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7/25/2019 Reservations to Human Rights Treaties and Their Validity - A Contemporary Analysis
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Reservations to human rights treaties and their validity - a
contemporary analysis
www.lawteacher.net /free-law-essays/human-rights/reservations-to-human-rights-treaties.php
RESERVATIONS TO HUMAN RIGHTS TREATIES AND THEIR VALIDITY - A
CONTEMPORARY ANALYSIS
1. Introduction
An ongoing debate in international human rights law concerns the universality of human rights treaties versus
their integrity. The use of reservations and unilateral declarations by states, while apparently encouraging the
universality of human rights treaties, has also created 'a feeling of unease' among human rights activists and
urists considering the 'indivisible and interdependent nature of the rights set out in such treaties'. The question
here, therefore, is to what extent states can validly make reservations to human rights treaties. While the Vienna
Convention on the Law of Treaties continues to govern the matters of reservations to human rights treaties and
the fundamental rule remains that a reservation cannot be incompatible with the object and purpose of a treaty,the question of validity of reservations cannot be addressed solely on these premises anymore and there has
been growing jurisprudence on the view that human rights treaties need to take exception from certain rules of
VCLT, especially those concerning reservations, as the latter focuses predominantly on the bilateral elements of
treaties and not law-making or multilateral treaties. This paper, in addition to bringing out the conditions and
extent for the validity of reservations under the Vienna Convention regime, will also address the additional
conditions to be satisfied vis-a-vis human rights treaties which are being developed by the International Law
Commission vide its Draft Guidelines on Reservations to treaties and the practice of human rights treaty bodies,
while highlighting the lacunae in the laws of reservations in relation to human rights treaties. It must be noted
that this paper addresses the research question on a purely theoretical aspect and not on the basis of state
practice or specific human rights treaties.
2. Validity of reservations to human rights treaties: Compatibility with the Vienna
Convention Regime
1. Reservations under the Vienna Convention regime
Part Two Section Two of VCLT lays down the provisions regarding the formulation of reservations, objections
and their consequences. The fundamental rules for the formulation of a valid reservation under the Vienna
Convention regime, which have been accepted to govern reservations to human rights treaties, are contained in
Article 19 of VCLT. It provides that a State can, while signing, ratifying, accepting, approving or acceding to a
treaty, formulate reservations if the treaty does not expressly prohibit them, or they are included in the specificreservations provided for in the treaty. Where a reservation is not prohibited by the treaty or falls within the
specified categories, a State may make a reservation provided it is not incompatible with the object and purpose
of the treaty. These continue to be the conditions for and the extent to which a state can validly make
reservations to human rights treaties. While the first two conditions in Article 19 are rather straightforward,
although there might be problems in determining whether a particular reservation falls within those specified in a
treaty, it is the third condition, viz., the incompatibility test that gives rise to serious problems more in practice
than in theory. It must be observed, however, that although the abovementioned remain the conditions for the
formulation of a valid reservation, they do not necessarily have to be the criteria for the permissibility of such
reservation. The permissibility of reservations to treaties has been left to the judgment of the states parties, with
VCLT laying down no criteria which states have to essentially consider while determining such permissibility. Asfor the consequences of an objection, it makes no difference in the applicability of the treaty as between the
reserving and objecting states unless the latter expressly precludes the entry into force of the treaty between
itself and the reserving state.
2.2 Inadequacy of the regime in governing reservations to human rights treaties
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The flexible regime created by VCLT has worked well for treaties which have reciprocity as their basis but has
not been very effective in the realm of legislative treaties, especially human rights treaties which deal with
community and not bilateral interests. At the outset, Article 19 of VCLT presumes the right of states to make a
reservation unless certain other situations exist, which is not necessarily and ideally should not be the case in
human rights treaties. From their very nature and purpose, it would not be wrong to assume that the integrity of
human rights treaties is as important as their universal ratification. As stated earlier, the permissibility of a
reservation depends on its acceptance by even one of the contracting states parties and the application of Article
19 and 20 to human rights treaties would make States alone the judges of both the validity and permissibility ofreservations. While the 'object and purpose' test is contained in Article 19 which deals with the formulation of a
reservation, it does not find any mention in Article 20 which deals with its acceptance and objection. Thus,
although this may be a consideration for states in deciding their acceptance or objection to such reservation,
they need not necessarily be guided by it and therefore even an invalid reservation, when accepted by one or
more of the contracting states parties would become permissible. However, the debate as to whether these
provisions are applicable only to reservations which are compatible with the object and purpose test (the doctrine
of 'admissibility') or that a reservation cannot be invalidated on the ground of being incompatible with the object
and purpose of the treaty as long as it has been accepted by even one of the contracting states parties (the
doctrine of 'opposability'), is relevant to be mentioned here. It is submitted that the doctrine of admissibility is
more suited for human rights treaties as it is apparent that "State objections in relation to reservations areinappropriate to address the problem of reservations to human rights treaties" and inter-State reciprocity not
being a guiding factor, "States have not found the legal interest or need to object to reservations". The few
objections against numerous sweeping and generic reservations which have been made to various human rights
treaties stand proof of this. Acceptance of an invalid reservation to a human rights treat or objecting to it with no
legal consequence should not make such reservation permissible as this would not serve the integrity of the
treaty and would reduce human rights treaties into a set of innumerable bilateral treaties.
In this context, it must be noted that VCLT does not define the 'object and purpose' of a treaty, nor does it
provide for the criteria or the means to determine the same. Guidance is available in the Advisory Opinion on
Reservations made under the Genocide Convention by the International Court of Justice where the Court
observed that "[N]one of the contracting parties is entitled to frustrate or impair, by means of unilateral decisions
or particular agreements, the purpose and raison d'etre of the convention", yet the practical and objective
applicability of this test remains a problem. In as much as it may appear to be simple, it indeed is not so. For
instance, although the 'object and purpose' of the Convention against torture is the prevention of torture, what
would be the case of a provision establishing a mechanism for the implementation of the Convention? Would it
be wrong to consider it a purpose of the Convention, as the very implementation of the object of the Convention
is dependent on it? VCLT throws little light on issues such as these, which are peculiar to legislative treaties in
general and human rights treaties in particular.
The most important defect in applying these provisions of VCLT to reservations to human rights treaties relates
to the consequences of an objection vis-a-vis the validity of a reservation. That states have to either accept thereservation or preclude the entry into force of the treaty with the reserving state cannot be the only options
available to a state in the case of human rights treaties, for they do not envisage a bilateral relationship between
states but reflect community interests and choosing either of these options is not going to serve the purpose of
these treaties. Questions arise, therefore, as to who should be the determining authority of the validity of
reservations, what would be the consequences of the determination of an invalidity of a reservation and whether
it is severable. Neither does VCLT address questions such as these nor is it equipped totally to answer them.
3. Substantive validity of reservations - ILC Draft Guidelines on Reservations to Treaties
There has been ongoing work on the part of the International Law Commission to develop guidelines on'Reservations to Treaties', the fourteen report of which has been submitted recently by Special Rapporteur Prof.
Alain Pellet. Part III of the Guidelines lay down the criteria for the substantive validity of reservations,
assessment of such validity and the consequences of invalidity of reservations, of which this paper concerns the
first part thereof. It has been reaffirmed time and again that the substantive validity of reservations is grounded in
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Article 19 of VCLT and the Guidelines expand, clarify and provide examples to determine the validity of
reservations. For this purpose Guideline 3.1 reproduces, nearly verbatim, the text of that Article. Guidelines 3.1.1
to 3.1.4 clarify and elaborate Article 19(a) and (b), defining reservations prohibited by the treaty and specified
reservations, along with elaborating on their permissibility, but do not depart from the VCLT provisions and as
discussed earlier, this is not adequately equipped to deal with reservations to human rights treaties. It must be
noted that the use of the terms 'permissibility' and 'impermissibility' for Part III as a whole was opposed
vehemently by states, on the grounds that they 'prejudge the doctrinal controversy' of permissibility versus
opposability and that they 'reflected upon the consequences of the formulation of reservations contrary to the
substantive conditions in Article 19' including that of engaging the responsibility of the reserving state. Therefore
the terms validity, invalidity or non-validity were adopted as being neutral. However, the term 'permissibility' was
retained to denote the substantive validity of reservations fulfilling the requirements of Article 19, dealt with in
Guidelines 3.1 to 3.1.13, which does not seem to have been explained sufficiently. In the context of human rights
treaties, this would still leave room for the doctrinal debate and also for the argument that the legal effect of a
reservation depends not only on its validity but on the reactions of states. In effect, this does not alter the existing
law and therefore does no service to human rights treaties. However, by providing that treaty implementation
monitoring bodies shall be competent to determine the validity of reservations, the guidelines have
acknowledged the consistent findings and practice of human rights treaty bodies. That there is no human rights
treaty body which has the capacity to render binding decisions but only to make findings which are in the nature
of recommendations will continue to affect the consequences which attach to the determination of invalidity andStates may chose to maintain their position. This is a matter to be addressed by specific human rights treaties.
3.1 Object and Purpose Test
Draft Guideline 3.1.5 deals with the incompatibility of a reservation with the object and purpose of the treaty. This
guideline does not provide for a definition, either substantive or operational, of the concept of 'object and
purpose of the treaty' but merely clarifies when a reservation could be considered as being incompatible with the
object and purpose of the treaty and how the same can be determined. As for the mode of determining the object
and purpose of a treaty, Guideline 3.1.6 does not innovate but merely condenses the provisions of Article 31 of
the Convention. It does not appear to be a rational move to state when and how a reservation is incompatible
with the object and purpose of a treaty, without actually explaining the concept. Placing this in the context of
human rights treaties, Guideline 3.1.12 provides that "in determining the compatibility of a reservation with the
object and purpose of a treaty, account shall be taken of the indivisibility, interdependence and interrelatedness
of the rights set out in the treaty". However, it goes on to add that "account should also be taken of the
importance that the right or provision which is the subject of the reservation has within the general thrust of the
treaty, and the gravity of the impact the reservation has upon it". Although it is reasonable to consider that not all
the provisions of a human rights treaty are of the same import, there cannot be a hierarchy of importance among
the rights guaranteed by a human rights treaty and this cannot be an objective ground for determining the
validity of a reservation as it makes the process more subjective than it is now. As an attempt in clarifying this
concept further, Guidelines 3.1.7 to 3.1.13 are meant to provide specific examples of reservations that may be
considered incompatible with the object and purpose of a treaty. However, most of those examples do not dealwith the validity of the reservations per se, but only with them being incompatible with the object and purpose of
a treaty, such as reservations protecting internal laws or those against non-derogable rights, which makes the
whole exercise convoluted. This can be explained further through an analysis of the validity of vague and general
reservations.
2. Vague and general reservations
Vague and sweeping reservations made by states to various human rights treaties have given rise not just to
objections from other states but also problems in determining their effect vis-a-vis the implementation of such
treaties in the reserving states. The Vienna Convention does not address this issue and as a result, the practice,
both by states and by treaty bodies, has not been consistent. One of the most common reservations of this type
is restricting the implementation of a treaty on the basis of its compatibility with the reserving state's domestic
law, as has been pointed out by the Human Rights Committee ("Committee") in its highly acclaimed and
controversial General Comment No. 24. For instance, Kuwait's interpretative declaration under ICCPR, which
reads thus "the rights to which the articles refer must be exercised within the limits set by Kuwaiti law", was
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objected to by Finland, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden. The Committee observed in its General
Comment No. 24 that such reservations "essentially render(s) ineffective all Covenant rights which would require
any change in national law to ensure compliance with Covenant obligations. No real international rights or
obligations have thus been accepted." In respect of Saudi Arabia's reservation to the Convention on the
Elimination of all forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), whereby it precluded itself from any
obligation to observe those terms of CEDAW which is in contradiction with the norms of Islamic law, the CEDAW
Committee held that this reservation was so widely drawn that it defeats the object and purpose of the
Convention. However, it was silent about the consequence of such a finding. It must be noted that in these
cases, although a determination as to the compatibility with the object and purpose of the treaties was made, the
practical consequences remained the same and the reserving states continued to enjoy the benefits of such
reservations, except where it has been objected to with the intention of precluding the entry into force of the
treaty with the objecting state or where the reservations have been withdrawn.
Guideline 3.1.7 attempts to fill the existing gap by providing that "a reservation shall be worded in such a way as
to allow its scope to be determined, in order to assess in particular its compatibility with the object and purpose
of the treaty". Although this clarifies an area with the VCLT is silent about, one must note that this guideline could
be interpreted as necessitating a correlation between a vague and general reservation and the object and
purpose of a treaty. The guideline on vague and general reservations, as the others following it, has been used
to exemplify situations where a reservation may be incompatible with the object and purpose of a treaty. What isnecessary, however, is a norm for invalidating a reservation which is vague and general as it would be
impossible to determine whether they meet all the conditions for validity, and not merely the incompatibility test.
In this context, reference shall also be made to Guideline 3.1.11 which deals with reservations relating to internal
law and is distinguished from Guideline 3.1.7 by the fact that while the latter deals with reservations which are
lacking specifics or are formulated in reference to the internal law in general, the former deals with "whether the
formulation of a reservation - clearly expressed and sufficiently detailed - could be justified by considerations
arising from internal law". Guideline 3.1.11 provides that "a state may formulate reservations to protect the
integrity of specific norms of internal law insofar as it is compatible with the object and purpose of the treaty".
Although the use of the term 'specific norms' would exclude sweeping reservations preserving the entire
domestic laws of the reserving state, it still does not address the problem, which is amplified in case of humanrights treaties. In the case of human rights treaties, the mere exclusion of internal laws (whether generally or with
specifics) is against the state's commitment to such treaties. A human rights treaty has, apart from rights and
obligations, certain 'supportive guarantees' and a reservation which protects the internal laws of the reserving
state from any modification with respect to such guarantees cannot be valid, even if it is compatible with the
object and purpose of the treaty.
3.3 Other Reservations
In the specific examples contained in Guidelines 3.1.7 to 3.1.13, other than those already discussed, there are
certain other kinds of reservations. Guideline 3.1.9 declares an established rule which has been adopted by
most human rights treaty bodies that reservations cannot modify or be contrary to peremptory norms ofinternational law. The human rights committee in its General Comment No. 24 categorized a number of the
Covenant provisions as reflecting peremptory norms and that reservations to such provisions would be
incompatible with the object and purpose of the treaty. Guideline 3.1.10 provides that "reservations against non-
derogable rights may not be formulated by a state unless they are not incompatible with the essential rights and
obligations arising out of the treaty". It is interesting to note that the validity of reservations to non-derogable
rights have not been judged on the basis of their compatibility with the object and purpose of the treaty, but with
the essential rights and obligations of the treaty. This recognizes, as has been observed in the commentary to
this guideline, that while reservations to non-derogable rights are impermissible when they are incompatible with
the object and purpose of the treaty, there could be other situations where such reservations might be
impermissible. In applying this to human rights treaties, this is a highly subjective condition leading to anotherissue regarding the determination of what rights and obligations are essential. The onus here is on the
determining authority, be it states or human rights treaty bodies, to justify that a reservation to a non-derogable
provision is incompatible with an essential right or obligation arising under the treaty.
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4. Conclusion
The substantive validity of reservations to human rights treaties continue to be governed by Article 19 of the
Vienna Convention, while the bar has been raised by the practice of human rights treaty bodies and the
Guidelines of the International Law Commission. The 'object and purpose' test remains the fulcrum on which the
validity of a reservation rests. However the application of this test to reservations to human rights treaties, both in
terms of substantive rules and procedure, is changing to accommodate the needs of human rights treaties. In
terms of substantive rules, sweeping reservations, including those which protect the internal law of the reserving
state, which defeat the object and purpose of a treaty, should be considered invalid. Also reservations to non-
derogable provisions, whether or not they are compatible with the object and purpose of the treaty, should be
considered invalid. Needless to mention, reservations against provisions which reflect peremptory norms of
international law shall be invalid. In terms of procedure, states cannot be the judges in determining the validity of
reservations owing to the lack of inter-state reciprocity and the legislative nature of human rights treaties. Human
rights treaty bodies are better equipped for this purpose and a number of human rights treaties have adopted
this stand, which has been reaffirmed in the Draft Guidelines. The problem does remain with respect to the
implementation of the findings of these treaty bodies and can be solved by including in human rights treaties a
provision regarding the competence of the monitoring bodies and the binding nature of their finding vis-a-vis
reservations. Any conclusions as to the consequence of an invalid reservation and its severability from the treaty,
is beyond the reach of this paper. Owing to "the insufficient evolution of the precepts of the law of treaties to fulfillthe basic purpose of effective protection of human rights", human rights treaties and reservations to them have to
be considered under the general international law regime, taking into consideration their lex specialis nature.
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General Reading
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UNITED NATIONS MATERIALS, TREATIES
Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, 1115 UNTS 331
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, G.A. Res. 2000, 21 U.N. GAOR, Supp. N o16, U.N. Doc.
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Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, G.A. Res. 34/180, U.N. GAOR,
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