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THE CAMPAIGN FOR THE ACCOUNTABILITY OF AMERICAN BASES (CAAB) |
By EDITH M. LEDERER
Associated Press Writer
UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The new Iraqi war crimes tribunal includes provisions
taken from the International Criminal Court, which the United States vehemently
opposes - an irony that the international court's supporters have been quick to
note.
The statute establishing the Iraqi Special Tribunal was approved by the Iraqi
Governing Council and signed into law on Dec. 10 by L. Paul Bremer, the top U.S.
administrator in Iraq, on behalf of the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional
Authority.
It has come under intense scrutiny because members of the Iraqi Governing
Council said this week that the Special Tribunal would try Saddam Hussein,
though the United States says no decision has been made.
The statute for the Iraqi tribunal has been published and was distributed to
the U.N. Security Council on Thursday by U.S. Ambassador John Negroponte,
prompting comparison with the 1998 Rome statute that created the International
Criminal Court.
``It's very instructive that the Iraqi Governing Council decided to literally
cut and paste the definitions of the crimes of genocide, crimes against
humanity, and war crimes for their tribunal from the International Criminal
Court statute,'' Richard Dicker, head of the International Justice Program at
Human Rights Watch, said Friday.
The Iraqi court's reliance on the 1998 Rome Statute establishing the
International Criminal Court shows the treaty has set a standard for the
definition of these crimes, Dicker told The Associated Press.
``It's the ultimate irony that the U.S. government, which is the greatest
obstacle to the ICC today, helped oversee the drafting and inclusion of the very
crimes from the very court that it treats as anathema into the language of the
Iraqi Special Tribunal,'' Dicker said.
The American Non-Governmental Organization Coalition for the International
Criminal Court sent an e-mail to supporters Friday also noting that ``almost all
of the substantive provisions are word for word from the ICC's Rome Statute.''
The International Criminal Court is the first permanent international war
crimes tribunal and targets the future Pol Pots and Adolf Hitlers of the world.
It will prosecute cases of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity
committed after July 1, 2002, but will step in only when countries are unwilling
or unable to dispense justice themselves.
The United States is the most vocal opponent of the court, arguing that
Americans - especially soldiers - could be singled out for frivolous or
politically motivated prosecutions simply because of its superpower status. It
objects to the idea that Americans could be subject to the court's jurisdiction
even if the United States is not a party to the pact.
But the more than 90 countries that have ratified the Rome treaty - including
all 15 members of the European Union - counter that it contains enough
safeguards to prevent such abuses.
The American NGO Coalition noted that the Iraqi statute was drafted by an
American supporter of the ICC who was chairman of the drafting committee at the
Rome conference - Professor Cherif Bassiouni, president of DePaul University Law
School's International Human Rights Law Institute in Chicago.
It was then checked by lawyers in the coalition's legal office from Britain,
Australia and the United States, the coalition said. The text apparently was
approved in English and there is still no Arabic translation, it said.
The Iraqi statute differs from the ICC statute in key ways: Its jurisdiction
is limited to Iraqi nationals and residents accused of crimes between 1968 and
May, whereas the ICC statute provides for cases to come to the court through a
state that has ratified the treaty, the U.N. Security Council, or the court's
prosecutor.
The Iraqi statute also includes some crimes under Iraqi law as well as the
death penalty - a problem for some European countries and the United Nations
which oppose capital punishment.
The NGO coalition said the Iraqi court's reliance on the International
Criminal Court statute clearly demonstrates that the Bush administration
``considers it to be a reliable restatement of the current status of
international law.''
But since ``no American could ever be tried'' by the Iraqi court it ``does
not reflect any softening of the U.S. ICC position,'' the group said.