine the correctness of the
allegations. The House must assume the correctness of the allegations as the backcloth of
the questions of law arising on this appeal.
The former Head of State immunity
It is now possible to turn to the point of general public
importance involved in the Divisional Court's decision, namely "the proper
interpretation and scope of the immunity enjoyed by a former Head of State from arrest and
extradition proceedings in the United Kingdom in respect of acts committed while he was
Head of State". It is common ground that a Head of State while in office has an
absolute immunity against civil or criminal proceedings in the English courts. If General
Pinochet had still been Head of State of Chile, he would be immune from the present
extradition proceedings. But he has ceased to be a Head of State. He claims immunity as a
former Head of State. Counsel for General Pinochet relied on provisions contained in Part
I of the State Immunity Act 1978. Part I does not apply to criminal proceedings: see
Section 16(4). It is irrelevant to the issues arising on this appeal. The only arguable
basis for such an immunity originates in Section 20 of the Act of 1978. It provides as
follows:
- "Subject to the provisions of this section and to any necessary
modifications, the Diplomatic Privileges Act 1964 shall apply to- (a) a
sovereign or other head of State. (b) members of his family forming part of his
household; and (c) his private servants. as it applies to the head of a
diplomatic mission, to members of his family forming part of his household and to his
private servants."
It is therefore necessary to turn to the relevant provisions of the Diplomatic
Privileges Act 1964. The relevant provisions are contained in Articles 31, 38 and 39 of
the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations which in part forms Schedule 1 to the Act of
1964. Article 31 provides that a diplomatic agent shall enjoy immunity from criminal
jurisdiction in the receiving state. Article 38(1) reads as follows:
- "Except in so far as additional privileges and immunities may be granted by
the receiving State, a diplomatic agent who is a national of or permanently resident in
that State shall enjoy only immunity from jurisdiction and inviolability in respect of official
acts performed in the exercise of his functions."
(My emphasis)
Article 39 so far as it is relevant reads as follows:
- "1. Every person entitled to privileges and immunities shall enjoy them from
the moment he enters the territory of the receiving State . . . . .
2. When the
functions of a person enjoying privileges and immunities have come to an end, such
privileges and immunities shall normally cease at the moment when he leaves the country or
on expiry of a reasonable period in which to do so but shall subsist until that time even
in case of armed conflict. However, with respect to acts performed by such a person in
the exercise of his functions as a member of the mission, immunity shall continue to
subsist." (My emphasis)
Given the different roles of a member of a diplomatic mission and a Head of State, as
well as the fact that a diplomat principally acts in the receiving state whereas a Head of
State principally acts in his own country, the legislative technique of applying Article
39(2) to former a Head of State is somewhat confusing. How the necessary modifications
required by Section 20 of the Act of 1978 are to be achieved is not entirely
straightforward. Putting to one side the immunity of a serving Head of State, my view is
that Section 20 of the 1978 Act, read with the relevant provisions of the schedule to the
1964 Act, should be read as providing that a former Head of State shall enjoy immunity
from the criminal jurisdiction of the United Kingdom with respect to his official acts
performed in the exercise of his functions as Head of State. That was the synthesis of the
convoluted provisions helpfully offered by Mr Lloyd-Jones, who appeared as amicus
curiae. Neither counsel for General Pinochet nor counsel for the Spanish Government
questioned this formulation. For my part it is the only sensible reconstruction of the
legislative intent. It is therefore plain that statutory immunity in favour of a former
Head of State is not absolute. It requires the coincidence of two requirements: (1) that
the defendant is a former Head of State (ratione personae in the vocabulary of
international law) and (2) that he is charged with official acts performed in the exercise
of his functions as a Head of State (ratione materiae). In regard to the second
requirement it is not sufficient that official acts are involved: the acts must also have
been performed by the defendant in the exercise of his functions as Head of State.
On the assumption that the allegations of fact contained in the
warrant and the request are true, the central question is whether those facts must be
regarded as official acts performed in the exercise of the functions of a Head of State.
The Lord Chief Justice observed that a former Head of State is clearly entitled to
immunity from process in respect of some crimes. I would accept this proposition.
Rhetorically, The Lord Chief Justice then posed the question: "Where does one draw
the line?" After a detailed review of the case law and literature, he concluded that
even in respect of acts of torture the former Head of State immunity would prevail. That
amounts to saying that there is no or virtually no line to be drawn. Collins J. went
further. He said:
- "The submission was made that it could never be in the exercise of such
functions to commit crimes as serious as those allegedly committed by the applicant.
Unfortunately history shows that it has indeed on occasions been state policy to
exterminate or to oppress particular groups. One does not have look very far back in
history to see examples of the sort of thing having happened. There is in my judgment no
justification for reading any limitation based on the nature of the crimes committed into
the immunity which exists."
It is inherent in this stark conclusion that there is no or virtually no line to be
drawn. It follows that when Hitler ordered the "final solution" his act must be
regarded as an official act deriving from the exercise of his functions as Head of State.
That is where the reasoning of the Divisional Court inexorably leads. Counsel for General
Pinochet submitted that this conclusion is the inescapable result of the statutory
wording.
My Lords, the concept of an individual acting in his capacity
as Head of State involves a rule of law which must be applied to the facts of a particular
case. It invites classification of the circumstances of a case as falling on a particular
side of the line. It contemplates at the very least that some acts of a Head of State may
fall beyond even the most enlarged meaning of official acts performed in the exercise of
the functions of a Head of State. If a Head of State kills his gardener in a fit of rage
that could by no stretch of the imagination be described as an act performed in the
exercise of his functions as Head of State. If a Head of State orders victims to be
tortured in his presence for the sole purpose of enjoying the spectacle of the pitiful
twitchings of victims dying in agony (what Montaigne described as the farthest point that
cruelty can reach) that could not be described as acts undertaken by him in the exercise
of his functions as a Head of State. Counsel for General Pinochet expressly, and rightly,
conceded that such crimes could not be classified as official acts undertaken in the
exercise of the functions of a Head of State. These examples demonstrate that there is
indeed a meaningful line to be drawn.
How and where the line is to be drawn requires further
examination. Is this question to be considered from the vantage point of the municipal law
of Chile, where most of the acts were committed, or in the light of the principles of
customary international law? Municipal law cannot be decisive as to where the line is to
be drawn. If it were the determining factor, the most abhorrent municipal laws might be
said to enlarge the functions of a Head of State. But I need not dwell on the point
because it is conceded on behalf of General Pinochet that the distinction between official
acts performed in the exercise of functions as a Head of State and acts not satisfying
these requirements must depend on the rules of international law. It was at one stage
argued that international law spells out no relevant criteria and is of no assistance. In
my view that is not right. Negatively, the development of international law since the
Second World War justifies the conclusion that by the time of the 1973 coup d'etat, and
certainly ever since, international law condemned genocide, torture, hostage taking and
crimes against humanity (during an armed conflict or in peace time) as international
crimes deserving of punishment. Given this state of international law, it seems to me
difficult to maintain that the commission of such high crimes may amount to acts performed
in the exercise of the functions of a Head of State.
The essential fragility of the claim to immunity is underlined
by the insistence on behalf of General Pinochet that it is not alleged that he
"personally" committed any of the crimes. That means that he did not commit the
crimes by his own hand. It is apparently conceded that if he personally tortured victims
the position would be different. This distinction flies in the face of an elementary
principle of law, shared by all civilized legal systems, that there is no distinction to
be drawn between the man who strikes, and a man who orders another to strike. It is
inconceivable that in enacting the Act of 1978 Parliament would have wished to rest the
statutory immunity of a former Head of State on a different basis.
On behalf of General Pinochet it was submitted that acts by
police, intelligence officers and military personnel are paradigm official acts. In this
absolute form I do not accept the proposition. For example, why should what was allegedly
done in secret in the torture chambers of Santiago on the orders of General Pinochet be
regarded as official acts? Similarly, why should the murders and disappearances allegedly
perpetrated by DINA in secret on the orders of General Pinochet be regarded as official
acts? But, in any event, in none of these cases is the further essential requirement
satisfied, viz. that in an international law sense these acts were part of the functions
of a Head of State. The normative principles of international law do not require that such
high crimes should be classified as acts performed in the exercise of the functions of a
Head of State. For my part I am satisfied that as a matter of construction of the relevant
statutory provisions the charges brought by Spain against General Pinochet are properly to
be classified as conduct falling beyond the scope of his functions as Head of State.
Qualitatively, what he is alleged to have done is no more to be categorized as acts
undertaken in the exercise of the functions of a Head of State than the examples already
given of a Head of State murdering his gardener or arranging the torture of his opponents
for the sheer spectacle of it. It follows that in my view General Pinochet has no
statutory immunity.
Counsel for General Pinochet further argued that if he is not
entitled to statutory immunity, he is nevertheless entitled to immunity under customary
international law. International law recognizes no such wider immunity in favour of a
former Head of State. In any event, if there had been such an immunity under international
law Section 20, read with Article 39(2), would have overridden it. General Pinochet is not
entitled to an immunity of any kind.
The act of state doctrine
Counsel for General Pinochet submitted that, even if he fails
to establish the procedural bar of statutory immunity, the House ought to uphold his
challenge to the validity of the warrant on the ground of the act of state doctrine. They
argued that the validity of the warrant and propriety of the extradition proceedings
necessarily involve an investigation by the House of governmental or official acts which
largely took place in Chile. They relied on the explanation of the doctrine of act of
state by Lord Wilberforce in Buttes Gas and Oil Co v. Hammer [1982] A.C. 888.
Counsel for General Pinochet further put forward wide-ranging political arguments about
the consequences of the extradition proceedings, such as adverse internal consequences in
Chile and damage to the relations between the United Kingdom and Chile. Plainly it is not
appropriate for the House to take into account such political considerations. And the same
applies to the argument suggesting past "acquiescence" by the United Kingdom
government.
Concentrating on the legal arguments, I am satisfied that there
are several reasons why the act of state doctrine is inapplicable. First the House is not
being asked to investigate, or pass judgment on, the facts alleged in the warrant or
request for extradition. The task of the House is simply to take note of the allegations
and to consider and decide the legal issues of immunity and act of state. Secondly, the
issue of act of state must be approached on the basis that the intent of Parliament was
not to give statutory immunity to a former Head of State in respect of the systematic
torture and killing of his fellow citizens. The ground of this conclusion is that such
high crimes are not official acts committed in the exercise of the functions of a Head of
State. In those circumstances it cannot be right for the House to enunciate an enlarged
act of state doctrine, stretching far beyond anything said in Buttes Gas, to
protect a former Head of State from the consequences of his private crimes. Thirdly, any
act of state doctrine is displaced by Section 134(1) of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 in
relation to torture and Section (1)(1) of the Taking of Hostages Act 1982 . Both Acts
provide for the taking of jurisdiction over foreign governmental acts. Fourthly, and more
broadly, the Spanish authorities have relied on crimes of genocide, torture, hostage
taking and crimes against humanity. It has in my view been clearly established that by
1973 such acts were already condemned as high crimes by customary international law. In
these circumstances it would be wrong for the English courts now to extend the act of
state doctrine in a way which runs counter to the state of customary international law as
it existed in 1973. Since the act of state doctrine depends on public policy as perceived
by the courts in the forum at the time of the suit the developments since 1973 are also
relevant and serve to reinforce my view. I would endorse the observation in the Third
Restatement of The Foreign Relations Law of the United States, published in 1986 by the
American Law Institute, Volume 1, at 370, to the effect that: "A claim arising out of
an alleged violation of fundamental human rights--for instance, a claim on behalf of a
victim of torture or genocide--would (if otherwise sustainable) probably not be defeated
by the act of state doctrine, since the accepted international law of human rights is well
established and contemplates external scrutiny of such acts." But in adopting this
formulation I would remove the word "probably" and substitute
"generally." Finally, I must make clear that my conclusion does not involve the
expression of any view on the interesting arguments on universality of jurisdiction in
respect of certain international crimes and related jurisdictional questions. Those
matters do not arise for decision.
I conclude that the act of state doctrine is inapplicable.
Conclusions
My Lords, since the hearing in the Divisional Court the case
has in a number of ways been transformed. The nature of the case against General Pinochet
is now far clearer. And the House has the benefit of valuable submissions from
distinguished international lawyers. In the light of all the material now available I have
been persuaded that the conclusion of the Divisional Court was wrong. For the reasons I
have given I would allow the appeal.
LORD HOFFMANN
My Lords,
I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech of my
noble and learned friend Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead and for the reasons he gives I too
would allow this appeal.
First page
Lord Slynn of Hadley Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead
Lord Lloyd of Berwick
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