Certainly individuals have rights under international law- and if you want to claim that there is no redress anywhere, that " individuals currently have obligations and rights but no remedies under general international law " then you'd be wrong on that score too. As examples, the 11th protocol of the European Convention on Human Rights, 1998, 'enables individual victims to seise the Court directly. The same is now possible with regard to the African Court of Human and Peoples’ Rights.'
http://ejil.oxfordjournals.org/content/21/1/25.full
I have not disputed that there exists legal mechanisms for persons to seek redress for injuries and violations by governments. Our dispute is whether those mechanisms are available to people who have suffered injuries at the hand of fellow private citizens not acting under any color of law or authority (e.g., criminal attack).
The article you provided confirms my position; that even though a person can be thought to possess an individual right (i.e., to not be killed), the system to enforce those rights is lacking. This is a deficiency directly attributable to the rights philosophy of international law. Instead of considering rights to be inherent and emanating from a plane above the actions (laws) of man, international law surmises rights to exist only because intentional law places obligations on persons not to harm. Your article says (emphasis added):
"Over the last 60 years we have also seen a change in the status of the individual as a holder of rights under international law. How can we deduce these international rights? For Cassese one can assume ‘corresponding rights’ to every individual's ‘strict international obligation fully to respect some important values (maintenance of peace, protection of human dignity etc.)’.10 He claims:
In other words individuals currently have obligations and rights but no remedies under general international law."
"It would be not only consistent from the viewpoint of legal logic but also in keeping with new trends emerging in the world community to argue that the international right in respect of those obligations accrues to all individuals: they are entitled to respect for their life and limbs, and for their dignity; hence they have a right not to become a victim of war crimes, crimes against humanity, aggression, torture, terrorism. At least for the time being, this international right, deriving from general international rules, is not, however, attended by a specific means, or power, of enforcement that belongs to individuals.11"
In other words individuals currently have obligations and rights but no remedies under general international law."
So, under international law, individual rights are mere detritus from the legal prohibitions on collective aggression, war crimes, crimes against humanity, torture, etc. Under international law, individual rights are merely a derivative legal fiction equatable to corporate personhood in US law . . .
Under international law because an obligation to not kill is placed on nations, an inferior, nebulous, impossible to define and quantify (and thus enforce) "right" to not be killed can be said to exist. This is what you've been babbling about. Problem is, the international legal system was not predicated on the right of individuals so the system has never been employed to protect or enforce the rights of individuals -- but it is trying to catch-up, but it has many, many fine points to discover.
Under US law, the entire governmental system is predicated and founded on the existence of inherent individual rights; the individual right to not be killed, imprisoned or have your property seized are considered foundational and the power of government is framed after those great principles were established. Because each person possesses those rights each individual person has a place of standing under the law . . . That corporations enjoy legal standing is a derivative of the corporation owner's individual rights.
That's the trend. Progress. As I keep repeating, local shysters might well be primed to do the bidding of gun lobbies currently - but change will come. The general right of everybody for protection by the state and the right of redress are the future. It is "consistent from the viewpoint of legal logic " Enjoy your moment.
So please refrain from dependence upon your local examples regarding states and the police- it's an insult to the human spirit. These backwoods legalities have always been evidently flawed even though the rulings have to be respected - for the time being.
Your claim that international law is more advanced, superior or more desirable than the US system is complete fantasy. Your entire argument has no basis in international law; international law hasn't even figured out yet if the rights you claim, even exist for individuals. It is international law that is trying to catch up to the US system and crib together a mechanism to address "individual rights" . . . Come back in a decade or so and give me an update.
Trying to define and explain individual rights and their enforcement under international law is as futile as trying to describe a milkshake to the Sentinelese.
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