Libya, Peace and Justice: ‘Gaddafi has to go’ but Peace must be Negotiated

Justice Libya

What will happen when the bombing ends? (Photo: Emilio Morenatti/AP)

Missing from the coverage of the war in Libya has been any discussion as to what the end goal is. Yes, there has been a lot of talk, although little consensus, about what should happen with Gaddafi. But what about Libya itself? When the coalition partners involved in the mission in Libya ask themselves “where do you see Libya in five years” what is their answer?

What is the international community trying to achieve, and more importantly what is possible to achieve? Is the aim to have the current rebels controlling the country? Perhaps a leader, handpicked by the coalition powers, will be chosen to oversee a transition to democracy?

Lost in the midst of the chaotic and equally ambiguous mission in Libya are questions regarding what happens when the bombing ends. The conventional wisdom of conflict resolution suggests that only a negotiated settlement between the rebels and the pro-Gaddafi factions can guarantee peace. That may clash with another goal of the mission: justice.

It is an accepted truism amongst scholars and practitioners of conflict resolution that unless there is a clear victor in an armed conflict, a negotiated peace agreement is necessary.

Libya war

Photo: Tyler Hicks, NYT

Conflicts that end in negotiated agreements, rather than military victory by one party, tend to include provisions for power-sharing between the conflicting parties. The hope is that power-sharing can reassure previously conflicting parties about key issues concerning the control of and access to economic resources, political power and security. It is argued that power-sharing is particularly necessary where the social fabric of a society has particularly sharp ethnic, religious, regional, or other, tensions.

In a recent paper, Power-Sharing and Transitional Justice: A Clash of Paradigms, Stef Vandeginste and Chandra Lekha Sriram (2011) argue that the paradigms of post-conflict power-sharing and accountability clash. Where conflicts have included mass atrocities, a typical response has been to grant amnesty laws or offer exile to perpetrators as an incentive to continue the process of negotiating peace.

A problem arises when attempting to provide a place for justice in power-sharing agreements. The problem is exacerbated because, as Michael Scharf notes, it is unrealistic to believe that a party would cease hostilities if “they would find themselves or their close associates facing life imprisonment.” For some, like Jack Snyder and Leslie Vinjamuri, this reflects the rather uncomfortable reality that, for some, the perpetrators of atrocities may sometimes be “indispensable allies” in the pursuit of peace.

rebel media

The rebels media center (Photo: John Moore Getty Images)

Let’s apply the theory to Libya. The past few weeks have shown that Gaddafi retains a remarkable, perhaps surprising, level of support within Libya. The result, as characterized by The Economist, has been constant “see-sawing” in the fighting between pro-Gaddafi forces and the rebels. The divisions within the social fabric of Libya are clearly profound and, according to some, the outbreak of war along tribal lines remains a distinct possibility. While it’s difficult to ascertain where it derives and how strong it is, it does appear that Gaddafi retains significant levels of loyal support.

All of this would may suggest that a negotiated settlement, with power-sharing provisions, between the rebels and pro-Gaddafi forces is the only way to end the peace. Interestingly, this was recognized in an attempt to broker a truce by the African Union. Gaddafi accepted their plan, which included a “dialogue between the government and rebels on a political settlement”. The rebels subsequently rejected it on the basis that “[t]he African Union initiative does not include the departure of Gaddafi and his sons from the Libyan political scene.”

If it is increasingly evident that, at the current pace, there will be no decisive victor in Libya. Yet the ambivalence about what should be done with Gaddafi has been replaced by a vehement consensus that “it is impossible to imagine a future for Libya with Qaddafi in power.” In their now infamous letter, President Obama, President Sarkozy and Prime Minister Cameron declared:

“The International Criminal Court is rightly investigating the crimes committed against civilians and the grievous violations of international law. It is unthinkable that someone who has tried to massacre his own people can play a part in their future government. The brave citizens of those towns that have held out against forces that have been mercilessly targeting them would face a fearful vengeance if the world accepted such an arrangement. It would be an unconscionable betrayal.”

Meanwhile, there are reports that the US and others are seeking states to offer Gaddafi asylum. Uganda recently declared that it would welcome Gaddafi.

Tripoli Gaddafi

Gaddafi retains significant levels of support and the capacity to fight a long war (Photo: Ben Curtis/AP)

A number of observers have argued that the ICC’s investigation of Gaddafi may make the chances of peace less likely. It is an argument based on a lot of assumptions of what conflict resolution entails and what incentives exist in negotiating peace. It is also an unbalanced argument which fails to consider counter-narratives. Doug Saunders, for example, recently argued that justice “stands in the way of” Gaddafi’s departure:

“By applying the pressure of justice to a savage leader, the ICC may have perpetuated, rather than ended, his crimes: Col. Gadhafi and his sons and generals do not dare end their campaign of violence if it means spending years in a Dutch cell.”

Max Boot similarly argued that because of the ICC:

“Qaddafi has every incentive to fight to the death and take a lot of people down with him.”

Putting aside the problem of laying blame at the feet of the ICC rather than the UN Security Council, the argument, on some level, is compelling: why would individuals like Gaddafi negotiate an agreement which delivered them to the Hague? They wouldn’t, the argument goes, and instead will have every incentive to continue committing atrocities.

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Posted in African Union (AU), Amnesty, France, Human Rights, International Criminal Court (ICC), Libya, Libya and the ICC, Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), Peace Negotiations, Transitional Justice, Truth Commission, Uganda, UN Security Council, United Kingdom, United States | 2 Comments

More Justice in Argentina: Dirty War Dictator Gets Life Sentence

Argentina Dirty War

Nunca más: "Never Again" (Photo: Nadim Ab)

Last month, Argentina continued its remarkable zeal for justice and accountability by putting two of its most brutal leaders on trial. Former Argentine dictators Jorge Videla and Reynaldo Bignone, along with six others, were brought to trial for crimes committed during the so-called ‘Dirty War’.

Yesterday, Bignone and other Dirty War figures were convicted and sentenced. Bignone was sentenced to life in prison.

If there is a “grandfather” of transitional justice, it wouldn’t be a person; it would be Argentina. If most post-conflict contexts are characterized by not having any or having too few transitional justice mechanisms, Argentina can be characterized as pretty much having all of them, including numerous trials, and truth commission (CONADEP) and amnesty laws.

What is particularly remarkable about the trial of Videla, Bignone, and others is that it continues Argentina’s mission to have all crimes adjudicated. It would be easy to have taken the first chance to throw the inconvenient figures of Argentina’s history into jail and simply leave them there. However, such an approach denies other victims and survivors the ability to see justice.

As I noted in an earlier post, Iraq serves as a good example. In 2006, Saddam Hussein was convicted and sentenced to death for crimes against humanity against 148 Shias in Dujail in 1982. Certainly the crimes committed under Hussein’s regime over twenty-five years were more widespread than the deaths of these 148 Shias. The result was that a more ‘complete’ justice for Hussein’s victims was denied. Some of the sharpest critics of Hussein’s trial have gone so far as to suggest this was a political decision by the US which did not want Hussein to present embarrassing and damning evidence of Iraq’s relationship with the US.

Argentina Transitional Justice

Bignone (glancing at camera) was sentenced to life (Photo: http://www.elpais.com)

In the case of Argentina, the country has clearly taken the view that the continuous pursuit of justice and truth is a priority. Bignone, for example, had already been sentenced to 25 years (at his age of 83, the equivalent of a life sentence) for his role in the abduction, torture and murder of 56 people.

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Posted in Amnesty, Argentina, Human Rights, Iraq, Transitional Justice, Truth and Reconciliation Commissions | 2 Comments

Ivory Coast and the ICC: This Justice for You, That Justice for Me?

Laurent Gbagbo and Alassane Ouattara during happier times (Photo: http://www.umuseke.com)

Ivorian President Alassane Ouattara was quoted today speaking about the need for all individuals responsible for human rights violations to be brought to justice:

Mr Ouattara…said that all those responsible for committing atrocities in Ivory Coast’s civil war, including his own troops, must face justice.

“I will speak shortly with the ICC’s chief prosecutor so the court can begin investigations,” Mr Ouattara said during his first major press conference since being able to exercise executive power.

“These massacres are unacceptable… I am revolted,” he said.

So far so good, right? President Ouattara’s words are a welcome commitment to investigating crimes committed on all sides. This is critical given widespread reports that forces on both sides of the conflict have allegedly committed atrocities. Any justice will be hollow unless all parties responsible for crimes are investigated.

Nevertheless, there should be a healthy dose of skepticism. Ouattara’s declaration that he will speak to ICC Prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo “so the court can begin investigations” suggests that Ouattara will shortly officially refer Ivory Coast to the Court. However, it may not be in the best interests of either Ivorians nor justice for the situation in Ivory Coast to be referred by Ouattara to the ICC. That justice is both done and seen to be done in an impartial manner may best be guaranteed if the ICC’s prosecutor opens an investigation proprio motu.

Ivory Coast ICC

Reconciliation in Ivory Coast requires that all alleged perpetrators are brought to justice (Photo: GLENNA GORDON/AFP/Getty Images)

History has shown that it is not always in beneficial to have a government implicated in a conflict refer a situation to the Court.

In the case of northern Uganda, the first situation referred to the ICC, the Court has been plagued by claims that its pursuit of justice has been biased because it has only sought arrest warrants for members of the Lord’s Resistance Army and not of Ugandan government forces. Some have suggested that the Court, desperate to open an official investigation but wary of doing so proprio motu, pressured the Government of Uganda to refer the situation in northern Uganda to the ICC, which it did in 2003. In a case of horrible optics, the ICC Prosecutor held a press conference covering the Court’s investigation alongside Uganda President Yoweri Museveni. As Tim Allen wrote:

“…the court made an error in judgement in January 2004 when the chief prosecutor held a joint press briefing with President Museveni. From that time onwards, his office has had to struggle to demonstrate that it is not simply ‘in the pocket’ of the Ugandan government.”

Equally problematic is the apparent suggestion that while Gbagbo will face criminal prosecution, Ouattara’s forces may only be subject to a Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Ouattara has been adamant about bringing Gbagbo to justice. But as for his forces, he has only said that:

Both sides will be brought to account by a planned Truth and Reconciliation Commission based in Ivory Coast.

Ouattara’s pledge to create a Truth and Reconciliation Commission is welcome (if underwhelming) and if it is given the capacity and power to fulfil a mandate of effectively investigating events and establishing truths regarding the conflict in Ivory Coast, such a Commission could contribute significantly to both peace and justice.

However, if transitional justice is to be pursued credibly and legitimately and thus contribute to the process of reconciliation in Ivory Coast, individuals on all sides must be accessible to both criminal procedures as well as the work of the prospective truth commission. Justice has no favourites and Ouattara’s forces cannot be subject to a different form of justice than Gbagbo’s. That, indeed, would not be justice but injustice.

Posted in Human Rights, International Criminal Court (ICC), Ivory Coast / Côte d'Ivoire, Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), Truth and Reconciliation Commissions, Uganda | 5 Comments

A Case for ICC Intervention in Ivory Coast

Gbagbo ICC Ivory Coast

It seems clear that former Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo will be brought to trial but there are allegations that forces loyal to new President Ouattara may also have committed atrocities (Photo: Foreign Policy)

The worst appears to be over. The detention of Laurent Gbagbo yesterday by French forces, (or was it Alassane Ouattara troops?), appears to have closed an ugly, brutal and costly chapter of Ivorian history.

Over the past few days there has been a buzz in the air about the possibility of the International Criminal Court investigating possible crimes against humanity in the Ivory Coast. The ICC’s Prosecutor, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, has expressed a desire to open an investigation and there’s a sense that it isn’t a matter of whether he will initiate an investigation, but when he will.

In line with the remarkable spread of the use of accountability and transitional justice language, President Ouattara’s camp has expressed its desire to create a Truth and Reconciliation Commission and to put Gbagbo on trial. Ivory Coasts’ representative to the UN declared that Gbagbo will be brought to justice:

The question is whether the international community, and the ICC in particular, should sit back and see whether Ouattara’s government can and will investigate and prosecute those responsible for atrocities or whether it should intervene now.

Skeptics of the ICC’s involvement will argue that the Court has no place in intervening in Ivory Coast, at least not until it is obvious that the new government refuses to bring individuals responsible for crimes to account. They will sensibly argue that Ivory Coast should have the “first shot” at establishing the rule of law and respect for democracy. Criminal prosecutions, after all, are most fruitful and effective when conducted locally.

I largely agree with this view and agree that Ivory Coast should have primacy over an investigation and trial. However, the ICC’s involvement would not undermine the capacity for Ouattara to initiate credible and legitimate trials. On the contrary, it might provide an impetus to do so.

Ivory Coast ICC

While Gbagbo has been detained, Ivory Coast still faces many challenges ahead (Photo: Sia Kambou/AFP/Getty Images)

The situation in Ivory Coast remains incredibly sensitive. It is far from a foregone conclusion that the country will not return to violence. While the hope of weathering the storm and returning to calm has increased, the country is still in turbulent waters. As one observer accurately described it: “whether this country will be able to bounce back from the depths of violence, propaganda and hate that he dragged it into is anything but certain.” A state whose streets have been littered with the bodies of victims does not transform to peace, security and stability overnight.

The delicacy of the current situation is further complicated by the sharp divisions that run through the country and which may provide fodder for future violent conflict. Indeed, the French denials that their special forces were responsible for detaining Gbagbo and their adamant assurances that it was Ivorian forces which nabbed him, are intended to prevent any provocation of the deep chasm that divides Gbagbo’s and Ouattara’s supporters.

Further complicating the situation is that troops on both sides of the conflict have allegedly committed atrocities. Ivory Coast is not a black-and-white story of bad guys committing atrocities (Gbagbo forces) against good guys fighting for democracy (Ouatttara forces). It is clear that Gbagbo’s troops committed crimes that must be investigated and as one Human Rights Watch (HRW) official argued,“Gbagbo has been credibly implicated in crimes against humanity and other atrocities for which he should be held to account.” However, evidence suggests that Ouattara’s forces may also be responsible for human rights abuses.

A recent report by HRW suggested that Ouattara’s forces killed hundreds of civilians, raped more than twenty alleged Gbagbo supporters, and burned at least 10 villages in Côte d’Ivoire’s far western region. The UN has expressed fears that Gbagbo supporters could be the target of retributive violence. Further, as Phil Clark writes in his lucid account of Ouattara’s and Gbagbo’s history, despite having the support and backing of most of the international community, Ouattara’s history gives reason to “question his democratic credentials and his ability to ensure stable governance.”

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Posted in International Criminal Court (ICC), Ivory Coast / Côte d'Ivoire, Transitional Justice, Truth and Reconciliation Commissions | 4 Comments

The ICC and Ivory Coast: Proprio Motu is the Way to Go

UN Ivory Coast

The ICC is likely to open an investigation into alleged crimes in Ivory Coast (Photo: Telegraph)

The ICC wants in. The Court’s Prosecutor has expressed a desire to investigate potential crimes committed in the Ivory Coast. If the ICC is to judicially intervene in the Ivory Coast it will need to both actually stay above the political fray as well as appear to stay above the fray. Its chances of doing so are better if the Prosecutor initiates an investigation proprio motu – by his own volition.

Last week, ICC Prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo indicated that his office would like to investigate alleged crimes in Ivory Coast. Ocampo declared that:

“We are discussing with some (ICC) state parties, particularly within the region, if they wish to refer the case. That would help to expedite the activities of the court…What we are doing now is collecting information in order to open an investigation there. We are concerned about the recent information of massive atrocities in the west of Ivory Coast and we are trying to define exactly what happened there.”

In short, Ocampo may open an investigation proprio motu but would prefer to do so with a referral by the UN Security Council or member-state from West Africa.

The decision of Ocampo to seek a referral rather than open an investigation proprio motu has stumped some observers. Kevin Heller, over at Opinio Juris, opined that the Prosecutor’s angle on investigating alleged crimes in Ivory Coast “is just dumb”, given that the Prosecutor must identify reasonable grounds to open an investigation regardless of whether he seeks a referral or opens an investigation proprio motu. Heller concludes that:

“States fought long and hard to ensure that the Prosecutor has proprio motu powers.  Moreno-Ocampo finally got over his ridiculous love of self-referrals with the Kenyan situation; if he wants to investigate in Cote D’Ivoire, he should — to quote the famous Greek philosopher Nike — just do it.”

I agree that opening an investigation into potential crimes in Ivory Coast proprio motu is the correct course of action. The nature of the violence in Ivory Coast suggests that all parties to the conflict there may be implicated in atrocities and human rights violations. Initiating an investigation proprio motu would allow the Court to appear unbiased as it accumulates evidence and investigates crimes.

I have no doubt that the Office of the Prosecutor of the ICC will investigate all sides of the conflict and conduct its investigation impartially. However, one of the more important lessons drawn in recent years has been that justice must not only be done, but must be seen to be done. It may be just as important that an investigation is seen to be impartial as whether or not it is, in fact, impartial.

Given alleged abuses by Ouattara's forces, one observer wondered whether he was a "hero or a villain" (Photo: CNN)

It has become painfully evident that atrocities have likely been committed by both sides in recent days. Despite being granted the legitimacy of the international community following the election victory of Alassane Ouattara over Laurent Gbagbo, the Ouattara camp has recklessly squandered the world’s good will by allegedly committing abuses against Gbagbo supporters. On April 9th, Human Rights Watch declared condemned the actions of Ouattara’s troops:

“Forces loyal to President-elect Alassane Ouattara killed hundreds of civilians, raped more than 20 alleged supporters of his rival, Laurent Gbagbo, and burned at least 10 villages in Côte d’Ivoire’s far western region.”

Column Lynch of Foreign Policy recently wondered whether Ouattara was a hero or a villain, noting that:

Ouattara’s standing as Ivory Coast’s new leader is already being tarnished amid reports that forces loyal to his cause have engaged in gross human rights abuses during an offensive aimed at driving Gbagbo from power.

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Posted in International Criminal Court (ICC), Ivory Coast / Côte d'Ivoire, Transitional Justice, Uganda | Leave a comment

The US and the ICC: Towards A Closer Relationship?

A number of recent events and statements have brought the relationship between the United States and the ICC back into focus. Most notably, the US was amongst the permanent members of the UN Security Council which agreed to refer Libya to the ICC. This was particularly important because the US voted in favour of Resolution 1970 whereas in the Security Council’s only other referral of a situation to the Court, the referral of Darfur to the ICC in 2005, the US abstained.

Last week, US Ambassador-at-large for War Crimes Issues, Stephen Rapp, reaffirmed American support for the Court stating that the US is cooperating with the ICC and believes that all of its “cases are appropriate and cry out for justice – and in the absence of genuine proceedings at the national level –they require effective international justice.”

I haven’t had an opportunity to read her book, but in Fighting for Darfur, Rebecca Hamilton apparently reveals that the Obama administration was largely responsible for preventing the deferral of the ICC’s case against Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir.

All of this suggests a relationship that has come a long way from the politically acrimonious position of the US towards the ICC that characterized the early years of the Bush administration. The US-ICC relationship has been historically tumultuous but appears to be comfortably sailing through calmer – and more cooperative – waters. I thought it would be a good time to take a look back at the relationship between the Court and the US to see just how far the relationship has come.

The relationship between the Court and the US has moved from active hostility to begrudging acceptance to concerted efforts at positive engagement. While the often uncomfortable and at times hostile approach of the United States appeared to hinder prospects for ICC’s success in the early years of the Court’s existence, there is significant evidence that the ICC has weathered the challenge. The current attitude in Washington is promising. Nevertheless, it is important to temper expectations about relations between the ICC and the US. It remains unlikely that the US will join the Court in the near future, there remain significant political barriers to overcome before the US joins the ICC, and the possibility of realpolitik guiding the decision-making of the US in situations where the Court is involved remains ever-present.

Explanations of American hostility towards the ICC have been numerous and divergent. In his venomous article, Courting Danger: What’s Wrong with the International Criminal Court, John Bolton argued that the ICC is contradictory to the constitutional ideals of the US, is an overreaching and unaccountable institution, which America should “isolate it through our diplomacy, in order to prevent it from acquiring any further legitimacy or resources.” Kingsley Moghalu suggests that ‘main street USA’ people are “reflexively opposed to subject U.S. citizens to such a sensitive act of international governance as international criminal justice under any circumstances.” This is echoed by Paul Kahn who maintains that the issue of American opposition to the court is one that is deeper than it simply being against the state’s national interest. Opposition “has little to do with the substantive threat it represents to particular American goals and little to do with a fear of political misuse”. Rather, it’s about the fundamental nature of what it is to be American and the faith of “the rule of law as rule by the popular sovereign.” The explanation of American exceptionalism has been widespread. G. John Ikenberry argued that in the post-Cold War context, the unipolar world, with America as its hegemon, leads to the U.S. to demand special status in, and exemptions from, multilateral institutions and arrangements. The United States “argues that it cannot sign the International Criminal Court treaty because its global security presence makes Americans unusually vulnerable to politically inspired prosecutions.” For his part, William Schabas answers the question of why the ‘US hates the ICC so much’ by asserting: “It’s all about the Security Council.” For Schabas, American ambivalence to the ICC has stemmed from frustrations that it is not subordinate to the UNSC.

Bolton ICC

John Bolton has been perhaps the Court’s most vociferous critic calling on it to be isolated (Photo: AP)

While some explanations are more convincing than others, reservations led President Bill Clinton, who signed the Rome Statute at the conclusion of his tenure, to proclaim that he did not “recommend that my successor submit the Treaty to the Senate for advice and consent until our fundamental concerns are satisfied.”

During the early years of George W. Bush administration, the US undertook efforts to undermine and isolate the ICC. In June 2002, the Bush administration took the unprecedented step of ‘unsigning’ the Rome Statute, declaring that “the United States has no legal obligations arising from its signature” of the Statute. That same year the administration adopted the American Service-Members Protection Act, also ominously known as the ‘Hague Invasion Act’, which included provisions to: prevent any American citizens or ‘allied persons’ from being prosecuted by the ICC; prohibit the provision of military aid to states party to the Court with some exceptions including  key allies and when providing aid is deemed “important to the national interest of the United States”; and that, should any members of the American armed forces be detained by the ICC, the US president is authorized to use “all means necessary and appropriate” to ensure their release. Further, the US negotiated, often through coercive means, Bilateral Immunity Agreements with some 100 other states, whereby states agreed to ensure that no American citizen would be prosecuted by the ICC while on their territory. Despite these efforts to impair the ICC’s capacity to be an effective, independent and strong institution, the relationship between the US and the ICC has not always been unproductive.

The US abstained from the UN Security Council Resolution 1593 referring the situation in Darfur to the ICC (Photo: Telegraph)

In 2005, the UN Security Council referred the situation in Darfur to the ICC with Resolution 1593. While the Bush administration had preferred and lobbied for the creation of an ad hoc tribunal to investigate crimes in Darfur, the US eventually abstained from the vote on the Resolution, allowing it to pass. The resolution accommodated American exceptionalism by including the assurance that no American officials or personnel could be investigated or prosecuted. Only citizens of nations party to the ICC can be sought by the Court, allowing America to remain beyond prosecution. Furthermore, America agreed to abstain from the Security Council vote. The resolution granted the ICC no funding for its investigation nor promised any future political support, leading Robert Cryer to criticize it as a selective and incomplete reaction to Darfur. However, American abstention was clearly “a move away from the scathing anti-ICC rhetoric that has characterized the contributions of some members of the US government to the debate.” It was a sign that, at least in some circumstances, the US would not stand in the way of the ICC’s ability to function. Anne Patterson, the American deputy ambassador to the UN explained that the U.S. “decided not to oppose the resolution because of the need of the international community to work together in order to end the climate of impunity in Sudan,” remarkably similar to words spoken by the ICC’s proponents. The firm objections and concerns of the US have been further softened with the ascension of the Obama administration to power.

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Posted in Human Rights, International Criminal Court (ICC), Sudan, Truth and Reconciliation Commissions, UN Security Council, United States | 57 Comments

Breaking News: International Criminal Court Announces New ‘3 Strikes’ Genocide Policy

From a remarkably credible source:

THE HAGUE—In an effort to crack down on the systematic killing of entire races and ethnic groups, International Criminal Court officials introduced a new “three strikes” policy Monday that mandates harsher punishments for offenders receiving their third genocide conviction. “You get three chances, and that’s it,” said ICC president Sang-Hyun Song, a judge with a reputation for being tough on genocide. “It doesn’t matter if you’re slaughtering rival clans en masse, gassing your own people, or gunning down all males over the age of 15 in front of their families and neighbors. If it’s your third time, we’re throwing the book at you.” According to the ICC, three-time perpetrators of genocide will face stiff fines and have to issue formal public apologies, pending appeals.

Happy April Fools’ Day folks!

Posted in Genocide, Humour, International Criminal Court (ICC) | Leave a comment

Ugandan Holiday? Thoughts on the Offer of Asylum to Gaddafi

Qhaddafi

Would Gaddafi "peace out" and head to Uganda? (Photo: undergroundrepublik.com)

Uganda has become the first country to offer asylum, if asked to do so, to Libya’s Gaddafi. This comes at a time when ambiguity proliferates as to what fate the international community sees as necessary for Gaddafi.

A few thoughts on the subject:

1. Words matter and the offer of asylum was not an offer of exile. Exile occurs when an individual is either forcibly or voluntarily removed from his/her native country. Asylum, on the other hand, has a long legal history, and requires a state to protect and provide immunity from extradition to an individual who fears being persecuted in their native country. Much of the talk thus far has been on exile. Uganda, as well as other potential asylum destinations for Gaddafi (Chad, Mali, Niger, Eritrea, Sudan, Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua), however, have taken their commitment a step farther. Whether it’s far enough is another question (see below).

2. Uganda is a member-state of the ICC and its offer of asylum puts it in an awkward position given that the situation in Libya is being investigated by the Court, and Gaddafi himself is being investigated for potential crimes against humanity and war crimes. However – and this is a big however – if Gaddafi were to accept the Ugandan offer, Uganda would currently be under no obligation to detain Gaddafi.

The investigation in Libya by the ICC is currently in a holding pattern until the Court decides whether arrest warrants should be issued. My understanding is that prior to an arrest warrant being issued, no member-state of the ICC has the obligation to arrest Gaddafi.

3. In the case of Gaddafi, the offer of asylum is an implicit recognition that he has committed crimes (see comments for clarification). Yes, asylum would grant Gaddafi immunity, but immunity is only granted to those who “require” it. In other words, if Gaddafi were to be granted asylum it would be an acknowledgment that he has committed crimes. Unfortunately, this type of acknowledgment would be vastly insufficient for those who have suffered because of him.

Gaddafi rebels

Will Gaddafi accept an offer of asylum in Uganda or elsewhere? (Photo: The Guardian)

4. It remains unlikely that Gaddafi will, in fact, leave Libya. I think that is obvious by now, although given his unpredictability, it may be wiser to refrain from guessing what Gaddafi will do next. The uncertainty about what the international community believes should be Gaddafi’s fate certainly hasn’t helped. On the contrary, the ambiguity they are exhibiting may provide incentives for him to stay in power. A conference in London with dozens of foreign ministers this past week did not rule out the possibility of allowing Gaddafi’s exile. Paul Koring observed that:

The tough talk of relentless pressure aimed to oust the unpredictable and brutal despot who has ruled Libya for 41 years didn’t entirely drown out hints of possible exile and the possibility of avoiding a war crimes trial.

Ambiguity is rife. The Guardian described the myriad of disagreements as such:

the conference hall exposed fault lines in the international community over the next vital stages: whether to arm and recognise the rebels, and whether Gaddafi might leave voluntarily if he was given a chance to take exile rather than stand trial either in Libya or at the international criminal court.

There is a very delicate and, some would say, precarious diplomatic balancing of peace and justice being conducted right now. It is obvious that numerous states, particularly Western states, would like to see Gaddafi brought to the ICC. Gaddafi, however, retains large pockets of support in numerous African states and they, amongst others, have expressed reservations over bringing Gaddafi to the Hague. The emerging compromise appears to be exile.

The problem, of course, is that the longer the international community remains ambiguous about what it sees as the appropriate fate for Gaddafi, the greater incentive he has to continue fighting. While most reports focus on the rebels, Gaddafi clearly has strong backing from many Libyans as well as the money to fund soldiers and perhaps even mercenaries. Orthodox conflict resolution theory suggests that when conflicts cannot be exhausted by the complete victory of one side over another, a negotiated settlement with power-sharing provisions should be sought. Paradoxically, then, the more Gaddafi illustrates his might, the more support he will gain for either a negotiated settlement in which he retains power or a negotiated settlement in which a close of ally (perhaps his son Saif?) shares power and he gets a cozy villa to retire in.

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Posted in African Union (AU), Amnesty, Article 16, Exile, Libya, Sierra Leone, Special Court for Sierra Leone, Uganda, UN Security Council | 6 Comments

The ICC and R2P – Bridging the Gap

rebels in Benghazi

R2P and the ICC have both been invoked in Libya (Photo: Reuters)

Update: I have written an article on this subject which can be downloaded here. See here for an abstract. Comments and feedback are very much welcome!

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I have wondered for some time now about the relationship between the ICC and the Responsibility to Protect (R2P). The reason is pretty simple  – prior to concentrating on the ICC during my masters studies, my academic focus and interests was on R2P. I felt that there was an affinity between the two concepts as well as important threads or narratives that linked them. No work that I know of has systematically examined the practical, political and ethical relationship between R2P and the ICC. This post represents an effort to try to wrestle with and illuminate the potential links between the two in practice, politics and ethics.

As many readers will know, the R2P doctrine asserts that the international community has the responsibility to intervene in a sovereign state if that state is unwilling or unable to prevent or stop genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity. As a concept, it was developed by the International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty (ICISS) in the wake of controversy over the humanitarian intervention in Kosovo and the question of whether a “right to intervene” existed. In 2005 with some modifications (tethering it to the UN Security Council, for example), R2P passed unanimously as a resolution at the UN’s General Assembly.

In 1998 the international community agreed to set up the ICC which subsequently came into being in 2002. The Court’s mission is to end impunity by holding individuals who are “most responsible” for war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide accountable. It currently has six states under official investigation and a handful of cases are being heard at its headquarters in the Hague, Netherlands.

The precise relationship between the ICC and R2P has rarely been made explicit or clear. In a recent discussion about the two concepts, Benjamin Schiff says that getting to the bottom of the relationship is “irritating”. Nevertheless, there seems to be an increasing recognition that these two concepts – typically considered separately – are, in fact, intimately linked.

Before looking at Schiff’s arguments of the practical relationship between the two concepts as well as mine on the political and ethical underpinnings of both R2P and the ICC, let’s consider some broader possible links.

First, typically those groups and individuals who support ICC, support R2P and vice versa (see the Enough! Project, for example). Likewise, those who are suspicious of the ICC will almost surely be suspicious about R2P (we all know what John Bolton thinks!) Sure, context will determine when either is supported or not, but this suggests that there’s some subtext that bridges the ideas behind R2P and ICC.

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Rebel fighters in Benghazi. Where the language of R2P has been invoked the langauge of international criminal law has never been far behind (Photo: Reuters)

Second, while many consider R2P a doctrine of humanitarian military intervention, in actuality, it is much broader than that. It is a doctrine based on a continuum of responses along which legal action or the threat of legal action to stop or prevent atrocities has a place.

Third, when the rhetoric of R2P is invoked, the language of international criminal justice is rarely far behind. Libya is a case in point. The language of responsibility for protecting Libyan civilians paralleled the language of bringing Gaddafi to account for alleged crimes against humanity. Even when the language of R2P was not explicitly employed as in Resolution 1970 which referred the situation in Libya to the ICC, the basic tenets of R2P were at play. One observer remarked:

“R2P is not mentioned in the resolution [1970]: nonetheless, its flavour impregnates the decision. In referring the situation to the ICC, and thus sending a clear signal to unscrupulous leaders that their crimes will not go unpunished, the UN Security Council brings the responsibility to protect to the forefront of the battle to maintain international peace and security in the world.”

All of this suggests a proximity of the concepts and institutions of R2P and the ICC. But it doesn’t illustrate the nature or foundation of the proximity.

Schiff argues that there are numerous similarities between R2P and the ICC. Both are products of the 1990s but have genealogies which stretch back further into history. Each address similar governmental failures, namely the failure (or unwillingness) of governments to prevent atrocities. Both thus speak to the responsibilities that governments have to their citizens and imply that when governments fail or are unwilling to uphold those responsibilities, external interventions are warranted. Interestingly, with the exception of ethnic cleansing and aggression, R2P and the ICC also cover the same crimes – crimes against humanity, war crimes, and genocide. Both R2P and the ICC thus recognize the same acts as the most egregious crimes to commit against people and as justifications for intervention.

There are also important differences between the ICC and R2P. While the ICC is an institution, R2P lacks any institutional structure. Rather, R2P is a concept, perhaps even an emergent norm, that is embedded within the UN. In its current form it is subject to the political machinations of the UN Security Council. At the level of perception, R2P is clearly political whereas the ICC presumes itself to be apolitical, although the notion that the ICC can exist in a political vacuum has been increasingly challenged.

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A Danish F-16 returning from a mission into Libya as part of the no-fly zone campaign (Photo: AP)

Schiff concludes by suggesting a potential practical relationship between R2P and the ICC. He argues that R2P can probably and sensibly use the Court, presumably as a part of the R2P continuum of interventionary options. However, the ICC, if it continues to view itself as apolitical, cannot invoke R2P. In practice then, Schiff argues that the relationship between R2P and the ICC is asymmetrical. Theoretically, R2P and the ICC, I would argue, are the progeny of the same liberal political and ethical projects.

Politically, the ICC and R2P are both elements of the liberal peace project. The liberal peace, in the most general sense, attempts to promote and construct peace in states emerging from violent political conflict and/or authoritarianism by adhering to a particular formula: democratization, liberal economic reforms, rule of law, and respect for human rights. At the heart of the liberal peace – which is promoted by global civil society, international institutions like the UN, as well as key Western states – is the notion that the formula can and should be applied universally; if all states were liberal, democratic polities, then the incidence of war could be dramatically reduced or even eliminated.

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Posted in Human Rights, International Criminal Court (ICC), Liberal Peace, Libya, Responsibiltiy to Protect (R2P) | 5 Comments

Contradictions in Kenya: Kenyan PM Backs the ICC Trial of the Ocampo Six

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Kenyan PM Raila Odinga (middle) with President Kibaki (left) and Kofi Annan (right). Odinga has voiced his support for the trial of the Ocampo Six at the ICC (AFP: Simon Maina)

It appears that Kenyan efforts to defer the ICC prosecutions of the “Ocampo Six” are destined to fail. But it may not only be because of international pressure or lack of consensus in the UN Security Council. Rather, the final nail in the coffin may have come from the Kenyan government itself.

The Kenyan government has been working hard to ensure that investigations into six senior officials (the so-called “Ocampo Six”), including the current Prime Minister and Finance Minister, the Minister of Higher Education as well as key political allies of the current government are deferred. Kenyan officials have gone on a diplomatic road-show to dozens of states in an attempt to convince other members of the international community to pressure the UN Security Council to invoke Article 16 of the ICC’s Rome Statute. Article 16 allows the Council to defer an ICC investigation or prosecution by 12 months, renewable yearly. Earlier this month, the Kenyan government officially requested the Security Council to defer the cases and they have gained the support of numerous African states in their efforts.

Kenya has argued that ICC prosecutions are no longer necessary because the government will now establish a credible and legitimate judicial institution to look into crimes committed after the 2007 elections. The President of Kenya, Mwai Kibaki, has argued that “a local tribunal “will boost our efforts [for] peace, justice and reconciliation as well as uphold our national dignity and sovereignty; and prevent the resumption of conflict and violence.”

Nevertheless, a few of the so-called Ocampo Six have said they would appear before the ICC. Earlier, I suggested that, their willingness to appear before the Court seriously undermined the government’s attempt to have the ICC’s investigations deferred. Why would Kenya need to defer the investigation if the alleged perpetrators were themselves willing to sit trial at the ICC?

Now, however, Kenya’s Prime Minister Raila Odinga, a key figure in President Kibaki’s Orange Democratic Movement, may be the chief undermining source. A chasm has been created within the Kenyan government regarding the issue of accountability and the ICC investigations which can only weaken the government’s claim that the cases must be deferred. In an exclusive interview with Radio Netherlands Worldwide, Odinga, declared his support for the ICC:

“The trial should take place in The Hague, that’s what I think. The trial should proceed there, until Kenya has put in place a competent local mechanism, which I don’t think will be achievable.”

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The post-election violence in Kenya resulted in 1,200 deaths and hundreds of thousands civilians fleeing from their homes (Photo: Simon Maina/Agence France-Presse)

Odigna further rejected claims by those like President Kibaki that proposals for a tribunal to be set up by the government to investigate post-election crimes would be legitimate.

“Putting up a bill is a long process; it doesn’t mean that we want to quit the ICC track at all!…Parliament rejected a local tribunal twice! That’s why the matter went to the Hague. What they are talking about right now is not a truly independent local tribunal, but a kangaroo court which they can manipulate to get these people acquitted. That is not acceptable.”

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Posted in African Union (AU), Article 16, International Criminal Court (ICC), Kenya | Leave a comment