NEW DIRECTIONS FOR REGIONAL COOPERATION IN THE SUPPRESSION OF TRANSNATIONAL CRIME IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC
We can expect, over time that police might see merit in harmonised laws and policies, for example, to support a regional pool of police prosecutors, or perhaps special investigation teams that can be called upon by a member state to assist with cross border crimes. Given your knowledge of law enforcement issues, I am sure that you will come up with many more ideas about where we might better share resources for our mutual benefit.[50]
The
Final Draft, to be put to the 2005 Forum in late October in Papua New Guinea,
singles out inter alia the enhancement and stimulation of ‘security for
Pacific countries through regionalism as one of the goals to be met by the
Pacific Plan’.[51] The
strategic objectives under the goal are ‘[i]mproved political and social
conditions for stability and safety.’ The Final Draft envisages
regionalism being based at this stage on ‘regional cooperation’, by
which it means increased coordination of nationally provided services in the
region by, for example, organisations like
OCO.[52] Alternative strategies such
as ‘regional provision of services’, meaning pooling national
services, and ‘regional integration’, lowering market barriers
between countries, are left for the
future.[53]
Largely following
the Working Draft, the Final Draft prioritises maritime and aviation security
and surveillance, the implementation of PRSTCS, law enforcement training; and
disaster management as security measures ready for immediate implementation (by
2008). Its relevant priorities for good governance include regional support for
audit and ombudsman offices, leadership codes, anti-corruption institutions and
departments of attorneys general, judicial training and education, and support
for the Forum Principles of Good leadership and Accountability. Abandoning any
further time frame, it denotes as security strategies requiring ‘agreement
in principle’, i.e. the development and approval of a full proposal, plans
for urbanisation, bio-security and safety. Relevant strategies requiring
‘further analysis’ as to whether a regional approach is appropriate,
include only the good governance strategies of the establishment of a regional
customs revenue service, a regional ombudsman and human rights mechanisms. There
are no purely security strategies awaiting ‘further analysis’.
Other regional initiatives not taken on board are relegated to Background
Paper 2.[54] These include the
harmonisation of national court structures, the creation of a regional court of
appeal and the establishment of a Pacific Human Rights Charter with
implementation mechanisms.[55] With
respect to implementation, the Final Draft envisages the Forum Secretariat
(ForumSec) being the main agent, with oversight by a Pacific Plan Action
Committee (PPAC).[56] The Plan talks
of the development of a regional institutional framework to maximise
cooperation.[57] Oddly, references
to the existing Forum Declarations on security and in particular to the Honiara
Declaration have disappeared.
We can only speculate at this stage about
what form greater regional cooperation in the suppression of transnational crime
might take, if it occurs at all. If there is going to be a longer term legal
change, the current legal nature of the Forum and its declarations must first be
clarified.
THE LEGAL NATURE OF THE FORUM AND ITS
DECLARATIONS
The Forum has proceeded gradually and pragmatically. The
declarations it has produced thus far have been adopted by consensus of the
leaders present and signed by them. The legal status of these measures is
uncertain as is the legal nature of the Forum itself. While the Forum has
observer status at the UN, and Forum Secretary General Greg Urwin claims that
the Forum is an intergovernmental
organisation,[58] it does not appear
to have an international legal
personality.[59]
The Agreement
Establishing the Pacific Islands Forum
Secretariat[60] provides in Article
1 for the composition of the Pacific Islands Forum, and provides for the legal
immunity of the ForumSec and for some immunity for its officials, but it is not
yet in force. Moreover, it can hardly be claimed to be a constitutive treaty and
these immunities are only operative among the Forum members inter se.
Other
indiciae of international personality such as the claim to such status
and the establishment of international obligations and or responsibilities
between the Forum and non-member states or international organisations, are
absent.[61] Thus participation in a
declaration generates no treaty-derived obligation. The declarations are
articulated in a non-binding form, they contain vague and imprecise terms, they
emanate from a body lacking international law making authority, they lack a
theory of responsibility, and they are based solely on voluntary
adherence.[62] The declarations are
non-binding soft-law. They may provide evidence of state practice or opinio
iuris of emerging regional norms of customary international
law,[63] but they may also fail to
provide such evidence because they have only generated soft compliance. Indeed,
the aspirational nature of many of the Forum’s declarations and the poor
record of implementation fatally weakens the case for a customary basis.
In
relying on soft law declarations the Forum has deliberately adopted an approach
that runs counter to orthodox modes of regional law
making.[64] The ‘Pacific
Way’ considers inter alia that the Forum should generate Pacific solutions
to Pacific problems and place political goals before legal
goals.[65] The adoption of
declarations by unanimous compromise leads to general instruments that are then
fleshed out by committees of experts and officials to achieve detailed hard law
instruments.[66] But unlike the case
with environmental and fisheries issues where soft law declarations have been
followed by the adoption of regional
treaties,[67] the Honiara
Declaration has been followed only by the expert committee production of model
domestic laws.
However, there are indications that the Forum’s
approach appears to be changing. New concerns about orthodox security matters
such as the stability of members indicate a movement to a more orthodox approach
where the de facto veto implicit in the ‘unanimous compromise’
insisted upon by the Forum to support its declarations until recently is being
abandoned and processes and products are becoming more
formal.[68] As former Forum
Secretary General put it: ‘There are limits to cooperation based in
voluntary commitments and moral persuasion... This is not always strong enough
to ensure effective implementation of the regional
agreements.’[69]
Are there
good reasons to move away from the current approach to the suppression of
transnational crime in the region?
THE UTILITY OF SOFT REGIONAL
TRANSNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW
It appears that the Forum has used soft
law in respect of transnational crime because of the political necessity of
enabling leeway in terms of implementation. This kind of approach is commonly
adopted when there are concerns about the obligations imposed by hard law,
concerns about non-compliance because of domestic political opposition, lack of
ability or capacity, uncertainty about whether compliance can be measured, and
disagreement with the proposed
norm.[70] Soft law can set the
programme for emergent hard law by playing an educative role socialising leaders
and officials into the kinds of measures necessary, for example, to suppress
transnational crime. Compliance, if it occurs, is based on a range of political
and other non-legal factors: ethical or moral obligations, conformity to the
group, peer pressure, fear of being labelled a rogue state, acquisition of
international legitimacy, or through some other vested interest. It has been
argued, however, that the very nature of soft laws makes it impossible
to determine whether a state is living up to its commitments and therefore creates opportunities to shirk. They also weaken the ability of governments to commit themselves to policies by invoking firm international commitments and therefore make it easier for domestic groups including other branches of government, to undo the agreement.[71]
Soft law enables some states to stay inside the regime and
not comply, thus undermining its efficiency, credibility, and confidence in the
regime.
There is also a serious and largely unexplored issue about whether
soft law is conceptually appropriate to the generation of international legal
cooperation to suppress crime. Soft law has arguably been used quite effectively
in the environmental sphere where principles such as the precautionary principle
have effectively moulded state practice. Some of these principles have been
difficult to define and even more difficult to implement, and thus soft law has
provided an appropriate vehicle to introduce them. Where soft law has been
singularly inappropriate is where it has been used in place of
‘hard’ obligations, in situations where hard obligations were
obviously necessary to get the required change to meet a patent
problem.[72]
It seems that there
is no real place for soft law where the aim is to define and tackle harmful
conduct that has or is very likely to emerge in the region, where the first step
must be harmonising substantive offences and penalties. Soft law may, perhaps,
be appropriate to harmonising criminal process across jurisdictions, but to some
extent without alteration of substantive criminal law much of this process
articulation will be in vain. Law enforcement cooperative strategies or plans
that rely on soft law for their legal frameworks are legally
unenforceable.
The current perceptions of the use of soft law by the Forum
appear to be negative. Forum Secretary General Greg Urwin notes that ‘we
have many examples in the region where countries have signed up to declarations
and pledges and nothing has come of
it.’[73] Dominant members of
the Forum like Australia seek clearer commitments. Should they seek ‘hard
law’? Or to be more precise, “legally binding obligations that are
precise (or can be made precise through adjudication or the issuance of detailed
regulations) and that delegate authority for interpreting and implementing the
law.”[74]
Regional
Crime Control Treaties and Institutions
While concerns about
transnational crime may see the Forum adopt a more formal regional approach that
goes beyond the Honiara Declaration’s soft-law, it is unlikely to take the
form of supra-national criminal law; even within the EU the regulation of
criminal matters is still dealt with largely through international
treaty.[75] Currently, the Forum
cannot pass regional criminal laws. In the absence of the transformation of the
Forum into a supranational regional organisation in the South Pacific, which is
politically unlikely, any regional criminal law must thus be a product of an
intergovernmental treaty adopted by the member states of the Forum. Similar
treaties have been proposed for other congruent
regions.[76] A possible next step
for Forum members is to provide for a range of regional treaties to suppress a
range of transnational crimes. Such an approach would have a number of
advantages.
It would provide a vehicle to expand and update the existing
regional framework. One of the problems the region faces is that many FICs do
not have substantive crimes and appropriate punishments upon which to build an
articulated regional criminal process. It seems fairly clear that formal
regional treaty obligations would also make a difference to compliance, because
they would be formally binding and there would be a greater expectation of
conforming behaviour and more serious consequences flowing from non-compliance.
The advantage of hard law is that while the potential for participation
without any intention of implementation still exists, it makes it possible to
set fairly rigorous standards particularly by prohibiting reservations to treaty
provisions so that a situation of ‘in and cheating’ is avoided and
replaced with ‘out and exposed’. Hard law is usually opted where
immediate unification or harmonisation of national law is
sought,[77] and this is a goal the
region may need to take seriously in respect of transnational crime.
It is
worth noting that the Forum has already used treaties elsewhere. One of the
major successes of the region has been in fisheries control through the adoption
of treaties like the 1979 South Pacific Forum Fisheries Agency
Convention,[78] which made possible
the agreement of the 1992 Niue Treaty on Cooperation in Fisheries Surveillance
and Law Enforcement in the South Pacific
Region.[79] Indeed, the Convention
for the Protection of Natural Resources and Environment of the South Pacific
Region (SPREP Convention)[80] and
its associated protocols cover ground that was originally covered by Forum
Communiqué rhetoric. Significantly, their entry into force was welcomed
by the Forum at its 1991 Meeting in
Palikir.[81]
Soft law may have
been used for the suppression of transnational crime in contrast to the treaty
basis used for environmental issues and for fisheries control because the latter
are issues in which FICs have an immediate internal interest while suppression
of transnational crime is imposed externally. The regional treaties that Forum
members have adopted have also focussed on travel and trade matters, all matters
close to the region’s
heart.[82] This indicates the
necessity of developing a transnational crime control treaty that responds to
regional as well as external concerns. Another possible reason is that treaty
bases already exist in the drug conventions and so forth, and the Honiara
Declaration points to these treaties.
However, these lowest common
denominator global crime control treaties are not comprehensive in areas such as
legal assistance and extradition, they are unresponsive to local legal and
operational conditions, and they are selective of the offences to be
criminalised because they respond largely to the demands of the developed world.
What is more? Just as the SPREP Convention and its associated protocols were
adopted under the UNEP regional seas programmes, the UNODC (UN Office on Drugs
and Crime) driven crime conventions rely on bilateral and regional conventions.
They clearly anticipate regional fleshing out of these large multilateral
treaties. Consider, for example, the adoption by SADC of the Protocol on the
Control of Firearms, Ammunition and other Related Materials in the Southern
African Development Community[83] as
a regional response to the UN Firearms
Protocol.[84]
A regional treaty
has the potential to respond to regional demands for criminalisation and develop
an integrated regional criminal justice system. It may provide a greater
opportunity to counterbalance the negative effects of the suppression of
transnational crime by guaranteeing due process in inter-state cooperation on
investigation, the gathering of evidence and the transfer of
suspects.[85] Such a system, if it
was ambitious, could stipulate regional transnational crimes and penalties,
articulate national criminal processes, and perhaps even remove the burden of
suppressing serious transnational and international crime from the member states
by delegating jurisdiction to a regional court that deals with such offences,
staffed by regional judges and procurement processing offences investigated by a
regional investigation bureau. This court would face all the disadvantages of a
court potentially operating far from the site of the actual offence, such as the
availability of witnesses and physical evidence, and the fact that the harm
caused is not addressed locally. But these problems can be overcome by the
funding of a single institution that only deals with serious offences and which
drives the suppression of these offences on behalf of the region as a whole.
It was just such reasoning that prompted Trinidad and Tobago to lead a
coalition of Caribbean states calling upon the UN General Assembly to create an
International Criminal Court with jurisdiction over illicit drug trafficking
across national frontiers, because these states were unable to cope with the
prosecution of transnational crimes that threatened their
sovereignty.[86]
Papua New
Guinea and Vanuatu were among the many small island states that co-sponsored the
General Assembly Resolution 44/39 which made specific reference in its preamble
to the ‘established link between illegal trafficking in narcotic drugs and
other recognised criminal activities which endanger the constitutional order of
states and violate basic human rights.’ Treaty crimes were ultimately
excluded from the jurisdiction of the ICC for various reasons including the
difficulties of getting states parties to the Rome Statute to sign the relevant
treaty, but these problems could be overcome by the Forum through the operation
of a regional treaty.
Moreover, the International Criminal Tribunal for the
Former Yugoslavia (ICTY)[87] already
serves as a working model of a criminal court with a regional jurisdiction that
covers the states that now make up the Western Balkans. And while a Forum
regional criminal court may have a permanent base, there is nothing to prevent
it going on circuit and taking justice to a specific FIC. Proposals for a
regional court are not new. Samoa proposed a regional Appeal Court in 1974 and
Forum Secretary General Greg Urwin proposed a regional ‘privy
council’ in 2004 and again in
2005.[88] In addition, such a
proposal was made during the drafting of the Pacific
Plan.[89] According to Forum
Secretary General Greg Urwin, however, the acid test for implementation of any
major regional change will be
practicality.[90]
A regional
treaty response may be most practical when it comes to funding, because of the
potential to concentrate funding in one regional system, to develop an
obligation to sustain that funding in an environment when the regional power is
currently engaged with the Pacific but may well disengage in the
future,[91] and to call for
technical support from other Forum Partners on an issue driven basis. Technical
assistance to individual FICs for law reform could then be directed towards
replacing colonial era laws and practices and building the essentials of a
modern criminal law or code of general jurisdiction, while the regional
institutions dealt with the actual implementation of special crimes of special
jurisdiction.
A stronger legal partnership framework will erode sovereignty,
which may be an insurmountable hurdle for the developers of the Plan if they
propose such a radical agenda. Tighter legal regulation of Forum members will be
resisted; as Crocombe points out, the Forum has thus far ‘successfully
kept the lawyers at bay’.[92]
On the positive side, however, a stronger independent regional organisation may
provide some compensation for loss of sovereignty if it offers FICs a greater
opportunity to exercise a new regional sovereignty. In responding to
transnational crime, for example, the region may have more control over choosing
what to consider criminal, to respond with appropriate legal measures and to
adjust this response according to the efficacy of these measures, than an
individual state responding to outside pressure.
As an interim step, it may
be sensible, in order to overcome sovereignty concerns, to avoid a full scale
treaty that spells out a detailed range of obligations. Following the example of
environmental law a ‘compromise instrument’ could be adopted which
would strike more of a balance between soft and hard law obligations, by setting
up a framework for regional institutional change, a set of obligations with
respect to participation in that development and a time-table for change. Such a
treaty could speed up the already extant process to full-scale substantive
change by building into the treaty processes for re-visiting the matter and to
thus create the institutions for reform.
CONCLUSION
The
Forum is meeting soon and the Forum Secretary General is proposing that a treaty
be adopted formalising it as an intergovernmental
institution.[93] Some delegation of
the sovereignty of Forum members has been anticipated since the Biketawa
Declaration called for the Forum members to ‘constructively address
difficult and sensitive
issues’.[94] Influential
Pacific leaders such as Samoan Prime Minister Tuilaepa Aiono Sailele Malielegaoi
accept that the current policies and infrastructure are not as effective as they
might be in a globalising world, and that losing sovereignty might be necessary
for the gains to be achieved through
regionalism.[95] He suggests two
tests for determining whether a regional approach should be taken. First, the
economic test: If the good or service is being provided adequately by the market
then the region should not be involved. Second, the subsidiarity test: If the
good or service is being provided adequately by national governments then the
region should not be involved. [96]
Application of both tests to the suppression of transnational crime reveals the
clear role for regionalism. But he notes that only genuine public support can
lead to significant legal change. Support is likely to be dependant on the total
package, and particularly on what is to be gained from Australia and New Zealand
– access to markets, freedom of movement and regional human rights
guarantees.[97] That total package
appears to be hovering in the wings at the moment; the Pacific Plan is largely,
at least in its current form, about improved functional cooperation. However, it
is significant that steps are being taken to establish formal legal
relationships, and it may be as this gathers impetus the Forum’s previous
soft law will decline in significance. Ultimately the choice between soft and
hard law is context specific; it is determined by local conditions. If
transnational crime is of high salience to the South Pacific the likelihood is a
switch to hard law. If economic and environmental concerns dominate to the
exclusion of other concerns, we are unlikely to see much change in this
regard.
[*] Senior Lecturer, School
of Law, University of Canterbury, New Zealand. The author thanks the Eric Hotung
Trust for financial support for this paper, and to Sheryl Boxall (University of
Canterbury), Karen Scott (University of Nottingham) and John McFarlane (ANU) for
their insightful comments. A version of this paper was presented at the
Australian Institute of Criminology/ University of Queensland T.C. Beirne School
of Law Roundtable, ‘Transnational Organised Crime and International
Criminal Law: Developments and Debates’, The University of Queensland,
Tuesday 14 June 2005.
[1] This
piece builds on a chapter entitled ‘Regional Cooperation in the
Suppression of Transnational Crime in the South Pacific’ in G Leane and B
Von Tigerstrom (eds), International Law in the South Pacific (London:
Ashgate, forthcoming), 35-93.
[2] See Boister, above n 1,
44-52.
[3] Declaration by the
South Pacific Forum on Law Enforcement Cooperation, Annex to the Forum
Communiqué, Twenty-Third Pacific Islands Forum, Honiara, Solomon
Islands, 8-9 July 1992 (‘Honiara Declaration’); all Forum
communiqués were available at The Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat
<http://www.forumsec.org.fj/> (Accessed 04 November 2005), paragraphs 1
and 2.
[4] Forum
Communiqué, Thirty-Second Pacific Islands Forum, Republic of Nauru,
16-18 August 2001, paragraph
38.
[5] Forum
Communiqué, Thirty-Fourth Pacific Islands Forum, Auckland, New
Zealand, 14-16 August 2003, paragraphs 21-25. See generally, on the criminal
threats facing the Pacific, Andreas Schloenhardt, ‘Transnational Crime and
Island State Security in the South Pacific’ in Eric Shibuya and Jim Rolfe
(eds), Security in Oceania in the 21st Century (2003) 171; UNODC,
Profile on the Pacific Islands (2003), UNODC Regional Center Thailand
<http://www.unodc.un.or.th/material/document/2004/Regional%20Profile%20Pacific%20Island.pdf>
(Accessed 04 November 2005).
[6]
Anthony Van Fossen, ‘Money Laundering, Global Financial Instability, and
Tax Havens in the Pacific Islands’ (2003) 15(2) Contemporary
Pacific 237, 239-41; Schloenhardt, above n 5, 178-83; UNODC, above n 5,
18.
[7] The Kooralbyn
Declaration, Transparency International,
<http://www.transparency.org.au/documents/Kooralbyn_Declaration.pdf
> at 4 August 2003.
[8] Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat, Small Arms Control, PIFS (03) FRSC 11 Session 1, Paper prepared for the Forum Regional Security Committee Meeting, 18-20 June 2003, (2003).
[9] Schloenhardt, above n 5,
174.
[10] Ron Crocombe, The
South Pacific (2001),
569.
[11] Crocombe, above n 10,
85; see UNODC, above n 5, 8.
[12]
Australian Senate Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Committee Report, A
Pacific Engaged: Australia’s Relations with Papua New Guinea and the
Island States of the South West Pacific (2003) 194, Parliament of Australia,
<http://www.aph.gov.au/senate/Committee/fadt_ctte/png/report/C07.pdf>
(Accessed 04 November 2005).
[13] Phil Williams and Ernestor Savona, ‘Problems and Dangers Posed by Organised Transnational Crime in the Various Regions of the World’ in Phil Williams and Ernestor Savona (eds.), The United Nations and Transnational Crime (1996) 1, 38.
[14] See Boister, above n 1,
59-72.
[15] Declaration by the
South Pacific Forum on Law Enforcement Cooperation, Annex to the Forum
Communiqué, Twenty-Third Pacific Islands Forum, Honiara, Solomon
Islands, 8-9 July 1992 (‘Honiara Declaration’); all Forum
communiqués were available at The Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat
<http://www.forumsec.org.fj/> (Accessed 04 November
2005).
[16] Ibid, paragraph
4.
[17] Ibid, paragraph
3.
[18] Ibid, paragraph
7.
[19] Ibid, paragraphs 7 and
10.
[20] Ibid, paragraph
9.
[21] Ibid, paragraph
13.
[22] Ibid, paragraph
15.
[23] Ibid, paragraph
16.
[24] Ibid, paragraph
17.
[25] Ibid, paragraph
18.
[26] Ibid, paragraph
19.
[27] Ibid, paragraph
20.
[28] Forum
Communiqué, Thirtieth Pacific Islands Forum, Koror, Republic of
Palau, 3-5 October 1999.
[29]
Nasonini Declaration, [1]. The Declaration is annexed to the Forum
Communiqué, Thirty Third Pacific Islands Forum, Suva, Fiji Islands,
15-17 August, 2002, paragraph
1.
[30] Forum
Communiqué, Thirty-Fourth Pacific Islands Forum, Auckland, New
Zealand, 14-16 August 2003.
[31]
Forum Communiqué, Thirty-Fourth Pacific Islands Forum, Auckland,
New Zealand, 14-16 August
2003.
[32] Forum
Communiqué, Thirty-Fifth Pacific Islands Forum, Apia, Samoa, 3-10
August 2004, paragraph 29.
[33]
See Boister, above n 1, 72-105.
[34] 1988 United Nations Convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances, Vienna, 20 December 1988, 185 UNTS 453, entered into force 11 November 1990.
[35] US Department of State,
International Narcotic Control Strategy Report 2003, Bureau for
International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, March 2004
<http://www.state.gov/g/inl/rls/nrcrpt/2003/vol2/html/29919.htm>
(Accessed 04 November 2005).
[36]
FATF, Annual Review of Non-Cooperative Countries or Territories (2004)
(‘Annual Review 2004’), 1.
[37]For example, only Australia, New Zealand and PNG attended the 1988 Diplomatic Conference that adopted the Drug Trafficking Convention. See theUnited Nations Conference for the Adoption of a Convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances, Official Records, Volume I (New York, 1994) UN Doc E/CONF 82/16, UN Publication Sales No E 94 XI 5, 197.
[38] Forum
Communiqué, Thirty-Second Pacific Islands Forum, Republic of Nauru,
16-18 August 2001, paragraph
38.
[39] Address by Greg Urwin at
the Australian Federal Police Pacific Team Leaders Conference, Forum
Secretariat, Suva, 5 April 2005, The Brown Pages,
<http://www.brownpages.co.nz/news_forum20050405.htm> (Accessed 04 November
2005).
[40] See generally
Richard Hobbs, ‘Going Down the Glocal: The Local Context of Organised
Crime’ (1998) 37 The Howard Journal of Criminal Justice
407-422.
[41] Auckland
Declaration, Pacific Island Forum Leaders Special Retreat, Auckland 6 April
2004, paragraph 1, Pacific Islands Forum <http://www.forumsec.org.fj/docs/Gen_Docs/Auckland_Declaration.pdf>
(Accessed 04 November 2005).
[42]
See Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat, The Pacific Plan for Strengthening
Regional Cooperation and Integration, WorkingDraft, Ministry of Foreign
Affairs and Trade Website,
<http://www.mfat.govt.nz/foreign/regions/pacfic/pifsec/pifsec/pacificplan.html>
(Accessed 04 November 2005).
[43]
Editorial, ‘More Consultation Sought on Plan’ (2005) Pacific
Connection, Issue 4, 6.
[44]
See above n 42, paragraph
3(b).
[45]
Ibid.
[46] See above n 42, Annex
C, column IV.
[47] See above n
42, paragraph 17.
[48] See above
n 42, paragraph 2.
[49] See above
n 42, paragraph 11.
[50]
Address by Greg Urwin to the Australian Federal Police Pacific Team Leaders
Conference, Forum Secretariat, Suva, 5 April 2005, The Brown Pages,
<http://www.brownpages.co.nz/news_forum20050405.htm> (Accessed 04 November
2005).
[51] Available on the
Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat Website, <http://www.forumsec.org.fj/>
(Accessed 04 November 2005).
[52]
See above n 51, paragraph 9.
[53]
See above n 51, paragraph 9.
[54]
Also available on the on the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat Website,
<http://www.forumsec.org.fj/> (Accessed 04 November
2005).
[55] See above n 54,
strategic objective 12, suggestions iv, v, and xvi.
[56] See above n 51, paragraphs
17 and 18.
[57] See above n 51,
paragraph 20.
[58] Editorial,
‘More Consultation Sought on Plan’ (2005) Pacific Connection,
Issue 4, 6.
[59] Richard Herr,
‘South Pacific Forum’ in Brij V Lal and Kate Fortune (eds.), The
Pacific Islands: An Encyclopaedia, (2000)
329.
[60] Tarawa, 30 October
2000, not yet in force. Available at
<http://www.austli.edu.au/au/other/dfat/treaties/notinforce/2000/14.html>
(Accessed 04 November 2005).
[61]
See generally Malcolm Shaw, International Law, 5th edn (Cambridge: CUP,
2003), 241-246.
[62] See
Christine Chinkin, ‘Normative Development in the International Legal
System’ in Dinah Shelton (ed.), Commitment and Compliance: The Role of
Non-Binding Norms in the International Legal System (Oxford, OUP, 2000),
21.
[63] See the conditions for
soft law articulated by Chinkin, ibid; Jan Klabbers, ‘The Redundancy of
Soft Law’ (1996) 65 Nordic Journal of International Law 167-182;
Jan Klabbers, ‘The Undesirability of Soft Law’ (1998) 67 Nordic
Journal of International Law 381-391.
[64] Jim Rolfe, ‘The Pacific Way: Where ‘Non-Traditional’ is the Norm’ (2000) 5 International Negotiation 427, 428.
[65] See Rolfe, above n 64, 434,
citing M. Haas, The Pacific Way: Regional Cooperation in the South
Pacific (New York: Praeger, 1989),
5.
[66] See Rolfe, above n 64,
435, citing M. Osmond, The South Pacific: A Regional Approach to
Environmental Law Reform, (Wellington: Unpublished LLM Research Paper,
Victoria University Wellington, 1992),
49.
[67] Thus the 1989 Tarawa
Declaration which called for a ban on drift net fishing was followed by the
adoption of the 1989 Wellington Convention for the Prohibition of Fishing
with long Drift Nets in the South Pacific, 1899 UNTS 3, opened for
signature1989, entered into force
1990.
[68] Rolfe, above n 64,
435, 436.
[69] Noel Levi,
Speech to Forum Review Eminent Persons Group, Pacific Islands Forum,
Suva, 17 November 2003, Press Statement 110/03, cited in Graeme Dobell,
‘Australia-Oceania and Pacific Asia’, in Peter Cozens (ed.),
Engaging Oceania with Pacific Asia (Wellington: Centre for Strategic
Studies, Victoria University Wellington, 2004), 79,
83.
[70] Dinah Shelton,
‘Introduction: Law, Non-Law, and the Problem of ‘Soft Law’ in
Dinah Shelton (ed.), Commitment and Compliance: The Role of Non-Binding Norms
in the International Legal System (Oxford, OUP, 2000), 1,
12.
[71] KW Abbot and D Snidal,
‘Hard and Soft Law in International Governance’ in J. Goldstein et
al (eds.), Legalisation and World Politics (London: MIT Press, 2001), 37,
62.
[72] An example might be the
1995 Washington Declaration on the Protection of the Marine Environment from
Land Based Activities, 6 Yearbook of International Environmental Law
(1995) 883, which has been heavily criticised by commentators – see
Patricia Birnie and Alan Boyle, International Law and the Environment,
2nd Edition (Oxford: OUP, 2002),
419.
[73] Editorial,
‘Shaping the Pacific’ (2005) Pacific Connection, Issue 4,
8.
[74] Abbot and Snidal, above n
71, 37.
[75] See Steve Peers, EU Justice and Home Affairs Law (2000), chapter 1 generally.
[76] See Gregory Rose and Diana
Nestorovska, Towards an Asean Counter Terrorism Treaty, Paper presented
to the ASEAN Government Legal Officers Programme on Anti-Terrorism, 24-28 August
2003, Bali, Indonesia.
[77]
Chinkin, above n 62, 27.
[78]
South Pacific Forum Fisheries Agency Convention, opened for signature 10
July 1979, 1979 ATS 16, entered into force 9 August
1979.
[79] Done at Honiara 9 July
1992, entered into force 20 May 1993, Internet Guide to International Fisheries
Law <http://www.oceanlaw.net/texts/niue.htm> (Accessed 04 November
2005).
[80] Opened for signature 24
August 1986, Noumea, entered into force 22 August 1990, available at
<http://www.sprep.org.ws/sprep/about.htm> (Accessed 04 November
2005).
[81] Forum
Communiqué of the Twenty Second South Pacific Forum, Palikir, Pohnpei,
Federated States of Micronesia, 29 - 30 July 1991, paragraph 13.
[82] See Eric Shibuya, ‘The
Problems and Potential of the Pacific Islands Forum’, in Jim Rolfe (ed.)
The Asia-Pacific: A Region in Transition (Hawai’i: Asia Pacific
Center Press, 2005), 105-6.
[83]
Available at Southern African Development Community, <www.sadc.int>
(Accessed 04 November 2005).
[84]
Protocol against the Illicit Manufacturing of and Trafficking in Firearms,
Their Parts, Components and Ammunition, Supplementing the United Nations
Convention against Transnational Organised Crime, UN GA Res. 55/25, 15
November 2000, annex to UN Doc A/55/383.
[85] Mireille Delmas-Marty, Global Law: A Triple Challenge (2003), vi. This has happened elsewhere: in the European legal space, criminal law cooperation was made palatable by regional human rights cooperation. See Geert Corstens and Jean Pradel, European Criminal Law (2002) generally, Steve Peers, EU Justice and Home Affairs Law (2000) 15-30, 48-62.
[86] UNGAOR 6th Comm. 44th Sess.
UN Doc. A/c.6/44/SR.38-41 (1989). See generally N. Boister, ‘The Exclusion
of Treaty Crimes from the Jurisdiction of the proposed International Criminal
Court: Law, Pragmatism, Politics’ (1998) 3 Journal of Armed Conflict
Law 27; P Robinson, ‘The Missing Crimes’ in A Cassese, P Gaeta
and J R W D Jones, The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court: A
Commentary (Oxford: OUP, 2002), 497, 498.
[87] Established by SC Res 808,
22 February 1993.
[88] Sheryl
Boxall, The Pacfic Islands Forum and the Regional Security Environment,
Paper to the APCSS Conference ‘The Impact of the War or Terrorism on
Island State Security: Navigating Instabilities’, July 19-21, 2005, 26.
[89] See above n
52.
[90] ‘Shaping the
Pacific’ (2005) Pacific Connection, Issue 4,
8.
[91] See Dobell, above n 69,
97.
[92] Ron Crocombe, The
Pacific Plan Among Larger and Smaller Regional Approaches (Plenary Paper
presented at the Conference on Securing a Peaceful Pacific: Preventing and
Resolving Conflict in the Pacific, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New
Zealand, 15-17 October 2004).
[93] Pacific Magazine,
‘Region: New Agreement up for Adoption, 5 October 2005,
<http://www.pacificislands.cc/ina/pinadefault2.php?urlpinaid=17219>
(Accessed 04 November 2005).
[94]
Forum Communiqué of the Thirty First Pacific Islands Forum, Attachment 1
(2000).
[95] ‘A Crucial
Debate’ (2005) Pacific Connection, Issue 4, 7. The full text of his
address is a <http://www.pcf.org.nz/extras/pdf/PM%20Tuielapa.pdf>
(Accessed 04 November 2005).
[96]
Ibid.
[97] As the Final Draft of
the Pacific Plan notes in paragraph 15, see above n 54.