The Responsibility To Protect (“R2P”) in International Law: Protection of Human Rights or Destruction of State Sovereignty ?
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Abstract
The last decade has been characterized by a fervent debate over the role of the United
Nations when it comes to dealing with and responding to large scale human rights violations.
The recurrent legal, political and philosophical discussions pertaining to the inherent tension
between state sovereignty and intervention have yielded inconclusive results. Against this
background, the ‘Responsibility to Protect’ has emerged as a relatively new principle that
aims at the protection of the world’s most vulnerable populations from abominable
international crimes, namely, genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against
humanity. The central idea underlying the concept of R2P is primarily twofold: one, that
sovereign states have a responsibility to protect their own citizens from avoidable catastrophes
and two, when they are unable or unwilling to do so, this responsibility falls upon the
shoulders of the international community. The primary objection raised by international
law scholars regarding the practical implementation of R2P has been with respect to its
incongruity with the concept of state sovereignty. In this Article, the author contends that by
providing a legal and ethical basis for humanitarian intervention, the R2P, rather than
conflicting with, complements the principle of state sovereignty where a state fails to live up
to its responsibility.
The author focuses on fortifying this stance by arguing in favour of the employment of an
extensive approach, as opposed to a restrictive approach in the interpretation of the customary prohibition on the use of force and seeks to establish that such interpretation
serves to sever the Gordian knot of tension between intervention and sovereignty.
