I have come across this article on recent NRO Letter written by a prominent Law 
professor. I think it may be of value to the community, please see below:

" The world's Regional Internet Registries (RIRs), coordinated by Number 
Resource Organization (NRO), manage the distribution of Internet Protocol (IP) 
addresses in five continents respectively. Although far less well known than 
domain names, IP addresses are also the critical resources essential to the 
proper function of the global internet. As the steward of the critical address 
resources, NRO and all the Regional Registries are highly respected technical 
organizations.

However, many people in the internet community are surprised, though not in a 
lovely way, by the NRO's public call requesting Mauritius government to 
intervene in a court case in which AFRINIC was sued by a company reportedly 
located in Hong Kong for a contractual dispute. AFRINIC is the RIR for Africa, 
established in 2004 and headquartered in Ebene, Mauritius. Since the case 
involves the complicated legal and internet governance issues during a long 
period of time, the merit and procedure of the case cannot be elaborated in 
such a short piece. But anyone, of course, has the right to comment or opine on 
the case and may well have the different propositions or preferences.

But the NRO's Open Letter dated July 12, 2022 to Mauritius Foreign Minister and 
Attorney General uncommonly requests the government take action against the 
on-going court proceeding in a country with "stable and consistent legal 
system." Should the NRO's request be successful, Mauritius would hardly be able 
to maintain her "stable and consistent legal system" simply because judicial 
independence, the cornerstone of rule of law, would be subverted.

Since AFRINIC deliberately chose "Mauritius as the most appropriate place to 
host this fundamental role for the regional Internet", it shall comply with the 
laws and court orders of that country. The NRO's belief that preservation and 
protection of "the independence of AFRINIC" be only achieved through 
repudiating Mauritius legal system that actually "benefit" AFRINIC is entirely 
paradoxical.

The contractual dispute is a civil dispute in nature. The NRO's blames on both 
the "abusive" litigation and Mauritius court orders (such as the interim 
measure to freeze the AFRINIC's bank account) should be able to be reviewed or 
resolved within the legal system of Mauritius. Instead of keeping any faith in 
the "stable and consistent legal system" from which AFRINIC chose to reside in 
order to obtain the benefit, the NRO's resort to the government powers to 
influence or control the court proceeding seems arbitrary, cynical and a bit 
arrogant to a sovereignty state. Doing so is of little help to AFRINIC that is 
subject to the territorial jurisdiction of Mauritius. Doesn't NRO consider that 
its proactive Letter could make AFRINIC less welcome in local host country?

More interestingly, the NRO requests in the letter that the AFRINIC be 
recognized from Mauritius "as an international organization." Actually, what's 
requested by the NRO is the legal immunity granted to the legal status of an 
international organization. However, only Intergovernmental Organizations 
(IGOs) created through multilateral international treaties, like the UN based 
in New York or World Trade Organization (WTO) based in Geneva, are entitled to 
the legal status of privileges or immunities based upon the respective founding 
charters or treaties. AFRINIC, as stated at www.afrinic.net, is a nonprofit and 
member-based organization registered and operating under the Corporate Legal 
Frameworks of Mauritius. Irrespective of the NRO's call to recognize AFRINIC as 
an international organization "as rapidly as possible", obviously, no such 
international treaty exists at the moment. Before requesting for AFRINIC's 
legal status of an international organization, the international treaty that 
can support the NRO's request has to be concluded. Notwithstanding AFRINIC's 
importance to Africa, including but not limited to providing the services to 
internet operators, fostering digital culture throughout the region, and 
supporting regional digital economy, it will inevitably take years for African 
countries to convene, negotiate and reach an agreement on the treaty for 
AFRINIC. Actually, very few internet organizations transform into treaty 
organizations. Most of them remain non-governmental nonprofit organizations. 
For example, both the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers and 
Internet Engineering Task Force, two most influential global internet 
organizations, are incorporated under the American laws without any treaty 
immunity status. Although the pros and cons about the so-called "UN model" has 
been hotly debated for a couple of years, technical community is largely not 
keen of transforming into treaty organizations for a variety of reasons. The 
NRO's request that AFRINIC be recognized as an IGO is an eyebrow-raising move 
to the internet technical community.

Alternatively, Mauritius legislature may extraordinarily enact a special law to 
grant the legal immunity for AFRINIC. If NRO calls for this approach, it is 
ironical that the call was made to the Foreign Minister and Attorney General, 
none of whom has the legislative powers.

By all means, transformation of AFRINIC into an international organization 
either through an international treaty or a special Mauritius law deserves 
strategic thinking and planning, not just for convenience.

Further, should AFRINIC obtain the legal immunity of an international 
organization, such legal status generally shouldn't be applied retrospectively. 
In an unlikely scenario that Mauritius government did address this issue "as 
rapidly as possible" as urged by NRO, it is still highly contentious why 
AFRINIC should be allowed to resort to the newly-gained legal immunity in the 
preexisting legal proceeding of a contractual dispute. Since non-retrospective 
is the commonly-recognized legal principle in the world, NRO's request for 
AFRINIC's international organization status, no matter successful or not, is 
unlikely to have any effect on the current court case.

Although internet technical organizations origined from North America and 
Europe, they now commit to function as the steward of critical internet 
resources in the global public interests.  They should keep in mind that mutual 
respect and trust between the internet organizations and sovereign states in 
the Global South are very important to the stable operation and development of 
the internet. NRO's Open Letter not only shows little understanding of the real 
legal issues in the proceeding but the striking sense of superiority in the 
post-colonist world. If NRO really wants to ensure AFRINIC "to remain 
accountable and subject to Mauritian laws", it should contribute to resolve the 
dispute, not to cause collateral damage."

(The author is a professor of law with the Beijing Normal University.)

https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202207/1271059.shtml
-- 

To unsubscribe from this mailing list, get a password reminder, or change your 
subscription options, please visit: 
https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ripe-list

Reply via email to