Sibanda and Another V International Committee of The Red Cross
Sibanda and Another V International Committee of The Red Cross
Sibanda and Another V International Committee of The Red Cross
HC 5737/2000
PHYLLIS SIBANDA
and
MUNYAMA NGANGURA
versus
THE INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE OF THE RED CROSS (ICRC)
the matter.
The privileges and immunities of foreign States and
diplomatic and consular representatives of foreign States and of
certain international organisations and courts and certain
persons connected with them, is governed by the provisions of
Part IV of the Act. Section 7(1) in particular provides for the
privileges and immunities of international organisations such as
the ICRC and these are specified in Part 1 of the Third Schedule
to the Act. Of relevance to this application is the immunity from
suit and legal process of the ICRC which is specified in paragraph
1 of Part 1` of the said Third Schedule. In terms of s 7(1) of the
Act an international organisation which enjoys the immunity
mentioned above must be notified by the President, by notice in
the Gazette, which notice must specify as applicable to the
organisation any or all the privileges and immunities set out in
Part 1 of the Third Schedule. It was not in issue in these
proceedings whether or not the President acted in terms of s 7(1)
of the Act in respect of the ICRC. I must therefore accept that
the ICRC enjoys the immunity from suit or legal process and that
such immunity was duly accorded or conferred on it by the
President.
The fact that immunity from suit and legal process was
conferred on the ICRC does not, by itself, shed any light on the
nature and extent of that immunity. This is a matter which I
must determine in these proceedings. The ICRC, though an
international organisation, cannot be treated any differently from
a foreign sovereign where immunity is involved and the position
at international law must be the same for it as it is for a foreign
sovereign. The position as I understand it is that international
law is part of our law (Barker McCormark P/L v Government of
Kenya 1983 (2) ZLR 72 at 79G) and that it is now accepted that
the doctrine of absolute immunity applies only in respect of jure
imperii and not jure gestionis: in the latter case the doctrine of
restricted immunity applies (see Barker McCormark supra).
England, which along with Russia espoused the doctrine of
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HH 542002