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CATAN AND OTHERS v. MOLDOVA AND RUSSIA JUDGMENT
2. Case-law of the International Court of Justice (ICJ)
75. In its advisory opinion “Legal consequences for States of the
continued presence of South Africa in Namibia, notwithstanding Security
Council resolution 276 (1970)”, the ICJ held, on the obligation under
international law to put an end to an illegal situation:
“117. Having reached these conclusions, the Court will now address itself to the
legal consequences arising for States from the continued presence of South Africa in
Namibia, notwithstanding Security Council resolution 276 (1970). A binding
determination made by a competent organ of the United Nations to the effect that a
situation is illegal cannot remain without consequence. Once the Court is faced with
such a situation, it would be failing in the discharge of its judicial functions if it did
not declare that there is an obligation, especially upon Members of the United
Nations, to bring that situation to an end. As this Court has held, referring to one of its
decisions declaring a situation as contrary to a rule of international law: ‘This decision
entails a legal consequence, namely that of putting an end to an illegal situation"
(I.C.J. Reports 1951, p. 82).
118. South Africa, being responsible for having created and maintained a situation
which the Court has found to have been validly declared illegal, has the obligation to
put an end to it. It is therefore under obligation to withdraw its administration from the
Territory of Namibia. By maintaining the present illegal situation, and occupying the
Territory without title, South Africa incurs international responsibilities arising from a
continuing violation of an international obligation. It also remains accountable for any
violations of its international obligations, or of the rights of the people of Namibia.
The fact that South Africa no longer has any title to administer the Territory does not
release it from its obligations and responsibilities under international law towards
other States in respect of the exercise of its powers in relation to this Territory.
Physical control of a territory, and not sovereignty or legitimacy of title, is the basis of
State liability for acts affecting other States.”
76. In the Case Concerning the Application of the Convention on the
Prevention and Punishment of Genocide (Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia
and Montenegro), judgment of 26 February 2007, the ICJ held, on the
question of State responsibility:
“391. The first issue raised by this argument is whether it is possible in principle to
attribute to a State conduct of persons - or groups of persons - who, while they do not
have the legal status of State organs, in fact act under such strict control by the State
that they must be treated as its organs for purposes of the necessary attribution leading
to the State’s responsibility for an internationally wrongful act. The Court has in fact
already addressed this question, and given an answer to it in principle, in its Judgment
of 27 June 1986 in the case concerning Military and Paramilitary Activities in and
against Nicaragua (Nicaragua v. United States of America) (Merits, Judgment, I.C.J.
Reports 1986, pp. 62-64). In paragraph 109 of that Judgment the Court stated that it
had to
‘determine . . . whether or not the relationship of the contras to the United States
Government was so much one of dependence on the one side and control on the other
that it would be right to equate the contras, for legal purposes, with an organ of the
United States Government, or as acting on behalf of that Government’ (p. 62).