At its nineteenth
session, in 1967, the Commission appointed Mohammed Bedjaoui
as Special Rapporteur for the sub-topic of succession in respect
of rights and duties resulting from sources other than treaties.
[1]
The Commission considered this sub-topic at its twentieth,
twenty-first, twenty-fifth
and from its twenty-seventh
to thirty-third sessions,
in 1968, 1969, 1973 and from 1975 to 1981, respectively. In
connection with its consideration of this topic, the Commission
had before it the reports of the Special Rapporteur,
[2] information provided
by Governments
[3] as well as documents
prepared by the Secretariat. [4]
At its twenty-fifth session,
in 1973, the Commission decided to limit its study for the time
being to only one category of public property, namely property
of the State. At the same session, it began the first reading
of the draft articles.
The Commission completed the first reading of the draft articles on
succession of States in respect of State property and State
debts at its thirty-first
session, in 1979, and on succession in respect of State archives,
at its following session,
in 1980. In accordance with articles 16 and 21 of its Statute,
the draft articles adopted by the Commission on first reading
were transmitted, through the Secretary-General, to Governments
of Member States for their observations.
The General Assembly, in paragraph 4 (a) of resolution 35/163
of 15 December 1980 (E,
F,
S,
R,
C,
A)
, recommended that, taking into account the written comments of Governments
and views expressed in debates in the General Assembly, the
Commission should, at its thirty-third
session, complete the second reading of the draft articles on
succession of States in respect of matters other than treaties
adopted at its thirty-first and thirty-second sessions.
At its thirty-third session,
in 1981, the Commission re-examined the draft articles in the
light of the comments of Governments and adopted the final text
of its draft
articles on succession of States in respect of State property,
archives and debts, as a whole, with commentaries. [5] In accordance
with its Statute,
the Commission submitted the final draft articles to the General
Assembly with a recommendation that the Assembly should convene
a conference of plenipotentiaries to study the draft articles
and conclude a convention on the subject.
[6]
The General Assembly, in resolution 36/113 of 10
December 1981 (E,
F,
S,
R,
C,
A), decided to convene an international conference of plenipotentiaries
to consider the draft articles on succession of States in respect
of State property, archives and debts, and to embody the results
of its work in an international convention and such other instruments
as it might deem appropriate. In that resolution, the General
Assembly also invited Member States to submit their written
comments and observations on the final draft articles. In resolution
37/11 of 15 November 1982 (E,
F,
S,
R,
C,
A),
the General Assembly decided that the United Nations Conference
on Succession of States in respect of State Property, Archives
and Debts would be held from 1 March to 8
April 1983 at Vienna.
The Conference was accordingly held at Vienna from 1 March to 8 April 1983.
The delegations of ninety States participated in the Conference,
as did also Namibia, represented by the United Nations Council for Namibia. In addition, the Palestine Liberation Organization, the African National
Congress of South Africa and the Pan Africanist Congress of Azania were represented at the Conference. Two specialized and related agencies
and two other intergovernmental organizations were represented
by observers.
The Conference had before it written comments of Governments on the
final draft articles on succession of States in respect of State
property, archives and debts pursuant to General Assembly resolution
36/113 of 10 December 1981, as well as comments made orally
on the draft articles in the Sixth Committee of the General
Assembly at the thirty-sixth and thirty-seventh sessions of
the Assembly. The comments were contained in an analytical compilation
prepared by the Secretariat of the United Nations. [7]
The Conference assigned to the Committee of the Whole the consideration
of the draft articles on succession of States in respect of
State property, archives and debts adopted by the International
Law Commission. It entrusted to the Drafting Committee, in addition
to the responsibility of drafting and coordinating and reviewing
all the texts adopted, the preparation of the title, preamble
and final clauses of the Convention, as well as the preparation
of the Final Act of the Conference. The Conference, on 7 April
1983, adopted the Vienna
Convention on Succession of States in respect of State Property,
Archives and Debts,
[8] consisting of
a preamble, fifty-one articles and an annex, the text of which
is reproduced in annex V, section J. The Annex to the Convention
specifies the conciliation procedure to which article 43 of
the Convention relates. The Convention was opened for signature
on that date until 31
December 1983 at the Federal Ministry for Foreign Affairs of the Republic
of Austria and, subsequently, until 30 June 1984
at United Nations Headquarters. The Convention is subject to
ratification. The Convention remains open for accession by any
State. The Convention shall enter into force on the thirtieth
day following the date of the deposit of the fifteenth instrument
of ratification or accession.
The Final Act of the Conference, of which six resolutions adopted by
the Conference form an integral part, was signed on 8
April 1983. One of the resolutions
adopted by the Conference recognizes that the provisions of
the Convention may not in any circumstances impair the exercise
of the lawful right to self-determination and independence,
in accordance with the Purposes and Principles of the Charter
of the United Nations and the Declaration on Principles of International
Law concerning Friendly Relations and Cooperation among States
in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations, for peoples
struggling against colonialism, alien domination, alien occupation,
racial discrimination and apartheid and recognizes that
the peoples in question possess permanent sovereignty over their
resources and natural wealth and their rights to development,
to information concerning their history and to the conservation
of their cultural heritage. Another resolution, concerning Namibia,
provides that the relevant articles of the Convention shall
be interpreted, in the case of Namibia, in conformity with United
Nations resolutions on the question of Namibia and that, in
consequence, all the rights of the future independent State
of Namibia should be reserved.
[9]
At its forty-seventh session, in 1995, the Commission took up another
aspect of the topic of succession of States and Governments,
namely “Nationality in relation to the succession
of States”.