(Pix © Larry Catá Backer 2018; Musée Ariana, porcelain figures Meissen 1725-1730 )
Flora Sapio (Comments on the "Zero-Draft"), and I (Making Sausages?: Preliminary Thoughts on the "Zero-Draft")
have been considering the challenges posed by the Zero Draft. But we
wanted to dig deeper. To that end we wanted to avoid the altogether too
easy exercise of textual exegesis to suggest the challenges that this
draft might construct for itself.
Rather than consider text, or text in light of the various mandates and principles purportedly manifested in the language used to build the Zero Draft, we thought it might be useful to consider text within the context of the initial commentary it might generate among Zero Draft stakeholders motivated enough to make them. These, then, might usefully inform the reading of text, and sharpen analysis of its structure and consequences.
Rather than consider text, or text in light of the various mandates and principles purportedly manifested in the language used to build the Zero Draft, we thought it might be useful to consider text within the context of the initial commentary it might generate among Zero Draft stakeholders motivated enough to make them. These, then, might usefully inform the reading of text, and sharpen analysis of its structure and consequences.
To that end, and in this and subsequent posts, Flora Sapio presents
summaries of discussions on each article
of the Zero Draft, based on the written submissions available on the
website of
the OEIGWG. These, then, will be woven together first to develop both a
critique of the Zero Draft, and thereafter to suggest the value of an
alternative, framework, model for such a project.
This Part 5 focuses on Article 9 of the Zero Draft (Prevention).
These Commentaries form part of a larger Coalition for Peace and Ethics Project on the Effort to Elaborate an International Instrument on Business and Human Rights. Go to CPE Treaty Project Page: HERE.
This Part 5 focuses on Article 9 of the Zero Draft (Prevention).
Summaries of discussions on each article of the Zero Draft, based on the written submissions available on the website of the OEIGWG
Flora Sapio
On 14 July 2014, the Human Rights Council created an Open-Ended Intergovernmental Working Group (OEIGWG) on Transnational Corporations and Other Business Enterprises with respect to human rights (OEIGWG). According to Resolution 26/9, the Working Group has the mandate to: “elaborate an international legally binding instrument to regulate, in international human rights law, the activities of transnational corporations and other business enterprises.”
By “Other business enterprises” the Human Rights Council referred to all business enterprises having a transnational character in their operational activities. This designation does not apply to local businesses.
In establishing the OEIGWG, the Human Rights Council also decided that the first two sessions of the OEIGWG would be dedicated to conducting constructive deliberations on the content, scope, nature, and form of the future Treaty. Following deliberations, the Chairperson would prepare elements for the draft Treaty. Substantive negotiations on the Treaty would be held during the third session of the Working Group, based on the discussions held during the first two sessions.
The OEIGWG held its first session from 6 to 10 July 2015. A second session took place from 24 to 28 October 2016. Based on discussions held during the first two sessions, a third session was convened from 23 to 27 October 2017. During this session, the elements for the draft Treaty were discussed. Also, the OEIGWG requested the Chair-Rapporteur to complement the ongoing bilateral consultations with states and non-state stakeholders with informal consultations.
Following the third session, a Zero Draft of a Legally Binding Instrument (LBI) on Transnational Corporations (TNCs) and Other Business Enterprises (OBEs) was prepared by Ecuador. In July 2018 the Ministry of Corporate Affairs of India released the draft for public comments.
The Zero Draft of the Legally Binding Instrument (and a zero draft of an optional protocol to the binding instrument) formed the basis for a first round of substantive negotiations, held in Geneva from 15 to 19 October 2018. According to the program of work adopted by the OEIGWG, substantive negotiations saw experts, representatives of national states, transnational organizations, and NGOs comment on the Zero Draft.
In this and in following posts, I will be presenting summaries of discussions on each article of the Zero Draft, based on the written submissions available on the website of the OEIGWG.
Article 1 – summary of discussions - Thursday 18 October 2018
Article 2 – summary of discussions - Monday 15 October 2018
Article 3 – summary of discussions - Wednesday 17 October 2018
Article 4 – summary of discussions - Wednesday 17 October 2018
Article 5 – summary of discussions - Thursday 18 October 2018
Article 6 – summary of discussions - Tuesday 16 October 2018
Article 7 – summary of discussions - Tuesday 16 October 2018
Article 8 – summary of discussions - Monday 15 October 2018
Article 9 – summary of discussions - Tuesday 16 October 2018
Article 10 – summary of discussions - Wednesday 17 October 2018
Article 11 – summary of discussions - Wednesday 17 October 2018
Article 12 – summary of discussions - Wednesday 17 October 2018
Article 13 – summary of discussions - Tuesday 16 October 2018
Article 14 – summary of discussions - Thursday 18 October 2018
Article 15 – summary of discussions - Thursday 18 October 2018
Article 9 Prevention
1. State Parties shall ensure in their domestic
legislation that all persons with business activities of transnational
character within such State Parties’ territory or otherwise under their
jurisdiction or control shall undertake due diligence obligations throughout
such business activities, taking into consideration the potential impact on
human rights resulting from the size, nature, context of and risk associated
with the business activities.
2. Due diligence referred to above under
Article 7.1 shall include, but shall not be necessarily limited to:
a. Monitoring the human rights impact of its business activities including the activities of its subsidiaries and that of entities under its direct or indirect control or directly linked to its operations, products or services.b. Identify and assess any actual or potential human rights violations that may arise through their own activities including that of their subsidiaries and of entities under their direct or indirect control or directly linked to its operations, products or services.c. Prevent human rights violations within the context of its business activities, including the activities of its subsidiaries and that of entities under its direct or indirect control or directly linked to its operations, products or services, including through financial contribution where needed.d. Reporting publicly and periodically on non-financial matters, including at a minimum environmental and human rights matters, including policies, risks, outcomes and indicators. The requirement to disclose this information should be subject to an assessment of the severity of the potential impacts on the individuals and communities concerned, not to a consideration of their materiality to the financial interests of the business or its shareholders.e. Undertaking pre and post environmental and human rights impact assessments covering its activities and that of its subsidiaries and entities under its control, and integrating the findings across relevant internal functions and processes and taking appropriate action.f. Reflecting the requirements in paragraphs a. to e. above in all contractual relationships which involve business activities of transnational character.g. Carrying out meaningful consultations with groups whose human rights are potentially affected by the business activities and other relevant stakeholders, through appropriate procedures includingthrough their representative institutions, while giving special attention to those facing heightened risks of violations of human rights within the context of business activities, such as women, children, persons with disabilities, indigenous peoples, migrants, refugees and internal displaced persons.h. Due diligence may require establishing and maintaining financial security, such as insurance bonds or other financial guarantees to cover potential claims of compensation.
3. State Parties shall ensure that effective national procedures are
in place to enforce compliance with the obligations laid down under this
article, and that those procedures are available to all natural and and legal
persons having a legitimate interest, in accordance with national law, in
ensuring that the article is respected.
4. Failure to comply with due diligence duties
under this article shall result in commensurate liability and compensation in
accordance with the articles of this Convention.
5. States Parties may elect to exempt certain
small and medium-sized undertakings from the purview of selected obligations
under this article with the aim of not causing undue additional administrative
burdens.
_________
Article 9 of the Legally Binding Instrument on
Transnational Corporations and Other Business Enterprises was scheduled for
discussion on Tuesday 16 October 2018, from 16
PM to 18 PM.
After an introduction by the Chair, Luis
Gallego Chiriboga, permanent representative of Ecuador at the UN in Geneva,
comments on Article 13 were submitted by 4 experts. Written comments specific
to Article 13 were submitted by:
• 9 states (China, Costa
Rica, France, India, Mexico, Namibia, Russian Federation, South Africa,
Switzerland)
·
1 observer
state (Palestine)
• 13 NGOs
Comments
by Experts
Baskut Tuncak, UN SR on human rights and toxics:
1. States should compel all businesses in their
territory or jurisdiction to actively monitor, identify and prevent human
rights violations. Due
diligence requirements may seem obvious, but
human rights due diligence is not conducted in a number of chemical
companies. Existing initiatives do not follow the letter of the Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, nor the spirit of human rights in general.
2. HR due diligence must be traceable throughout
supply and value chains. However, the limitations placed on the scope of
monitoring, identification, prevention, as well as environmental and human
rights impact reporting, seem to leave the potential for human rights abuses to
persist in supply chains. The provisions also do not seem to adequately cover
suppliers, such as those to companies in electronics and textiles sectors whose
products are made with toxic products that again poison workers and their families. For these and other sectors, the most
significant risks to workers and local communities may be buried deep within
supply chains, including the activities of small and medium enterprises, which
could be exempted. Also, subsection (e)
seems unnecessarily limited to those under direct control. Perhaps include
language on the lifecycle approach to business activities
3. Due diligence should be transparent. Transparency about toxic chemicals in products
and production processes has been the key to advancing change in most instances
where companies have transitioned away from carcinogens, chemicals that alter
hormone systems and impact fertility and brain development. The intent of the language is section “d” is
very much welcome. However, I am
concerned that it does not go far enough to ensure transparency.
4. Due diligence should explicitly include
actual and potential exposures to hazardous substances. The due diligence applied under this treaty may
not adequately address crosscutting thematic human rights issues such as the
insidious threat posed by hazardous substances and wastes to human rights. The section may wish to highlight some key
issues that should be included in the due diligence requirements, such as the
exposure of communities and workers to hazardous substances.
Written comments by Elżbieta Karska, UN Working Group on Business and Human Rights are not available on the OHCHR website.
Robert McCorquodale, Inclusive Law: Article 9 uses the wrong terminology of “due
diligence”, while the UNGPs use the term “human rights due diligence”. These
are substantially different. Human rights due diligence was introduced not to
confuse it with business due diligence and to link it with international human
rights law. My strong recommendation is that “human
rights” must be added before “due diligence” wherever it occurs in this Article
and in the Treaty and Optional Protocol.
Article 9 does broadly – but not precisely – cover the four elements set
out by the UNGPs as mandatory human rights due diligence. There is, though, no
specific “mitigation” or “tracking” aspects, and these should be added as both
are important elements of HRDD. The OECD Guidance on Responsible Business Conduct in relation to HRDD is a very good template.
Article 9.2(c) includes “financial contributions” within the coverage of
the operations for which there are HRDD requirements. I think that the role of
the financial institutions is significant in this area. The specific inclusion
of financial institutions within the businesses covered by this Article and
across the entire draft should be made clearer.
The responsibility of international organizations should be included in
the draft.
I have
concerns about the ability of States expressly to exclude small and
medium-sized businesses (SMEs) from the obligations under Article 9.5. This
exclusion could lead to a form of immunity of SMEs, and the creation of new new
legal structures by transnational corporations of a series of SMEs, which would
undermine the purpose of the treaty. States could raise awareness, provide
support and incentives to SMEs to implement the Treaty. SMEs may rely on the
HRDD of larger businesses in their supply chain.
Article 9.2(c) refers to “preventing harm”. Some concerns
have been raised that this is different from “seeking to prevent” human rights
impacts under GP 13. A duty to prevent human rights harms on a business for its
own activities that cause or contribute to human rights harms, would reinforce
the core concern of the draft Treaty of prevention of human rights impacts. It
also moves the obligations from being on victims to show a business link, a
causal connection and a necessary forum, to that on the business to have the
burden of showing that it is serious about its implementation of effective HRDD
for its own activities. If this duty to prevent on business extends beyond
subsidiaries and those under the control of a business to those in a business
relationship, it would go beyond the UNGPs. There is, though, some national
legislation, such as the French Duty of Vigilance Act and the UK’s Modern
Slavery Act, which does extend this duty to suppliers
Including a
defence of effective HRDD would be a powerful incentive for businesses to
undertake HRDD and to act to prevent human rights abuses. Such a defence could
be added simply by inserting a new sentence in Article 9.4: “This
liability may not arise if the business enterprise/legal person or association
of legal persons can prove that it took all reasonable precautions within the
circumstances, had an effective policy and procedure in place, and exercised
all human rights due diligence to prevent the adverse impact”.
Written comments by Gabriella
Rigg Herzog, USCIB are not available on the OHCHR website.
Gabriela Quijano (Amnesty International): A future draft should clarify who exactly
would be placed under such a requirement as “persons with business activities
of transnational character” is equivocal. The obligation to conduct due
diligence should be premised on a duty to respect human rights, or to prevent
human rights abuses. This is consistent with the responsibility to respect
human rights under the UNGPs. To avoid confusion and streamline international
standards, we would recommend following the key due diligence steps under the
second pillar of the UNGPs more strictly, and only add language where necessary
to make concepts clearer or more detailed.
This article should be expanded to include
obligations to ensure critical procedural rights that enable individuals and
communities to defend their rights and prevent abuses, such as access to
information; participation in decision making, meaningful consultation and the
need to ensure the FPIC of IPs; protection of HRDs; the possibility to claim
injunctive or precautionary measures; and provisions to address the
differentiated, and often disproportionate negative impact of corporate
activities on women.
Comments
by States
China: the concept of due diligence in human rights is related to balancing
human rights and development, and promoting respect of human rights in business
activities, while avoiding an excessive burden on enterprises, that may affect
their contribution to development. The core content of Article 9 is to
establish a legal obligation to due diligence, which may be beyond the basis
consensus of our negotiations. As the Chairman clearly stated yesterday, the
proposed instrument does not seek to create new rights and obligations. There
is a consensus on cautiousness in the implementation of human rights in industry
and commerce, but countries at different stages of development may have
different understandings. If a legal concept is clarified in the text, an
examination is needed to see if conditions are mature, and a commonly accepted
rule of international law exists. The UNGPs mainly “encourage” human rights due
diligence.
Given the core purpose of the Draft Treaty is
to provide effective relief mechanisms to victims, from a legal-technical point
of view we do not need specific provisions on prevention. The absence of overly
specific provisions on prevention does not affect the implementation of the
UNGPs, or appropriate caution of States in accordance with their national legal
principles.
Costa Rica: the delegation asked the following questions:
Does this article have the goal to give a binding
force to UNGPs 17 to 20? If so, how can a uniform capacity to comply with these
obligations be guaranteed throughout the world? If all states had the same
legal basis to acknowledge the main international legal instruments on human
rights, and the same capacity to implement them, we would not be performing
this exercize.
Prevention should start from taking into
account the capacity of states, because Article 9.3 introduces an obligation
for states to ensure that effective
national procedures are in place to enforce compliance. This would imply
creating an ad hoc national institution to regulate the operations of
TNCs.
How can the state provide a legal guarantee of
due diligence by enteprises, in addition to its existing obligation to have law
respected? Is the establishment of a national institutions to monitor due
diligence by enterprises, with respect to the human rights obligations of
enterprises, which are enshrined in national legislation?
France: the French delegation described legislation on the duty of care for
business companies, promulgated in March 2017 (Loi de devoir de Vigilance), inviting states and the OEIGWG to take into
consideration this type of mechanism and the cases to which it applies. The
French delegation stated it believed that prevention is the first guarantee of
respect for human rights in business, and that because of this reason the scope
of the Treaty cannot be limited to TNCs.
India: the duty to prevent human rights
violations as elucidated in article 9.2.c is an onerous one and the threshold
must be reduced to 'seeking to prevent' human rights violations which is a
reduced standard. Further, 'seeking to prevent' human rights violations should
be treated as a mitigating factor while affixing liability under Article 10.
Article 9.4 also needs to be re-drafted to make
'due-diligence' understood as a 'standard of conduct' and not as a 'standard of
result'.
India appreciates the exemption clause provided
in article 9.5 for protection of certain small and medium enterprises from
additional undue administrative burdens. However the carve out is only for
select obligations under Article 9. Considering the importance of SMEs in the
economy, more flexibility in exemptions may be provided to SMEs.
Mexico: implementing obligations under Article 9 will require the setting of
deadlines to adapt national legal systems, and a deep process of legal
harmonization.
We would like to propose an amendment to
Article 9.1, to avoid limiting the adverse impact of transnational business
activities to direct consequences, and also extend it to indirect and
foreseeable consequences:
“…taking into consideration the potential impact on
human rights resulting from or associated with the size, nature, context of and
risk associated with of the business activities.”
Paragraph 9.2(g) can, as the Convention 169 of the ILO, recognize the right to consultation and
participation of various groups, but the elderly an other vulnerable groups
should be included in the consultations referred to in this article.
It would be worth considering whether it would
be desirable to include a general provision on the obligation to carry out a
prior, free and informed consultation, when from impact evaluations is apparent
that there could be a negative impact on human rights. Consultations would not
be limited to groups in a position of vulnerability.
The Mexican delegation expressed reservations
about Article 9.2, given its high degree of discretion and legal uncertainties.
The option to exempt SMEs from due diligence obligations would result in a weak
protection regime.
Namibia: Article 9 should refer to the term “human rights due diligence”, as
indicated by one of the panellists, as this will capture the essence of the
prevention sought through the treaty. We further propose that the listing in
Article 9 (g) be carefully considered in order to be all-inclusive as the list
currently poses a risk of exclusion of groups with a heightened risk of
violation, especially farmers and/or farmworkers. We also propose this
sub-article to include awareness raising as a specific element of the
consultations alluded to. Whilst SME’s
should not be encumbered with unnecessary due diligence administrative burdens,
they should not be excluded from the primary obligations to prevent abuses from
occurring. We reiterate our preference
to use the term "abuses" or "adverse impacts" with respect
to the human rights violations caused by the transnational activities of the
companies.
Russian Federation: states should be able to independently
determine the forms and mechanisms that will be used to ensure that obligations
are fulfilled and violations are prevented. States will take into account their
legal systems, capability, regional circumstances and legal traditions. The
main thing is ensuring a universal standard! In this regards we do not see the
need to include extensive provisions on preventive measures.
We are concerned about Article 9.2(f) because
it does not take into account the nature
of the content of commercial contracts, including the mechanisms for resolving
disputes over them. Inclusion of human rights clauses in such agreements would
mean that the jurisdiction of courts should include a category of cases on
compliance with human rights standards, fundamentally different from commercial
relations. The same considerations are fully applicable to Article 13.6.
Inclusion of human rights provisions would induce a radical reform of the
international system for resolving trade and investment disputes. In addition,
it is unclear what “all” contractual relations mean? The inclusion of human
rights committment may become a formality, and such an approach may not be
correct.
We would prefer not to include provisions on
preventive measures in the Draft Treaty. It would be more correct to issue them
as comments or recommentations, following the UNCITRAL practice. This would
allow to adjust provision during the implementation of the Treaty.
South Africa: this article must be guided by the “duty of
care” which creates the legal obligation for transnational corporations and
other business enterprises to adhere to a standard of reasonable care while
performing any acts that could foreseeably harm others.
Article 9.1 should refer to the consideration
of human rights impacts as well as environmental impacts and these assessments
must be conducted independently and transparently at cost to the company
involved.
The reporting referred to in Article 9.2(d)
should include financial and non-financial matters.
The principle of Free Prior Informed Consent
should be explicitly mentioned and guide the consultations in Artcle 9.2(g).
The notion of “continuous consent” should be added to ensure that communities
have the right to suspend or stop developments that were not previously agreed
upon.
Under Article 9.5, it is very important that
TNCs and OBEs understand that Prevention Mechanisms should be an integral part
of the business model as opposed to being viewed as “additional administrative
burden”, and subsidiaries, agencies, representatives and so forth should be
held acccountable for violations.
The text should refer to clear obligations to
halt production, and mitigating strategies. The article should make provisions
for prevention mechanisms in situations of conflict and occupation.
Switzerland: the concept of due diligence and the terminology used in the Draft
Treaty are not aligned with those in the UNGPs and the OECD Guidelines for
Responsible Business Conduct. The Draft Treaty recognizes that enterprises can
be involved in human rights abuses but the categories used in the Draft Treaty
do not correspond to notions of direct and indirect involvement in corporate
abuses, as contained in the UNGPs.
Comments
by Observer States
Palestine: in its current format the Treaty does not shed light on the importance
of requiring strict due diligence by both the state and corporate actors in
situations of conflict. “Special attention” under article 15 remains
insufficient to address the increasing role of corporations in the commission
of and involvement in grave breaches of international law, as well as their
significant role in protracting and sustaining conflicts, particularly those
relevant to the arms industry and natural resources. Adding a provision under
Article 9 on prevention requiring enhanced due diligence in conflict areas is
essential. Where a tiaution violates international law in conflict areas, the Treaty
must require states to create regulations to ensure that companies refrain from
activities contributing to such violations and/or terminate existing business
activities.
Comments
by NGOs
Amnesty International: “persons with business activities of a
transnational character” is ambiguous, so a future draft should clarify who
exactly would be placed under due diligence obligations. This obligation should
be premised on a duty to respect human rights, or prevent abuses. This is
consistent with the UNGPs. We would recommend following kay due diligence steps
under the second pillar of the UNGPs more strictly, and add language only where
necessary to make concept clearer or more detailed. This article should be
expanded to include obligations to ensure critical procedural rights that
enable individuals and communities to defend their rights and prevent abuses,
such as: access to information; participation in
decision making, meaningful consultation and the need to ensure the FPIC of
IPs; protection of HRDs; the possibility to
claim injunctive or precautionary measures; and provisions to address the differentiated,
and often disproportionate negative impact of corporate activities on
women.
Association for Women’s Rights in Development
(AWID) and Feminist for a Binding Treaty group: effective prevention absolutely depends on a
gender justice approach, seeking to address impacts of abuses on women. Article
9 should include the obligation as part of due diligence to carry out gender
impact assessment. The need for gender
integration in human rights impact assessments has been recognised by the
CESCR, the UNWG on TNCs and OBEs and even in the new OECD Due Diligence
Guidance for Responsible Business Conduct. Monitoring and reporting should
include gender-disaggregated data. The appropriateness of persons undertaking
the assessment in Article 9 should be measures against the minimum criteria of independence;
appropriate expertise; adequate funding; diversity including but not limited to
gender balance; and engagement of affected communities. Article 9 does
not include any measure regarding due diligence in the context of business
activities in conflict-affected and high-risk areas, which is a major gap.
Brazilian AIDS Interdisciplinary Association (directly
coordinating 17 NGOs in Brazil, indirectly representing more than
600 movements and organizations):
TNCs should have direct obligations to prevent violations of the riht to
health. They should be held responsible under civil, administrative and criminal
law. In practical
terms, the instrument must state that TNCs have the obligation to prepare,
publish and effectively implement vigilance plans, and to evaluate their
activities in light of human rights obligations. The consultation process must be: transparent and ensure the
participation of independent, public interested-oriented groups. Those
processes cannot be a mere formality
Groups listed in
Article 9.2(g) should include “LGBT and people living with chronic and
non-communicable diseases”.
CAFOD, CIDSE
(International family of Catholic social justice organisations), Trócaire and
CCFD-Terre Solidaire: the references to mandatory due diligence in article 9 build on the UN
Guiding Principles and offer an opportunity for the Treaty to complement and significantly
strengthen the impact of all existing National Action Plans. The UN Guiding
Principles were adopted 7 years ago. We can learn from experiences on Human
Rights Due Diligence in the interim to develop the zero draft text here and
ensure that the final Binding Treaty is effective in practice.
It is also important
to further explore the link to liability set out in the draft. This link is
more likely to drive actual change by company directors when it comes to their
decisions about the activities of their subsidiaries, environmental practices,
negotiating prices with firms in their supply chain and consultations with
workers and affected communities.
Centre Europe Tiers
Monde: the definitions included in Article 9 suppose a distancing from original
parameters. Its current formulation reflects important deficiencies in the
monitoring and accountability of TNCs. We are dealing with a concept of due
diligence close to voluntariness, in line with the spirit of the UNGPs, and not
a truly binding regulation. The control of compliance with due diligence falls
on states, and the original vector of Resolution
26/9 has been diverted, because the goal of directly regulating the
international obligations of companies has been abandoned in favor of
establishing obligations for states.
FIAN International: it is important that
the Treaty includes a more adequate concept of consultation with affected
persons, changing the concept from “meaningful consultation” to “free, previous
and informed consultation”, according to Convention 169 of the International
Labor Organization; guarantee that decisions taken by affected communities be
respected; clearer dispositions about the right to consultation, emphasizing
how consultation should be independently organized by states, rather than by
corporations.
Friends of the Earth
International: to the concept of “due diligence”, we prefer the concept of duty of
care, inspired from the French law, which includes not only the obligation to
develop preventive measures, but also the obligation to implement them
effectively, to evaluate their effectiveness. Above all it includes the
obligation to repair with a mechanism to incur the liability of the company. It
is also important to stress the responsibility of parent and outsourcing
companies for the activities of companies in their corporate group
(subsidiaries) but also throughout their supply chain. Article 9 (1c) should
thus more clearly include subcontractors and suppliers.
With regard to
paragraph 2g, the term "meaningful consultations" is too vague; an
explicit reference must therefore be made to the obligation for States to
obtain the free prior and informed consent of the communities potentially
affected by any investment project in their territories. Preventive measures
must be developed with the participation of affected communities and social
organizations. A gender perspective should be integrated in the Draft
Treaty.
International
Association of Democratic Lawyers (IADL): Article 9 should follow the mandate of Resolution 26/9
which is regulating the activities of TNCs and other business enterprises,
therefore it should establish direct obligations for TNCs and their supply
chains. Obligations related to prevention should be differently addressed both
to states and TNCs. Global supply chains should be included in this article,
and language that may narrow down the scope of application of due diligence
should be avoived. Human rights due diligence should not be confused with other
forms of due diligence. As signalled by the Human Rights Commissioner in 2018,
the key difference is that we are not elaborating a mechanism to riduce
economic risk, but to prevent corporate crimes. Therefore, we do not understand
the inclusion of “financial security, such as insurance bonds or other
financial guarantees to cover potential claims of compensation.”
Under Article 9.2(g)
the inclusion of women among groups in need of special attention should be
avoided in favor of measures integrating gender in impact assessments.
Regarding the
elimination of the reference to vigilance plans, we consider it fundamental to
include the obligation to elaborate, publish and implement such plans,
independently evaluate their efficiency, with the full guarantee of information
and transparency.
Indigenous Peoples International Centre for Policy
Research and Advocacy: for indigenous peoples,
mere consultation as provided in Article 9, sub para 2 g is inadequate. We
therefore recommend that a provision on Free Prior and Informed Consent be
added to the treaty. FPIC for indigenous peoples is protected in
international law, including International Labour Organization Convention (ILO)
169 and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (Articles
10,11,19,28, 29). We also refer members of this Honorable Working Group to the
study made by the Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
submitted to the Human Rights Council in September 2018 (A/HRC/39/62), to
further support this recommendation.
International
Commission of Jurists: the
language of Article 9 is not entirely satisfactory. Prevention amount only to
human rights due diligence but the Draft could contemplate additional ways for
states to prevent human rights abuses by companies, or to require companies to
prevent abuses. The form of human rights due diligence in the Draft departs
from existing standards of due diligence. Article 9 brings additional
requirements to the four-step process of due diligence, such as “meaningful
consultation” with affected groups, the requirement of financial security to
cover potential compensation claims, the incorporation of some measures into
transnational contract. Greter alignment with UNPGs 17 to 21 and existing
practices would be desirable.
International practice
and the French Loi de devoir de Vigilance should be taken into account, and a separate
article should be included to provide more specific guidance on human rights
due diligence.
The Draft should address
other forms of prevention, that could be modelled on those identified by UNGPs
3, 15, General Comment 16 of the Committee of the Rights of the
Child, and General Comment 24 of the Committee on Economic, Social, and
Cultural Rights.
International
Organization of Employers:
Article 9 unduly mess with and creates confusion with the four-step human
rights due diligence process under the UNGPs, that is understood and carried
out by more and more businesses. The Zero Draft Treaty formulation is
unworkable by establishing human rights due diligence as a standard of outcome.
Attaching liability for
non-compliance with human rights due diligence exposes parent companies, buyers
and retailers to legal risks regardless of their involvement in the harm.
Companies would need to adopt stricter policies in cross-border suppy chains,
that would require vastly greater abilities and powers. This approach would
further undermine the state as some of its traditional functions would be
transfered to global business.
Article 9.5 trying to
offer exemption to SMEs offers no assurance that an exemption would happen in
reality, and offers to clarity as to the application of its vague language. The
provision requiring “all persons with business activities of a transnational
character” to undertake due diligence obligations is completely unrealistic.
The speaker referred to the IOE Paper on State Policy Responses to Human Rights Due
Diligence.
RIDH: the delegate described the human rights
adverse impacts of transnational businesses in Colombia, and domestic
legislation limiting the binding character of existing forms of popular
consultation. The Colombian national environmental movement supports the
inclusion of a right to a binding consultation as a central element of
implementation of projects of TNCs.
Sudwind and
International Clean Clothes Campaign: conceptual alignment with Pillar II of the UNGPs is needed to reduce
definitional and operational ambiguities in the Draft Treaty.
Article 9.2 deviates from the formulation
adopted in the UNGPs and does not provide that mitigation measures shall be
taken, to to assess any adverse impact on human rights. The OECD Due Diligence Guidance frames the tracking
and monitoring impacts and responses and the public reporting as crucial and
intrinsic parts of Due Diligence. The reference to due diligence measures
should follow the sequence foreseen in the UNGPs to avoid confusion and
potential difficulties in interpretation. Greater alignment with the UNGPs
would provide more precision, greater clarity and an increased level of comfort
by all parties stakeholders who are already familiar with the concepts. The
UNGPs are clear on this front and reflect a consensus among states and stakeholders.
Meaningful
public disclosure is a cornerstone of making this article meaningful, and we
would invite to consider stronger and clear language on this. Clarity needs to
be provided on the point that human rights due diligence is a dynamic concept.
We suggest a continuous obligation and not an exercise confined to pre- and
post-event assessments; so, we would encourage article 9.2.e, which refers to
“pre and post’ assessments, to be modified to be continuous.
On SMEs, responsibility
is no longer a function of the size of the company, but needs to be
commensurate with the human rights risks at hand.
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