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The International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) assists countries pursuing accountability for past mass atrocity or human rights abuse. More
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Transitions
TJ News and Analysis from around the World
Under the Lens
ICC, Sudan, Arrest Warrants and Lubanga
Ten years after the coming into force of the Rome Statute, the International Criminal Court attracted more attention over the last month than ever before.
On June 13, the court ruled that a request by defendant Thomas Lubanga to halt the proceedings should be granted. The court found that the prosecutor had abused a rule allowed him to gather information from confidential sources for the purpose of investigation. Using this rule, the prosecutor had obtained a large number of documents from the United Nations but had been unable to release them either to the court or to Mr. Lubanga, as the prosecutor had not managed to obtain the consent of the UN to do so before the scheduled start of the trial.
This failure to give access to documents that may contain exonerating information to the defense before trial violated the right to a fair trial according to the court. For this reason, it decided to halt the proceedings. On July 2, it also decided to release Mr. Lubanga but agreed that the prosecutor could appeal to an appeals panel. The decision of the Appeals Chamber is expected shortly.
Is this a catastrophe for the court? It is certainly undesirable to have the first case dismissed on technical grounds rather than on the evidence. The narrow nature of the charges against Mr. Lubanga, who is charged with three counts of child recruitment, made the case vulnerable and apparently dependent on UN documents. However, the formal agreement between the UN and the ICC has put too much emphasis on confidentiality as a basis for sharing information and will need re-examination. The prosecutor will need access to such documents as evidence to bring and succeed in his cases.
While this issue is now with the Appeals Chamber, the decision of the trial court may cause the UN to reconsider its stance on making the documents available. The Trial Chamber decision is also a sign that the judges will be vigilant about the rights of the accused. After all, fair trials are more important for the long-term credibility of the court than convictions.
Developments in the Lubanga trial were eclipsed by the prosecutor's request July 14 for an arrest warrant for President Omar al-Bashir of Sudan on charges of genocide and crimes against humanity in Darfur. The request comes at a very difficult time for Sudan. From the time when the ICC issued arrest warrants against Ahmed Mohammed Harun and Ali Kushayb, in April 2007, Sudan has refused any cooperation with the court. Khartoum now threatens much more severe consequences that could result in the loss of life. Political support for the arrest warrants is uncertain, which is ironic since the Security Council itself referred the case to the court. While this referral began a process that was certain to lead to arrest warrants for those most responsible, it is unclear where the Security Council will stand. At the same time, the arrest warrants provide an important vindication for the victims of Darfur.
Photo: Thomas Lubanga at the International Criminal Court. Photo by Rob Keeris/AFP/Getty Images.
Fall Courses Announced
The ICTJ offers a wide range of courses and fellowship programs for
practitioners, academics, and students at the graduate and postgraduate
levels. The ICTJ is currently accepting applications for three fall
courses:
Workshop on
Transitional Justice and Development in Africa (Cape Town, South Africa,
September 15 - 19, 2008)
The theme of this workshop is "Enhancing socio-economic justice in
societies in transition: Case studies on the African continent." Sponsored
by the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) and hosted by the ICTJ, it
is the last in a three-part series of workshops that aims to foster
understanding of the relationship between transitional justice and development.
The ICTJ
Essentials Course: Spotlight on the European Experience (Brussels,
Belgium, November 12 - 14, 2008)
ICTJ Brussels, in association with the KU Leuven Faculty of Law, offers this
new three-day course, which adds a European aspect to the standard ICTJ
Essentials Course. It examines the mechanisms of transitional justice through a
deliberately European lens and the case studies in the course are drawn
from European experiences.
The
Cape Town Transitional Justice Fellowship Program (October 20- November 8,
2008)
ICTJ Cape Town offers an intensive three-week transitional justice course
taught by senior ICTJ staff and other visiting lecturers, including Andre du
Toit, Emeritus Professor at the University
of Cape Town and former
Truth and Reconciliation Commissioner Yasmin Sooka. Fellows will discuss
strategies that can bring about a more just, democratic, and peaceful society after
conflict or repressive rule.
The training provides an opportunity for fellows to develop a network of
human rights advocates from around the world. Participants who successfully
complete the Fellowship will receive a Certificate in Transitional Justice from
the ICTJ.
Visit the ICTJ website
to learn more about ICTJ courses and fellowships.
ICTJ, Duke: Archiving Transitional Justice
The ICTJ is pleased to announce a collaborative effort with the Duke University Libraries to preserve records of the ICTJ's global work. In the coming years, the Libraries' Archive for Human Rights will house the ICTJ's physical and digital archives.
"As an institution dedicated to dealing with the past, we have a strong appreciation for documentation and archives," said Louis Bickford, director of ICTJ's Policymakers and Civil Society Unit. "We became aware early on that we needed to take steps to secure our own institutional archive, and are very excited to work with Duke University Libraries to do so."
The transfer of material to take place over the next five years will include documentation relating to transitional justice and the ICTJ's work in both regional and thematic contexts. These materials will be made available to scholars and researchers.
"We are fully committed to preserving the remarkable print and digital records of the work of the ICTJ and to making them accessible into the future. It is an honor to be entrusted with this important collection of human rights documentation," said Deborah Jakubs, Rita DiGiallonardo Holloway University Librarian and Vice Provost for Library Affairs at Duke University.
An innovative digital records initiative at Duke University will ensure the preservation of thousands of historically important digital records.
"The ICTJ's archive will at some point be an essential resource for a wide variety of people, including researchers, historians, and human rights activists, interested in understanding the growth of the field of transitional justice," said ICTJ President Juan Mendez.
Duke's Archive for Human Rights also houses collections of other organizations, including the Center for International Policy, the Washington Office on Latin America and the International Monitor Institute.
Memorialization and Democracy
Throughout the world, societies must choose how to remember episodes
of past human rights abuse and mass atrocity. How they do so is
critical for sustainable peace and democratization. A new report,
Memorialization and Democracy: State Policy and Civic Action, explores
the complex issues related to remembering the past, with a special
emphasis on the role of both the state and civil society in creating
public memorials that strengthen democracy for the long-term.
The report is based on an international conference held in June 2007
in Santiago Chile that brought together 130 theorists, practitioners,
and policymakers from more that 20 countries to develop innovative
approaches to public memorials.
The conference sought to generate strategies for integrating
memorialization and democracy building, and grew out of three
imperatives:
- Memorialization can play a constructive role in shaping cultures of
democracy and therefore needs to be included in democracy-building
projects;
- Deliberate local, national, and international strategies are
required to ensure that memorials complement other democracy-building
efforts; and
- Strategies require participation of a wide variety of actors and must be tailored to diverse political and cultural contexts.
The report highlights conclusions reached at the conference, including:
- Sites need to promote dialogue rather than didactic approaches;
- Sites should involve and engage new generations;
- Creating sites is a process in which artists can play an important role;
- Context and creativity are two of the most necessary components of creating public memory sites; and
- Sites are places of civic engagement that can become central institutions of a thriving and stable democracy.
The report's authors include Sebastian Brett, Louis Bickford, Liz
Ševčenko and Marcela Rios. The Memorialization and Democracy
conference was organized by FLACSO-Chile, the ICTJ, and the
International Coalition of Historic Site Museums of Conscience, and its
Chilean counterpart, the Villa Grimaldi Peace Park Corporation.
Colombia: Truth and the Palace of Justice
A truth commission
investigating the 1985 attack on Colombia's Palace of Justice
has launched a website to encourage public participation as the commission
prepares a final report scheduled for release in 2009. With technical support
from the ICTJ, the commission is investigating the events of November 6-7, 1985, when members of the "April 9
Movement" (the guerilla group also known as M-19) forced their way into the Colombian
Supreme Court and the State Council, taking judges and staff members hostage.
Some hundred people were
killed, including eleven supreme court justices, in a battle that involved the
guerrillas as well as government forces. A dozen other people remain
unaccounted for.
Established by Colombia's Supreme
Court of Justice, the truth commission is a nonjudicial research group. Commission
members are three former chairmen of the court: Jorge Anibal Gomez Gallego,
Jose Roberto Herrera Vergara and Nilson Pinilla Pinilla. The commission
submitted a preliminary report in 2006 and a supplement in 2007.
The commission's new web
site, www.verdadpalacio.org.co, is part of an effort to
increase public participation in the commission's work as it prepares a final
report. The commission will also conduct public hearings this year. The website,
which has public documents related to the 1985 attack, invites witnesses to
participate through a "contribution to the truth" link.
The commission can
contribute to truth and social memory in Colombia, and may also pave the way
for a future truth commission focused on investigating a generation of
violence.
Transitional Justice in The News
Prosecutors urged an appeals panel at the International Criminal Court to reverse a decision to dismiss charges aganist militita leader Thomas Lubanga of the Democratic Republic of Congo. Lubanga's trial, the ICC's first, was to have started last month but was stalled when the court ruled that the prosecution had wrongly withheld evidence from Lubanga's lawyers. Lubanga is accused of war crimes conducted by the armed wing of the Union of Congolese Patriots between September 2002 and August 2003 in the DRC.
The Colombia
military freed Ingrid Betancourt along with 14 other hostages from the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), a rescue that was a serious blow
to the 44-year-old leftist guerilla movement, which considered Betancourt one
of its most highly prized hostages. The rescue has ignited renewed calls for
the FARC to release all remaining hostages and for the government and the FARC
to end the nearly five-decade-long conflict. FARC had abducted Betancourt in
February 2002 during her bid for the presidency.
Eleven
Timorese citizens, including ICTJ's Manuela Leong Pereira, delivered a petition
to the Court of Appeal and the Provedor for Human Rights and Justice in
Timor-Leste. The petition asks the Court of Appeal to declare a Presidential
Decree that grants executive clemency to 94 prisoners null and void. Among the
prisoners are several high profile militia members from the country's unrest in
1999. Some of the prisoners have already been released, including Team Alfa
militia leader Joni Marques, who was jailed for 33 years in 2001 after the first
trial in Timor-Leste for crimes against humanity.
A UN appeals court overturned the war crimes conviction of Naser Oric, a
Bosnian Muslim considered a war hero by many in his country for fighting Serbs
in Srebrenica during Bosnia's
1992-95 war. Oric, 41, was convicted in 2006 by the International Criminal
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) for failing to prevent the murder and
torture of Serb captives in Srebrenica. At that time judges sentenced him to
two years imprisonment but ordered his
immediate release because of time already spent in custody. Appeals judges
overturned the convictions because the original trial failed to establish that
Oric had control over forces responsible for the crimes. The ICTY was
established in 1993 to try serious violations of international humanitarian law
committed in the former Yugoslavia
since 1991.
The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) has rejected a request
to return a genocide suspect to Rwanda
on the grounds that he would not receive a fair trial. Ildephonse Hategekimana
is accused of genocide and crimes against humanity including crimes committed
by his subordinates. He served as the commander of a small military camp during
the 1994 genocide and is the third suspect that the ICTR has refused to return
to Rwanda
in recent weeks. The ICTR was established in November 1994 to try persons
responsible for genocide and other serious violations of international
humanitarian law committed in Rwanda
in 1994.
Historians and human rights activists have called for Morocco and Spain to address the violations committed by Spain during the 1920s in the Rif region in the north of Morocco. The Moroccan Equity and Reconciliation Commission was the first truth commission to be established in the region. Its work was limited to examine human rights abuses that occurred after Morocco's independence in 1956, but has brought about demands to address abuses perpetrated by Spain against the Moroccan civilian population in the north, including the use of chemical weapons during the Rif war (1921-1927).
Original article "España y sus bombas tóxicas sobre Marruecos" only available in Spanish.
A former head of Peru's
army intelligence service and an ex-member of a military death squad have been
sentenced to 20 years in prison for the killing of nine students and a
professor in 1992. According to local media, the court convicted
ex-intelligence chief Col. Alberto Pinto and Wilmer Yarleque, a former member
of the Colina death squad, of murder, for their roles in the La Cantuta
killings-a landmark human rights case in Peru, where security forces and leftist
rebels battled each other in a bloody conflict in the 1980s and
early 1990s.
In June, the Canadian government formally
apologized to former students of Indian residential schools-the first formal
apology from the government over the federally financed program-and the
Canadian Truth and Reconciliation formally began its work. Eduardo Gonzalez, deputy director of ICTJ's Americas
Program, and others discuss the process of truth and reconciliation worldwide.
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