THE UNITED NATIONS CHARTER AND USE OF FORCE IN INTERNATIONAL LAW: AN INQUIRY INTO THE LEGALITY OF NATO’S INTERVENTION IN KOSOVO
Abstract
In international law, prohibition on the use of force against the territorial integrity of another state is prohibited and the United Nations is restrained not to intervene in any matter considered to be within the domestic jurisdiction of a member state, except action taken within the collective enforcement measures under chapter VII of the Charter. Consequently, what underlies the humanitarian intervention debate is this perceived tension between the values of ensuring respect for fundamental human rightsand the primacy of the norms of sovereignty, non-intervention, and self determination which are considered essential factors in the maintenance of peace and international security. These values are set out in the United Nations Charter as fundamental purposes of the United Nations. However, while there are mechanisms within the Charter for the protection and enforcement of peace and international security, there are no equivalent provisions or mechanisms in the Charter for the protection of human rights. There is no legislative prescription on how to deal with grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions particularly when there is inaction by the United Nations Security Council. It is for this reason that the paper which has adopted the doctrinal approach questions the legality of the NATO’s intervention in Kosovo on grounds of protecting the ethnic Albanians from repression by the Serbian forces without the approval of the United Nations. The paper answered such questions whether there is an emerging norm of unilateral humanitarian intervention. It concluded that the Kosovo incident was a violation of international law and is just one isolated case that did not establish any state practice of unilateral intervention.
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