Responsibility for MH17 tragedy: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
by Kateryna Dronova (Berkeley, CA)
On July 17, 2014 Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 (MH17) from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur was shot down with a (reportedly) BUK surface-to-air missile system in the conflict zone of the ongoing Donbass insurgency, killing 298 people on board. This is the world's deadliest aviation incident since 9/11. Immediately after the information supplemented with gruesome photos from the crime scene reached the media, politicians got engaged in the intricate game of finger pointing and making mutual accusations. Apart from major political players we have three figures facing each other with triggered guns and blaming each other: Ukraine, Russia and Donbass People's Militia. The tension within this triangle reminds of the famous movie scene. The key question are: who is actually responsible for this tragedy and who will be held responsible for the crime committed? Let’s have a look at each party’s legal position in our attempt to answer these questions.
Donbass People's Militia (DPM)
Pro-Russia
separatists group denied any responsibility for downing the Malaysia Airlines
Flight MH17 on Thursday. Ukrainian President Petro
Poroshenko alleged that the plane was shot down
by paramilitary group similarly to other two Ukrainian (An-26 and SU-25) planes
and labeled incident as a terrorist act
which “is
no different from 9/11 or the Lockerbie Bombing”. Ukraine’s security
service published
an intercepted telephone conversations between Russian military
intelligence officers and their armed proxies concerning delivery of an
anti-aircraft missile system from Russia, which further infer Russian
contribution to the downing of the MH 17.
Subsequently,
President Barack Obama said
that the surface-to-air missile which hit the plane was fired from the area of
Ukraine controlled by Russian-backed separatists.
And while all international institutions insisted on cooperation while
conducting an effective investigation, a unit of heavily armed rebels blocked
the OSCE members from gaining access to part of site of crash to collect
evidence. Russian officials were mainly accusing Ukrainian government, though
they have never objected the responsibility of the separatists’ group. The more
evidence collected, the more apparent it becomes that DPM members were
launching the strike (different speculations exist as to the purpose of such
act, most likely they mistakenly targeted international flight instead of
Ukrainian commercial jet).
Before
the results of the investigation are released (and for the purpose of this
post) let’s assume that DPM members attacked (or erroneously) hit the plane. DMP
is an armed group operating in the conflict zone on the border between two
states. Ukraine does not control this territory and is currently in the state
of armed conflict with this group, what makes Ukraine practically incapable of
bringing DMP members to justice. Russia largely supports belligerents through
weapon supplies and intelligence services, but officially denies any ties with
a group (except, maybe, ideological ones). Moreover, several sources testify
that Russia is loosing
it’s control over the armed group. Thus, Russia is a state either unwilling
or claiming to be “irrelevant” in terms of obligation to apprehend persons
allegedly guilty in operating the strike. Moreover, even if requested to
cooperate during the process of investigation, judging from latest experience Russia
is very unlikely to efficiently commit: Ukrainian ex-president with the gang of
ex-high-state-officials facing numerous criminal charges in Ukraine found save
haven in Russian Rostov-on-Don. Thus, neither of two states is currently able
(or willing) to identify and bring to trial DMP members who could have launched
the strike.
The
matter of a due compensation is similarly complex, but is likely to turn to a
real battlefield. The criminal investigation in this case is already opened and
is actively supported by the number of states (Britain suggested a United
Nations-led probe, the UK Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) and Dutch
National Forensic Investigation Team (LTFO) and Russian-led
ICAO experts are already engaged
in the investigation procedure), while the burden of paying compensation is
to be borne by one state. Here we return again to the perennial problem of
what to do with the non-state actors’ responsibility. Roughly speaking, there
are no rules of international law directly and clearly regulating the scope of
obligations resting upon non-state actors and establishing margins of their
responsibility. This situation turns dispute into the question of either
attribution of DMP members’ actions to particular state or failure of a state
to comply with undertaken positive obligations in order to prevent threat to
live of individuals.
Russia
President
Vladimir Putin in his public statement on MH17 plane crash claimed that Ukraine is fully responsible for the downing of the
plane, explaining that the tragedy would not have happened if Ukrainian
authorities had not resumed a military campaign against DPM. A spokesman for the Russian
president Dmitry Peskov called allegations that Russia had been involved in the
downing of MH17 "stupidity". At a meeting with
advisers Putin said: “certainly
the state over whose territory this happened bears responsibility for this
terrible tragedy.” Thus, basically Russia claims
general rule of territorial jurisdiction should apply and Ukraine should bear
responsibility since state failed to ensure safety and security for
international citizens trespassing its territory (through feasible
precautions, establishing no-fly zone etc.). In short, Russia’s position is lavabo manus.
Ukraine
Despite
the large support of international community and having strong allies like the
US, shifting responsibility across the border is going to be an extremely
challenging task for Ukraine. It is likely that Kiev authorities would respond
to Russian claims with a redress to Russian extraterritorial jurisdiction.
Recent
developments
in international law and a number of high
profile cases suggest that state exercises its authority extraterritorially (1) over state agents under
direct control of this state, (2) if such state
has an effective control over an area (military presence and/or local
administration), (3) in espace juridique, the occupied territory with a purpose
to avoid a ‘vacuum’ of human rights protection.
The
first option is a questionable strategy for Ukraine since the threshold of
proof is very high: e.g. in Nicaragua
case the International Court of
Justice found that the ‘training, arming, equipping, financing,
supplying or otherwise encouraging, supporting and aiding’ the contra forces by
the US was not sufficient to attribute the actions performed by the contras to
the US. Although, Russia similarly suggests the wide spectrum of assistance for
Donbass belligerents, one can hardly state that DMP member do not have their
own agenda independent from Russian interests, especially in the light of the
latest separatists’ tendency to distance them from the Kremlin. Thus, a more
convenient way to rebut Russian accusation is collecting sufficient evidence of
the presence
of Russian militia in the Donbass
region and their command and control over the region, collecting intelligence
information about subordination and control among DMP belligerents (e.g., who
makes final decision on launching strikes).
Conclusion
Responsibility
issue in the MH17 tragedy is extremely complex especially in the light of
latest ICRC
confidential legal assessment that Ukraine is officially in a war (and
possible subsequent classification of MH17 attack as a war crime). Among all
the political players engaged in this, Ukrainian position is the most
disadvantageous since Kiev authorities have to base their legal position on the
two highly controversial concepts (“state-sponsored terrorism” and
extraterritorial jurisdiction in conditions of foreign occupation). However,
dynamic political landscape can drastically change this sad perspective as it
happened in the case of Lockerbie bombing when Gaddafi
was forced to accept responsibility and pay compensation to the families of the
victims under the pressure of UN &
US economic sanctions.
p.s.
I want to express my deepest condolences to the loved
and relatives of the ones who died in MH 17 crash.
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