When India took the unusual step of taking Jadhav’s case to the ICJ, it sought consular access to the convicted spy, not a ruling against his conviction by a military court. The whole thrust of its case was built on Article 36 [1] of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relation 1963 (VCCR) which is related to jurisdiction stemming from multilateral treaties. Instead of constructing Pakistan’s response on the same article’s first clause we somewhat imprudently chose to focus on the second clause (Article 36 [2]). Contrary to what we have been led to believe, the VCCR does not create any exceptions for alleged or convicted spies. Since Pakistan and India are co-signatories to the optional protocol of the Vienna Conventions, the International Court of Justice had no hesitation in declaring its jurisdiction over the case.
There were other miscalculations, too. Our side invoked and referred time and again to Article VI of an agreement signed with India in May 2008 – incidentally this is not registered under Article 102 of the UN Charter and as such cannot be invoked before any organ of the United Nations. If Pakistan can somehow register the agreement with the UN in the coming days, it can expect to derive some legal benefit when the proceedings resume later.
Pakistan will have to play its cards delicately and wisely from here onwards, especially when it comes to the appointment of an adhoc judge to the ICJ, strengthening its legal team and preparing water-tight arguments related to the merits of the case. The battle is far from over.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 20th, 2017.
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