The Theory of Implicit Waiver of Personal Immunity: Commentary on the Decision on the Obligation for South Africa to Arrest and Surrender President Omar al-Bashir of Sudan to the International Criminal Court

Table of contents

Bibliographic information


Cover of Volume: RiA Recht in Afrika | Law in Africa | Droit en Afrique Volume 18 (2015), Edition 2
Open Access Full access

RiA Recht in Afrika | Law in Africa | Droit en Afrique

Volume 18 (2015), Edition 2


Authors:
Publisher
Nomos, Baden-Baden
Copyright year
2015
ISSN-Online
2363-6270
ISSN-Print
1435-0963

Chapter information


Open Access Full access

Volume 18 (2015), Edition 2

The Theory of Implicit Waiver of Personal Immunity: Commentary on the Decision on the Obligation for South Africa to Arrest and Surrender President Omar al-Bashir of Sudan to the International Criminal Court


Authors:
ISSN-Print
1435-0963
ISSN-Online
2363-6270


Preview:

This commentary examines the meaning of the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) Decision of 13 June 2015 on the particular point of the theory of implicit waiver by the Security Council of personal immunity of a sitting head of state not party to the Court’s Statute. It is argued that this theory is inherently illegal and yet another error in the ICC’s judicial findings in Omar al-Bashir case. To demonstrate this assertion, the study suggests that the theory of implicit waiver of personal immunity is defective in the present case on two principal points. First, it contradicts with previous ICC’s judicial findings on the same matter; secondly, it creates a serious misunderstanding on the intent and the power of the Security Council when it decided to refer the situation in Darfur to the Court.

Citation


Download RIS Download BibTex