Pinochet Case
Pinochet Case
Pinochet Case
Pinochet Case
Regina v. Bartle and the Commissioner of Police for the Metropolis and Others Ex Parte
Pinochet
Regina v. Evans and Another and the Commissioner of Police for the Metropolis and
Others Ex Parte Pinochet (On Appeal from a Divisional Court of the Queen's Bench
Division)
Facts:
General Augusto Pinochet, the eighty-two year old former general and dictator of Chile, was
arrested in London by the Metropolitan Police at the request for extradition to prosecute Pinochet
in Spain. The request was made by a Spanish magistrate, Baltasar Garzon for the purpose of
having, in the decades following his 1973 violent overthrow of the democratically elected
government of President Salvador Allende, authorized (or at least knowingly permitted) the
torture, disappearance, and taking as hostage of thousands of people. His victims included not
only Chilean citizens, but also citizens of other countries, including the United Kingdom and
Spain Some of the crimes, most notably the acts of torture, were “crimes under international
law”—perpetrators of which may be prosecuted by any state regardless of their nationality, the
nationality of their victims, or the country in which the acts were committed. For this reason, at
the time of Pinochet’s arrest, there appeared to be no obstacle to his extradition nor any apparent
impediment to his prosecution in the United Kingdom. However, Pinochet’s lawyers argued that,
as Chilean head of state during the period in which most of the alleged crimes were committed,
Pinochet was immune from the jurisdiction of the British courts, including its extradition
procedures. The Divisional court recognized his immunity but due to continued protests he was
continuously detained.
The House of Lords, the highest British tribunal, held that Pinochet had no immunity from the
jurisdiction of British courts with respect to his alleged crimes under international law—and thus
no immunity from extradition.
The Court declared that a head of state who ordered or committed torture was not, when so
doing, acting as a head of state. Despite such decision Home Secretary of State of UK had
already exercised his discretion in favor of a continuation of the extradition process.
The decision was appealed. Pinochet’s lawyer raised the issue on double criminality that
whether, at the time that the alleged crimes had been committed, the British courts had
jurisdiction over acts of torture committed abroad. This is because the Great Britain was yet to be
a signatory of the Torture Convention at the time the alleged acts were committed.
Issue: Whether or not the British courts had jurisdiction over acts of torture committed abroad at
the time of arrest of Pinochet.
Held:
The British courts had no jurisdiction over acts of torture committed abroad by Pinochet.
The court ruled that that universal jurisdiction could only be provided by way of treaty, and not
customary international law—even if customary law had achieved the status of jus cogens before
the coming into force of the Torture Convention, the existence of the international crime of
torture as jus cogens was enough to justify the conclusion that the organization of state torture
could not rank for immunity purposes as performance of an official function. At that stage there
was no international tribunal to punish torture and no general jurisdiction to permit or require its
punishment in domestic courts. Not until there was some form of universal jurisdiction for the
punishment of the crime of torture could it be discussed about as a fully constituted international
crime. The court declared that he Torture Convention did provide what was missing: a
worldwide universal jurisdiction.