2
Scope of public international law
Legal personality of the United Nations
Reparation for Injuries Suffered in the Service of the United Nations
Advisory Opinion, ICJ Reports 1949, p 174
In 1948 the United Nations Mediator in the Middle East, Count Bernadotte, a Swedish diplomat, was murdered by terrorists in territory under the control of the provisional government of Israel. Although this action was immediately disowned and deplored by the Israeli government, the question arose whether the United Nations possessed the capacity to make an international claim against Israel for reparation in respect of the damage suffered by the United Nations as the result of Count Bernadotte’s death.
The General Assembly of the United Nations requested an advisory opinion on this question from the International Court of Justice. The court unanimously answered the question in the affirmative. In particular, after consideration of the Charter of the United Nations and the purposes and powers of the organization, the court held that the test of functional necessity required the attribution to the United Nations of a legal personality separate from the legal personalities of its member states. Thus, as a subject of public international law, the United Nations was capable of possessing rights and duties, including the capacity to maintain its rights by bringing an international claim against a sovereign state.
Notes
1. The diplomatic settlement of the dispute between the United Nations and Israel arising out of the murder of Count Bernadotte is instructive. In April 1950 the Secretary-General of the United Nations submitted to the Israeli government a claim for reparation in the sum of $US54,628. The claim was based on three elements of state responsibility:
(1) failure by Israel to exercise due diligence and to take all reasonable measures for the prevention of the murder;
(2) liability of the Israeli government for acts committed by irregular forces in territory under its control; and
(3) failure by Israel to take all measures required by public international law to bring the perpetrators to justice.
In June 1950 the Israeli government, without formal admission of liability, paid the claim. The payment was accompanied by a letter from the Minister for Foreign Affairs of Israel, addressed to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, which stated that Israel sincerely regretted that “this dastardly assassination” had taken place on Israeli territory.
2. The “behind the scenes” nature of diplomatic settlement of international disputes is illustrated by the following examples:
A. In 1988 a United States warship, USS Vincennes, operating in the Persian Gulf, shot down an unarmed civilian airliner operated by Iran Air killing all 290 persons on board. In 1996 the United States State Department announced that the United States and Iran had settled Iran’s claims arising out of this incident, such settlement involving substantial payment by the United States to the survivors of each victim. See 90 AJIL 278 (1996).
B. In May 1999 during an eleven week air campaign against the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, United States military aircraft operating under NATO command bombed, in
error, the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade, killing three Chinese nationals and wounding twenty others. On 30 July 1999 the United States and China reached agreement for the payment of compensation by the United States to the families of the persons killed and to the persons injured in this incident. Subsequently agreement was reached on the payment of compensation for property damage. See 94 AJIL 127 (2000).
______
RA:IntLaw07/Reparation for injuries suffered in UN