7 Sir Nigel S Rodley, the then UN Special Rapporteur on Torture, addressed the issue of reservations in his comments to the Working Group in 2001 and stated that no reservations should be permissible with regard to the OP: ‘It is so hard to conceive of a reservation to an instrument of this nature that would not have such an adverse effect that a general exclusion of reservations would appear appropriate.’8
8 Already in the first session of the Working Group the question whether any reservations should be admissible or if the Protocol should contain a clause that excluded (p. 999) this possibility triggered a heated discussion. On the one hand, it was argued that the Protocol did not contain provisions of substantive law and that therefore reservations should be inadmissible. Otherwise, it was brought forward, the effectiveness of the national preventive mechanism could be seriously hampered. Furthermore, the Protocol already envisaged a so-called ‘negotiated reservation’ allowing States to suspend a visit of the Subcommittee under certain circumstances.9 On the other hand, States advocating the possibility of making reservations stated that excluding reservations might inhibit States from becoming parties to the Protocol as this situation might make its implementation difficult for them. Moreover, allowing reservations would not be dangerous since the VCLT declared any reservation that is inconsistent with the object and purpose of the respective treaty to be inadmissible. Certain permissible reservations were discussed as a possible consensus.10
9 In the course of the fourth session of the Working Group in 1996, the discussion on reservations was taken up again. Certain States, such as Canada, Chile, France, the Netherlands, the Russian Federation, South Africa, Sweden, and Switzerland, supported by Amnesty International, clearly argued for excluding any reservations. On the other side, the Japanese delegate proposed to delete a provision with such content. Otherwise, it was proposed to add that only reservations incompatible with the object and purpose of the Protocol should not be permitted. This proposal was explicitly contested by the representative of Sweden with a reference to the VCLT, which declared such reservations inadmissible in any case. The delegates from Algeria, Mexico, and the United States suggested that reservations addressing procedural issues should be allowed and the US delegation made the proposal to add to the provision that reservations ‘incompatible with the object and purpose of the Convention and the Protocol’ should not be admissible.11
10 In the 1997 meeting, the two groups with contrary positions consolidated: on the one hand, Argentina, Austria, Canada, the Czech Republic, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and the Russian Federation, supported again by Amnesty International, reiterated that States parties should not be entitled to make reservations since such reservations could render the preventive mechanism useless. On the other hand, Algeria, Brazil, China, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Mexico, the Syrian Arab Republic, and the United States expressed opposition to a complete exclusion of reservations. Observers of the APT and the International Commission of Jurists stated that they preferred no reservations at all but could accept a provision that excluded reservations only to the core articles of the Protocol as a compromise. The representative of South Africa, although preferring no reservations, also indicated willingness to accept reservations in the interest of reaching agreement.12
11 In the Working Group of 1999, the opponents of a possibility for reservations emphasized once again that it was not logical to permit reservations since the Protocol only contained institutional and procedural provisions, while supporters of reservations (p. 1000) countered that the Protocol also contained substantive provisions imposing obligations on States parties which in turn, should be entitled to reservations. Alternatively, they proposed to make an explicit reference in the Protocol to those Articles where a reservation was not permitted.13
12 In the ninth session of the Working Group in 2001, where some delegations cited as an argument for allowing reservations recent practice in the two OPs to the CRC, still no consensus was found.14
13 In the final session of the Working Group, the Chairperson-Rapporteur presented a draft OP, which contained a provision excluding all reservations. Although some delegations explicitly contested this provision—the representative of the United States called it an ‘unwise departure from current standard-setting trends’15 and the Russian Federation perceived it as ‘a matter of grave concern’16—the proposal of the Chairman-Rapporteur was eventually adopted with a vote on 24 January 2002.17