Article contents
Bouzari and Others v. Islamic Republic of Iran
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2021
Abstract
Human rights — Freedom from torture — Nature of prohibition of torture — Whether a rule of jus cogens — Consequences — Remedies for torture — Whether State entitled to claim State immunity when sued for torture — Whether other States required to provide remedy for acts of torture committed outside their territory — Convention against Torture, 1984, Article 14(1) — International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, 1966, Article 14 — Balance to be struck between prohibition of torture and State sovereignty
Relationship of international law and municipal law — Customary international law — Part of Canadian common law — Treaties — Effect in Canadian law of treaty not implemented by legislation — International law principles and values as aid to construction of legislation — Expert evidence on international law — Admissibility — Value
State immunity — Jurisdictional immunity — Exceptions to immunity — Penal proceedings — Commercial activity — Torts occasioning personal or bodily injury — Whether exception to immunity for non-commercial torts extends to torture committed by defendant State in its own territory — Whether there is an exception to immunity for violations of jus cogens — Canada State Immunity Act 1982
Treaties — Interpretation — Relevance of subsequent practice — Convention against Torture, 1984 — Practice of States Parties — Reports to Committee against Torture — Response to declaration by United States of America — The law of Canada
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- Case Report
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- © Cambridge University Press 2007
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