Okay, here’s a breakdown of the main arguments presented in the text, focusing on the enforceability (or lack thereof) of international human rights law, specifically as illustrated by the case of Nepal:
Core Argument:
The text argues that international human rights law is largely unenforceable against states that deliberately violate its principles. This isn’t due to a flaw in the principles themselves, but rather in the structure of the international legal system that’s meant to uphold them. The system prioritizes state sovereignty (the “Westphalian compromise”) over effective enforcement.
Key Supporting points (the “Three Interconnected Structural Failures”):
- persuasion, Not Compulsion: Treaty monitoring bodies (like those overseeing the ICCPR) rely on persuasion and recommendations, not legally binding orders. States frequently fail to implement these recommendations, and ofen don’t even provide follow-up information. The example of Nepal failing to submit reports and provide information is central to this point.
- Defunct Horizontal Enforcement:
* Interstate Complaints: The ICCPR allows states to complain about other states’ human rights violations (Article 41), but this provision has never been used effectively. Very few interstate complaints have been filed across all UN treaty bodies, and those were recent and under a different convention.
* Treaty Termination: The Vienna Convention on the law of Treaties allows for treaty termination in cases of “material breach” (Article 60), but this requires the affected state(s) to invoke it. This doesn’t work when violations are widespread and affect diffuse interests,rather than directly harming a specific state.
- Lack of Regional Adjudication in South Asia: South Asia is unique in being the only major region without a binding regional human rights court or similar adjudicatory body. The text contrasts this with the existence of such bodies in Europe (European Convention on Human Rights), the Americas (American Convention on human Rights), and Africa (African Charter on Human and peoples’ Rights). This means ther’s no readily available, binding legal recourse within the region itself.
nepal as a Case Study:
Nepal is used as a concrete example to illustrate these failures. The country:
* failed to provide follow-up information requested by treaty bodies.
* Has not submitted its third periodic report to the ICCPR, even though it was due over seven years ago.
* Ratified the First Optional Protocol (allowing individual complaints), but this remedy is also deemed ineffective for addressing systemic issues.
Underlying Principle:
The text highlights the tension between the ideal of universal human rights and the reality of state sovereignty. The current system, born from the “Westphalian compromise,” prioritizes the consent of states, even when they are violating their human rights obligations.
In essence, the author is arguing that the current international human rights framework is structurally weak and allows states to get away with violations without facing meaningful consequences.