Contrary to all expectations, the Italian marines have returned to
India for trial. After having formally announced that the marines will
not come back, the Italian government has dramatically reversed its
position. This suggests that the hardliners in the government —
apparently the foreign and defence ministers — have been overruled by
wiser heads. It was not normal for a country with diplomatic traditions
as old as Italy’s to violate its solemn word to another friendly country
so flagrantly, striking by its action at the basic structure of
diplomacy which rests on the principle that countries will honour their
commitments.
Even if the Italian government has had to swallow its pride and lay
itself open to the charge internally of grossly mishandling the case in
the first instance and misjudging the strength of the Indian reaction,
especially that of the Supreme Court, it is just as well that good sense
has prevailed and further escalation of differences has been avoided.
In such cases of volte-face, especially by a major European
power, some face-saving compromise between parties can be expected, but
no such compromise is visible. The clarifications sought by Rome and
given by New Delhi that the marines will not be arrested on their return
and will not face the death penalty amount to little as the marines
were already on bail, were returning within the four-week deadline laid
down by the Supreme Court and the circumstances of the case do not at
all justify the death penalty.
It is just as well that the situation has been defused and further
deterioration of bilateral ties averted. By announcing that the marines
would not return, the Italian government had deliberately raised the
political and legal ante to a level that put enormous stress on
bilateral ties. The Supreme Court and the country at large felt duped by
the Italian decision. It defied belief that the Italian government
would knowingly give a false affidavit to the Supreme Court and cover up
further its deceptive intentions by approving a false undertaking by
its ambassador. Even if the Italian government has strongly disagreed
with India’s position on jurisdiction over the two marines, and even if
it has faced intense public pressure at home to defend their rights,
recourse to duplicity and fraud to spirit away the marines from Indian
judicial control was hardly defensible. It had the option to take strong
political steps to show its displeasure by recalling its ambassador in
protest, curtailing official links, mobilizing the European Union in its
favour, taking up the issue in whichever international forum was
available to it. It opted, instead, to show contempt for the Indian
Supreme Court and disdain for India.
In a sense, the conditions for the crisis were created by the Indian
side. The Supreme Court was extraordinarily accommodating in
entertaining the plea to let the marines go back to Italy in February
for voting when they had returned just a month earlier after spending
Christmas with their families. Why did the Supreme Court feel that it
was important that they should vote? In granting successive furloughs in
Italy, the consideration shown for those responsible for recklessly
killing two Indian citizens seemed excessive.
The Supreme Court, for all its generosity, had to have a guarantee
that the marines would return. Such a guarantee could only come from the
ambassador in the name of his government, and it was given. It was
overlooked that this guarantee was inherently political, not legally
enforceable in case of default. Neither the counsel for the Italians nor
the government counsel had reason to clarify to the judges that, under
the immunity provisions of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic
Relations, any undertaking by the ambassador would not be legally
actionable against his person if not eventually honoured, as both wanted
the marines to have a break and were willing to rely on the good faith
of the Italian government. In retrospect, the Supreme Court could be
accused of being naive, but, in all fairness, neither the court nor the
government could have anticipated the Italian government’s unscrupulous
conduct.
While the furore in India over this was justified, calls for punitive
action against the ambassador, even by leading jurists, on the ground
that the ambassador had voluntarily subjected himself to the
jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, seemed ill-conceived and violative of
the provisions of the VCDR, which are clear about the diplomatic
immunity of ambassadors.
The Vienna Convention (Article 32.2) says that the waiver has to be
expressed. In this case, the Italian government did not say, nor would
it have done so, that in case of default the ambassador could be
proceeded against legally as his diplomatic immunity could be considered
waived. The convention also requires a second waiver for the execution
of any judgment, which means that even if the court were to claim that
the Italian ambassador had voluntarily submitted himself to its
jurisdiction in the first instance, a further waiver by the Italian
government of the ambassador’s immunity would be necessary for any
punishment. Article 32.3, which says that initiation of proceedings
under Article 37 by a diplomatic agent will not allow him to claim
immunity in case of a counter-claim directly connected to the principal
claim, is not applicable as Article 37 relates to families of diplomatic
agents, the service, technical and administrative staff of the mission,
and not to the ambassador.
The Supreme Court’s order restraining the ambassador from leaving the
country has already created a major precedent by interpreting loosely a
country’s obligation under the VCDR to respect the diplomatic immunity
of an ambassador. This has caused serious disquiet in diplomatic
missions in New Delhi, as the possibility that Indian courts could, in
future too, interpret the principle of diplomatic immunity
circumstantially cannot be ruled out. In any case, bilateral options
against Italy being available to us, converting our differences with
Italy into an international issue by seriously infringing the VCDR and
disturbing the principles of diplomatic functioning in general would
have been most unwise.
The Italian government showed prudence in not asking the ambassador
to defy the court’s order, as any physical restraint on him would have
gravely escalated matters. The court’s order and the external affairs
ministry’s statement that the government was bound by it did put
enormous political and psychological pressure on the Italian government.
The EU has been measured in its support for Italy, but a big India-EU
dispute could have arisen if we had been cavalier with the VCDR. While
it is true that American and European countries have disregarded the
principle of diplomatic immunity by subjecting some of our missions to
local labour laws, to judgments of local courts on compensation issues —
attaching bank accounts to force payments, imposing traffic fines and
so on — we have to be careful not to widen the scope of such breaches by
unilateral action against the person of an ambassador.
Fortunately, escalation has been avoided. The Italian government
should be commended for retreating from an untenable position. For us,
seeking to rewrite international law on diplomatic immunity was a
fraught option. India and Italy can now, hopefully, resume normal,
friendly business with each other.
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