Bosnia V Serbia
Bosnia V Serbia
Bosnia V Serbia
Genocide (Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro) 2007 I.C.J. 191.
STATE RESPONSIBILITY: Under International law, the conduct of any state organ is to
be considered an act of the state, therefore giving rise to the responsibility of the state if
the conduct constitutes a breach of an international obligation of the state.
FACTS
The republics of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia and Slovenia declared
independence when the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia began to break up in
the early 1990s. this led Serbia and Montenegro to declare themselves the Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY). A massacre was perpetrated by Serbian forces on 8000
Bosnia Muslim men of fighting age in a small village called Srebrenica in July 1995 during
armed conflicts that arose in 1992-1995 within Bosnia and Herzegovina. A suit was filed
against the FRY (Serbia and Montenegro) by Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1993 in the
International Court of Justice, claiming violations of the Convention on the Prevention and
Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, on the theory that the FRY was responsible for the
actions of Serbian forces.
ISSUE
Whether the conduct of any state organ considered an act of the state, which can give
rise to the responsibility of the state if the conduct constitutes a breach of an international
obligation of the state - YES
HELD
Yes. This is a rule of customary international law that was codified in Article 4 of the ILC
Articles of State responsibility. No evidence showed that the Serbian forces were de jure
organs of FRY and this case did not show that the army of the FRYtook part in the
massacres or that the political leaders of the state had any part of it.
Although the FRY was providing some sought of financial and other support to the Serbian
forces, this does not automatically make them organs of the FRY. Also, no evidence was
provided to prove that the Serbs were under the effective control of FRY while conducting
the massacre at Srebrenica. This can only imply that those who were responsible for the
massacre were not organs of the FRY and the FRY cannot take responsibility under
international law for the massacres.
Finally, the Court observes that none of the situations, other than those referred to in
Articles 4 and 8 of the ILC’s Articles on State Responsibility, in which specific conduct
may be attributed to a State, matches the circumstances of the present case in regard to
the possibility of attributing the genocide at Srebrenica to the Respondent. The Court
does not see itself required to decide at this stage whether the ILC’s Articles dealing with
attribution, apart from Articles 4 and 8, express present customary international law, it
being clear that none of them apply in this case. The acts constituting genocide were not
committed by persons or entities which, while not being organs of the FRY, were
empowered by it to exercise elements of the governmental authority (Art. 5), nor by
organs placed at the Respondent’s disposal by another State (Art. 6), nor by persons in
fact exercising elements of the govern- mental authority in the absence or default of the
official authorities of the Respondent (Art. 9); finally, the Respondent has not
acknowledged and adopted the conduct of the perpetrators of the acts of genocide as its
own (Art. 11).
The “overall control” test has the major drawback of broadening the scope of State
responsibility well beyond the fundamental principle governing the law of international
responsibility : a State is responsible only for its own conduct, that is to say the
conduct of persons acting, on whatever basis, on its behalf. That is true of acts
carried out by its official organs, and also by persons or entities which are not formally
recognized as official organs under internal law but which must nevertheless be
equated with State organs because they are in a relationship of complete
dependence on the State.
Apart from these cases, a State’s responsibility can be incurred for acts committed by
persons or groups of persons — neither State organs nor to be equated with such
organs — only if, assuming those acts to be internationally wrongful, they are
attributable to it under the rule of customary international law reflected in Article 8.
This is so where an organ of the State gave the instructions or provided the direction
pursuant to which the perpetrators of the wrongful act acted or where it exercised effective
control over the action during which the wrong was committed. In this regard the “overall
control” test is unsuitable, for it stretches too far, almost to breaking point, the connection
which must exist between the conduct of a State’s organs and its international
responsibility.
Thus it is on the basis of its settled jurisprudence that the Court will determine whether
the Respondent has incurred responsibility under the rule of customary international law
set out in Article 8 of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility.
The Court concludes that the acts of those who committed genocide at Srebrenica
cannot be attributed to the Respondent under the rules of international law of State
responsibility: thus, the international responsibility of the Respondent is not
engaged on this basis.