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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Fernando v Sathananthan [2021] EWHC 652 (Admin) (19 March 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2021/652.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 652 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
-and-
MRS JUSTICE McGOWAN
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BRIGADIER ANDIGE PRIYANKA INDUNIL FERNANDO |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MAJURAN SATHANANTHAN |
Respondent |
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Peter Carter QC and Shanthi Sivakumaran (instructed by Public Interest Law Centre ) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 2 December 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Julian Flaux Chancellor of the High Court and Mrs Justice McGowan:
Factual History
Current Proceedings
"Was I right to determine that the actions he performed, whilst he was a diplomat, were outside the functions of the mission and therefore not covered by residual immunity when the defendant faced trial?"
a. Whether the Magistrates' Court had jurisdiction and/or should have dismissed the prosecution in circumstances in which the information was laid and the summons issued at a time when the Defendant remained a diplomat entitled to diplomatic immunity?
b. Whether the Magistrates' Court erred by concluding that the acts alleged were not covered by diplomatic immunity in circumstances in which it appeared to have been found that the act in question occurred at a time when the Defendant was performing functions as a member of the mission?
c. Whether the Magistrates' Court erred by relying on an implicit conclusion that the acts alleged were wrong or unacceptable when concluding that the acts alleged were not covered by diplomatic immunity?
d. Whether the Magistrates' Court erred by appearing to find that the Defendant could perform functions as a member of mission and perform private acts at the same time?
Legal Framework
Article 39
1. Every person entitled to privileges and immunities shall enjoy them from the moment he enters the territory of the receiving state on proceeding to take up his post or, if already in its territory, from the moment which his appointment is notified to the Ministry for Foreign Affairs or such other ministry as maybe agreed.
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. (emphasis added)
"In the case of the Convention on Diplomatic Relations, there are particular reasons for adhering to these principles:
(1) Like other multilateral treaties, the text was the result of an intensely deliberative process in which the language of successive drafts was minutely reviewed and debated, and if necessary amended. The text is the only thing that all of the many states party to the Convention can be said to have agreed. The scope for inexactness of language is limited.
(2) The Convention must, in order to work, be capable of applying uniformly to all states. The more loosely a multilateral treaty is interpreted, the greater the scope for damaging divergences between different states in its application. A domestic court should not therefore depart from the natural meaning of the Convention unless the departure plainly reflects the intentions of the other participating states, so that it can be assumed to be equally acceptable to them. As Lord Slynn observed in R v Secretary of State for the Home Department, Ex p Adan [2001] 2 AC 477, 509, an international treaty has only one meaning. The courts
"cannot simply adopt a list of permissible or legitimate or possible or reasonable meanings and accept that any one of those when applied would be in compliance with the Convention."
(3) Although the purpose of stating uniform rules governing diplomatic relations was "to ensure the efficient performance of the functions of diplomatic missions as representing states", this is relevant only to explain why the rules laid down in the Convention are as they are. The ambit of each immunity is defined by reference to criteria stated in the articles, which apply generally and to all state parties. The recital does not justify looking at each application of the rules to see whether on the facts of the particular case the recognition of the defendant's immunity would or would not impede the efficient performance of the diplomatic functions of the mission. Nor can the requirements of functional efficiency be considered simply in the light of conditions in the United Kingdom. The courts of the United Kingdom are independent and their procedures fair. It is difficult to envisage that exposure to civil claims would materially interfere with the efficient performance of diplomatic missions. But as the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs pointed out, the same cannot be assumed of every legal system in every state. The threat to the efficient performance of diplomatic functions arises at least as much from the risk of trumped up or baseless allegations and unsatisfactory tribunals as from justified ones subject to objective forensic appraisal. It may fairly be said that from the United Kingdom's point of view, a significant purpose of conferring diplomatic immunity of foreign diplomatic personnel in Britain is to ensure that British diplomatic personnel enjoy corresponding immunities elsewhere.
(4) Every state party to the Convention is both a sending and receiving state. The efficacy of the Convention depends, even more than most treaties do, on its reciprocal operation. Article 47.2 of the Convention authorises any receiving state to restrict the application of a provision to the diplomatic agents of a sending state if that state gives a restrictive application of that provision as applied to the receiving state's own mission. In some jurisdictions, such as the United States, the recognition of diplomatic immunities is dependent as a matter of national law on their reciprocity. As Professor Denza observes, op cit, 2 -
"For the most part, failure to accord privileges or immunities to diplomatic missions or their members is immediately apparent and is likely to be met by appropriate countermeasures"
In the graphic words of her introduction to the Vienna Convention on the United Nations law website, a state's "own representatives abroad are in a sense hostages who may on a basis of reciprocity suffer if it violates the rules of diplomatic immunity"."
"The principle of construction according to the ordinary meaning of terms is mandatory ("shall"), but that is not to say that a treaty is to be interpreted in a spirit of pedantic literalism. The language must, as the rule itself insists, be read in its context and in the light of its object and purpose. However, the function of context and purpose in the process of interpretation is to enable the instrument to be read as the parties would have read it. It is not an alternative to the text as a source for determining the parties' intentions."
"The continuing partial immunity of the ambassador after leaving post is of a different kind from that enjoyed ratione personae while he was in post. Since he is no longer the representative of the foreign state he merits no particular privileges or immunities as a person. However in order to preserve the integrity of the activities of the foreign state during the period when he was ambassador, it is necessary to provide that immunity is afforded to his official acts during his tenure in post. If this were not done the sovereign immunity of the state could be evaded by calling in question acts done during the previous ambassador's time. Accordingly under article 39(2) the ambassador, like any other official of the state, enjoys immunity in relation to his official acts done while he was an official. This limited immunity, ratione materiae, is to be contrasted with the former immunity ratione personae which gave complete immunity to all activities whether public or private."
Submissions
Analysis
"By comparison, the acts which an agent of a diplomatic mission does in a personal or non-official capacity are not acts of the state which employs him. They are acts in respect of which any immunity conferred on him can be justified only on the practical ground that his exposure to civil or criminal proceedings in the receiving state, irrespective of the justice of the underlying allegation, is liable to impede the functions of the mission to which he is attached."
"I turn to the Job Description of Brigadier Fernando. It contains a number of provisions of which the relevant ones are points 1, 2 and 9: the Brigadier has to monitor anti-Sri Lankan activities in the United Kingdom and report them, monitor activities of the LTTE and prepare strategies to safeguard the High Commission.
9. The defence contends that the Brigadier's actions were within his duties to monitor any anti Sri Lankan or LTTE activities and report to them to the Sri Lankan High Commission and to prepare appropriate strategies to safeguard the High Commission premises. Mr Carter's submissions were that the relevant act of making a cut-throat gesture is not within the functions of the mission or indeed within the Brigadier's job description.
10. I noted that the Brigadier was expected to strictly adhere to the personal behaviour (sic) and professional standards of the High Commission.
14. I find it was not part of Brigadier Fernando's job description to make the alleged cut-throat gestures on the three occasions, it could not be any part of the mission's function and therefore the Minister Counsellor's behaviour is not given immunity by Article 39(2) of the Vienna Convention. The Brigadier cannot call on the residual immunity that he would have been able to had the acts been performed in the exercise of his functions."
"It is not enough to say that it cannot be part of the functions of a head of state to commit a crime. Actions which are criminal under the local law can still have been done officially and therefore give rise to immunity ratione materiae (functional immunity)".