Distinguished members of the committee, I thank you warmly for inviting me to appear before you on the study into the implications of the State Immunity Act and Bill C-483, An Act to amend the State Immunity Act (genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes or torture). I know that this bill is not currently under study by the committee, but my comments on the implications of the State Immunity Act reflect my support of what Bill C-483 would provide to the state of the law.
My name is François Larocque. I'm a lawyer, assistant professor, and vice-dean of the University of Ottawa Faculty of Law. For the past 10 years my academic research has been devoted to various jurisdictional questions that arise in the context of transnational human rights litigation; that is, civil lawsuits brought in one country with respect to grave violations of fundamental human rights committed in another country.
As a practising lawyer, I have intervened either directly or as a consultant in a number of lawsuits, both here in Canada and in the U.K., brought by survivors of torture who seek civil redress against the foreign governments that tortured them, including the Bouzari litigation, and most recently the lawsuits against Iran brought by the estate of the late Zahra Kazemi and Stephan Hachemi.
In the context of these prosecutions, courts in Ontario and Quebec stated that the State Immunity Act protected governments that committed torture and even protected those responsible for acts of torture. In other words, our State Immunity Act ensures impunity in terms of the most serious violations of international law.
Clearly, the State Immunity Act, as it stands, is deficient and must be amended so that Canadians who have been affected by torture may have access to the redress they are entitled to. This is why I believe that Bill C-483 deserves the support of all the honourable members of this committee when it is studied, which I hope it will be.
Quite simply, Bill C-483 is a good idea whose time has come. As noted in the outline I've circulated, my presentation will briefly touch on three points. It will be an honour for me to expand on these points while answering the questions distinguished members direct to me.
As this committee well knows, the crimes for which Bill C-483 seeks to create an exception under the State Immunity Act--genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and torture--are prohibited by peremptory norms of international law and by Canadian statutory and common law. There is no clearer set of violations of basic and universal human rights than these crimes.
Bill C-483 is a good idea because it fixes an international incoherence. While civil law countries allow victims to seek redress as part of their criminal proceedings, Canada does not. I submit that Canadian survivors of torture and crimes against humanity are as deserving of redress as survivors who live in France, Italy, or Spain. Bill C-483 would fix this problem.
Bill C-483 is also a good idea because it fixes a Canadian incoherence. When Canada enacted the Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes Act in 2000 in fulfillment of our obligations under the Rome Statute, we explicitly removed all immunities with respect to criminal prosecutions for these crimes, but did nothing to permit civil lawsuits for the very same acts.
I submit that if a torturer or a génocidaire is barred from claiming immunity in criminal proceedings, there is no reason in principle that he or she should be allowed to claim immunity in civil proceedings.
This brings me to my second point in the presentation outline I provided.
Bill C-483 is consistent with the global trend toward the removal of immunity for serious violations of fundamental human rights. In their testimony last Tuesday, Matt Eisenbrandt and Jayne Stoyles from the Canadian Centre for International Justice referred to legal developments in the State Immunity Act in the United States, in the jurisprudence in Italy's court of cassation and in the work of the United Nations committee against torture. In 2005, that committee reproached Canada for not meeting its international obligations by not permitting all victims of torture, in all cases, to obtain the redress they are entitled to.
I would like to point out two additional developments. First, in its 2005 report, the United Nations committee against torture made negative comments about Canada. The committee reiterated the same concerns about other countries, in this case Japan, New Zealand and South Korea. According to the committee, these countries, like Canada, are not respecting the letter or the spirit of the convention against torture. It's something I wanted to bring to your attention.
Secondly, you may be aware that there is a United Nations Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and their Property that was signed in 2004. So far, only 28 countries have signed the convention, and only 11 have ratified it. In other words, it's a convention that is not unanimous internationally because it codifies and keeps the same exceptions that we have in our State Immunity Act, an act that is deficient.
I would like to raise a point about this convention. Of the eight countries that have ratified it, three of them—Switzerland, Norway and Sweden—have stated that this convention was without prejudice to developments in international law of an exception that would encourage the denial of immunity in cases of serious violations of international law.
Along with my plan, I provided to you with an example of one these interpretive statements, the one issued by Switzerland on April 16, 2010. I'll read it in English:
Switzerland considers that article 12--
which is equivalent to section 6 in our Canadian legislation for crimes committed in Canada.
--does not govern the question of pecuniary compensation for serious human rights violations which are alleged to be attributable to a State and are committed outside the State of the forum. Consequently, this Convention is without prejudice to developments in international law in this regard;
In other words, the state of law in the area of immunity internationally is still evolving.
My third and final point is that Bill C-483 is a good idea because it responds directly to the calls made by the courts that heard the Bouzari, Arar, and Kazemi cases.
In each of those cases, Canadian courts, rightly or wrongly--and I argue, wrongly--have found that it is for Parliament only to create a new exception to state immunity for grave violation of international law. Bill C-483 would create such exceptions for the clearest violations of international law, while ensuring that only valid claims are processed in our courts.
On a related note, I would also encourage this committee, should it ever come to study draft legislation to amend the State Immunity Act, to consider language that would clarify the relationship of our State Immunity Act to the continuously developing law of state immunity at international law and at common law in Canada. An example of such language would be the last clause I provided from the Switzerland interpretative declaration.
In closing, Bill C-483 is not only a good idea, it is also the right thing to do to prevent the impunity of those governments that blatantly violate fundamental human rights. It also provides access to justice for those survivors who have already suffered too much.
I thank this honourable committee for the time it has given me.