The Case “Manoharan et al. v. Rajapaksa” and Immunity of Heads of State from Foreign Jurisdiction

The author explores legal prospects of a civil complaint filed in January 2011 in the U.S. district court for the District of Columbia against the incumbent President of Sri-Lanka. Plaintiffs accuse Percy Mahendra Rajapaksa of sanctioning extrajudicial killings of their relatives during the civil wa...

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Main Author: S. V. Shatalova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO) 2011-12-01
Series:Московский журнал международного права
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mjil.ru/jour/article/view/546
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spelling doaj-4fd73da6c9ee4f91a95730cf522386352021-07-13T08:25:26ZengMoscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO)Московский журнал международного права0869-00492619-08932011-12-01047799492The Case “Manoharan et al. v. Rajapaksa” and Immunity of Heads of State from Foreign JurisdictionS. V. Shatalova0Russian Embassy in the United States of AmericaThe author explores legal prospects of a civil complaint filed in January 2011 in the U.S. district court for the District of Columbia against the incumbent President of Sri-Lanka. Plaintiffs accuse Percy Mahendra Rajapaksa of sanctioning extrajudicial killings of their relatives during the civil war with Tamil separatists. In this connection, the author examines current international law and legal writings relating to the personal immunities of incumbent heads of state from foreign criminal and civil jurisdiction, as well as practice of U.S. courts in this field. She describes the history and contents of a U.S. common-law doctrine of head-of-state immunity. Special attention is given to the question whether senior State officials preserve their immunities ratione personae when they commit such serious international crimes, as torture and extrajudicial killings.https://www.mjil.ru/jour/article/view/546personal immunities of foreign officialshead of state immunityinternational crimesofficial/private actsforeign civil and criminal jurisdiction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S. V. Shatalova
spellingShingle S. V. Shatalova
The Case “Manoharan et al. v. Rajapaksa” and Immunity of Heads of State from Foreign Jurisdiction
Московский журнал международного права
personal immunities of foreign officials
head of state immunity
international crimes
official/private acts
foreign civil and criminal jurisdiction
author_facet S. V. Shatalova
author_sort S. V. Shatalova
title The Case “Manoharan et al. v. Rajapaksa” and Immunity of Heads of State from Foreign Jurisdiction
title_short The Case “Manoharan et al. v. Rajapaksa” and Immunity of Heads of State from Foreign Jurisdiction
title_full The Case “Manoharan et al. v. Rajapaksa” and Immunity of Heads of State from Foreign Jurisdiction
title_fullStr The Case “Manoharan et al. v. Rajapaksa” and Immunity of Heads of State from Foreign Jurisdiction
title_full_unstemmed The Case “Manoharan et al. v. Rajapaksa” and Immunity of Heads of State from Foreign Jurisdiction
title_sort case “manoharan et al. v. rajapaksa” and immunity of heads of state from foreign jurisdiction
publisher Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO)
series Московский журнал международного права
issn 0869-0049
2619-0893
publishDate 2011-12-01
description The author explores legal prospects of a civil complaint filed in January 2011 in the U.S. district court for the District of Columbia against the incumbent President of Sri-Lanka. Plaintiffs accuse Percy Mahendra Rajapaksa of sanctioning extrajudicial killings of their relatives during the civil war with Tamil separatists. In this connection, the author examines current international law and legal writings relating to the personal immunities of incumbent heads of state from foreign criminal and civil jurisdiction, as well as practice of U.S. courts in this field. She describes the history and contents of a U.S. common-law doctrine of head-of-state immunity. Special attention is given to the question whether senior State officials preserve their immunities ratione personae when they commit such serious international crimes, as torture and extrajudicial killings.
topic personal immunities of foreign officials
head of state immunity
international crimes
official/private acts
foreign civil and criminal jurisdiction
url https://www.mjil.ru/jour/article/view/546
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