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IMPLEMENTATION OF LAW OF ARMED CONFLICT OBLIGATIONS

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Title: IMPLEMENTATION OF LAW OF ARMED CONFLICT OBLIGATIONS


1
IMPLEMENTATION OF LAW OF ARMED CONFLICT
OBLIGATIONS
  • Lecture 18 October 2007 by Arne Willy Dahl

2
1977 AP I Article 82 Legal advisers in armed
forces
  • The High Contracting Parties at all times, and
    the Parties to the conflict in time of armed
    conflict, shall ensure that legal advisers are
    available, when necessary, to advise military
    commanders at the appropriate level on the
    application of the Conventions and this Protocol
    and on the appropriate instruction to be given to
    the armed forces on this subject

3
1977 AP I Article 87 - Duty of commanders
  • 1. The High Contracting Parties and the Parties
    to the conflict shall require military
    commanders, with respect to members of the armed
    forces under their command and other persons
    under their control, to prevent and, where
    necessary, to suppress and to report to competent
    authorities breaches of the Conventions and of
    this Protocol

4
Positive Aspect Elements
  • Translation of the conventions to national
    language(s)
  • Dissemination and training
  • Providing experts and advisers
  • Military planning with regard to separation of
    potential military objectives from civil
    population
  • Identification of cultural property, civil
    defence works and installations containing
    dangerous forces

5
Negative Aspect Elements
  • Legislation on punishment of crimes
  • - Indirect obligation to cover the ICC crimes
  • - Treaty obligations with regard to crimes not
    covered by the ICC statute
  • Legislation on protection of the emblems
  • Assigning and training investigators and
    prosecutors

6
Mechanisms for international enforcement
  • Penal
  • Non-penal
  • Non-judicial

7
Non-judicial enforcement
  • Reprisals/expectations of reciprocity
  • Monitoring protecting power/ICRC
  • Fact-finding commission
  • Public exposure
  • Diplomacy/intervention by the UN SC

8
Non-penal judicial enforcement
  • Reparations as a part of a peace settlement
  • ICJ International Court of Justice
  • Lawsuits before national courts

9
Penal enforcement
  • At the outset a national responsibility
  • In wartime a state can prosecute enemy war
    criminals (exemption from customary immunity for
    state officials with regard to acts within the
    scope of their duties)
  • For international crimes, third countries have
    a right and an obligation to prosecute or
    extradite.

10
The core crimes
  • Genocide specific intent to destroy, in whole
    or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or
    religious group, as such. Convention 1948.
  • Crimes against humanity include certain
    enumerated criminal acts when committed as part
    of a widespread or systematic attack directed
    against any civilian population, with knowledge
    of the attack .
  • War crimes are generally speaking grave breaches
    against the Laws and Customs of War.
  • The crime of aggression

11
Nuremberg 1945
  • Under the art. 6 of the charter, the jurisdiction
    included
  • Crimes against peace namely, planning,
    preparation, initiation or waging of a war of
    aggression
  • War crimes namely, violations of the laws or
    customs of war, including, murder, ill-treatment
    killing of hostages, plunder of public or
    private property, wanton destruction
  • Crimes against humanity namely, murder,
    extermination, enslavement, deportation, and
    other inhumane acts
  • Genocide was at that time considered as a
    special case of crimes against humanity.

12
ICTY 1992
  • ICTY has under its statute jurisdiction the
    following crimes committed in the former
    Yugoslavia since 1991
  • Grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions of 1949
    (art. 2)
  • Violations of the laws or customs of war (art. 3)
  • Genocide (art. 4)
  • Crimes against humanity (art. 5)

13
G III art. 130
  • Grave breaches to which the preceding Article
    relates shall be those involving any of the
    following acts, if committed against persons or
    property protected by the Convention wilful
    killing, torture or inhuman treatment, including
    biological experiments, wilfully causing great
    suffering or serious injury to body or health,
    compelling a prisoner of war to serve in the
    forces of the hostile Power, or wilfully
    depriving a prisoner of war of the rights of fair
    and regular trial prescribed in this Convention.

14
ICTY-statute art. 3
  • The International Tribunal shall have the power
    to prosecute persons violating the laws or
    customs of war. Such violations shall include,
    but not be limited to
  • (a) employment of poisonous weapons or other
    weapons calculated to cause unnecessary
    suffering
  • (b) wanton destruction of cities, towns or
    village, or devastation not justified by
    military necessity
  • (c) attack, or bombardment, by whatever means,
    of undefended towns, villages, dwellings, or
    buildings
  • (d) seizure of, destruction or wilful damage
    done to institutions dedicated to religion,
    charity and educations, the arts and sciences,
    historic monuments and works of the art and
    science
  • (e) plunder of public or private property.

15
Some questions which the ICTY had to resolve
  • Do the provisions of the art. 3 of the statute
    (laws and customs of war) apply to
    non-international armed conflict? Yes.
  • Do the lists of grave breaches of the Geneva
    conventions apply to non-international armed
    conflict? No.
  • Do b reaches of common article 3 give rise to
    penal liability? Yes.

16
Common article 3 to the Geneva conventions
(excerpt)
  • (a) violence to life and person, in particular
    murder of all kinds, mutilation, cruel treatment
    and torture
  • (b) taking of hostages
  • (c) outrages upon personal dignity, in particular
    humiliating and degrading treatment
  • (d) the passing of sentences and the carrying out
    of executions without previous judgment
    pronounced by a regularly constituted court,
    affording all the judicial guarantees which are
    recognized as indispensable by civilized peoples.

17
The 1977 additional protocols and war crimes
  • The 1949 Geneva conventions are universally
    accepted.
  • This is not the case with regard to the 1977
    Additional Protocols.
  • The 1977 AP I has an additional list of grave
    breaches.

18
Excerpt of AP I art. 85
  • (a) making the civilian population or individual
    civilians the object of attack
  • (b) launching an indiscriminate attack affecting
    the civilian population or civilian objects in
    the knowledge that such attack will cause
    excessive loss of life, injury to civilians or
    damage to civilian objects, as defined in Article
    57, paragraph 2 (a) (iii)
  • (c) launching an attack against works or
    installations containing dangerous forces in the
    knowledge that such attack will cause excessive
    loss of life, injury to civilians or damage to
    civilian objects, as defined in Article 57,
    paragraph 2 (a) (iii)

19
ICC 1998
  • Statute adopted by treaty 17 July1998. In force
    1st of July 2002. 102 states parties.
  • The court has jurisdiction over the following
    crimes
  • Genocide (art. 6)
  • Crimes against humanity (art. 7)
  • War crimes (art. 8)
  • The crime of aggresion
  • The Court shall exercise jurisdiction over the
    crime of aggression once a provision is adopted
    in accordance with articles 121 and 123 defining
    the crime and setting out the conditions under
    which the Court shall exercise jurisdiction with
    respect to this crime

20
Ad hoc tribunals and the ICC
  • ICTY and ICTR have jurisdiction over specific
    situations. ICC in principle world-wide.
  • ICTY and ICTR established by UN Security Council
    resolution binding on all. ICC established by
    treaty binding on states parties
  • ICTY and ICTR have primacy over national
    jurisdictions. ICC has complementary
    jurisdiction a court of the last resort.

21
Other international efforts
  • Hybrid courts for Sierra Leone, East Timor,
    Cambodia, Bosnia-Hercegovina
  • Internationally inspired national efforts in
    Indonesia and Iraq

22
War crimes under the ICC statute
  • In general, the provisions reflect universally
    accepted customary law.
  • The Court shall have jurisdiction in respect of
    war crimes in particular when committed as a part
    of a plan or policy or as part of a large-scale
    commission of such crimes (art 8 paragraph 1).
  • In the statute, there are separate provisions
    that apply in international armed conflict (art.
    8 paragraph 2 (a) and (b)), and others that apply
    in non-international armed conclict (paragraph 2
    (c) and (e)).

23
Art. 8 nr. 2 (a) grave breaches of the 1949
Geneva Conventions
  • (i) Wilful killing
  • (ii) Torture or inhuman treatment, including
    biological experiments
  • (iii) Wilfully causing great suffering, or
    serious injury to body or health
  • (iv) Extensive destruction and appropriation of
    property, not justified by military necessity and
    carried out unlawfully and wantonly
  • (v) Compelling a prisoner of war or other
    protected person to serve in the forces of a
    hostile Power
  • (vi) Wilfully depriving a prisoner of war or
    other protected person of the rights of fair and
    regular trial
  • (vii) Unlawful deportation or transfer or
    unlawful confinement
  • (viii) Taking of hostages.

24
Art. 8 nr. 2 (b) other serious violations
  • (i) Intentionally directing attacks against the
    civilian population as such or against individual
    civilians not taking direct part in hostilities
  • (ii) Intentionally directing attacks against
    civilian objects, that is, objects which are not
    military objectives
  • (iii) Intentionally directing attacks against
    personnel, installations, material, units or
    vehicles involved in a humanitarian assistance or
    peacekeeping mission in accordance with the
    Charter of the United Nations, as long as they
    are entitled to the protection given to civilians
    or civilian objects under the international law
    of armed conflict
  • (iv) Intentionally launching an attack in the
    knowledge that such attack will cause incidental
    loss of life or injury to civilians or damage to
    civilian objects or widespread, longterm and
    severe damage to the natural environment which
    would be clearly excessive in relation to the
    concrete and direct overall military advantage
    anticipated
  • Continues to sub-paragraph xxvi

25
Art. 8 nr. 2 (c), based on common article art. 3
  • Applies in non-international armed conflict
  • (i) Violence to life and person, in particular
    murder of all kinds, mutilation, cruel treatment
    and torture
  • (ii) Committing outrages upon personal dignity,
    in particular humiliating and degrading
    treatment
  • (iii) Taking of hostages
  • (iv) The passing of sentences and the carrying
    out of executions without previous judgement
    pronounced by a regularly constituted court,
    affording all judicial guarantees which are
    generally recognized as indispensable.
  • .

26
Art. 8 nr. 2 (e) other serious violations
  • Apply in non-international armed conflict
  • (i) Intentionally directing attacks against the
    civilian population as such or against individual
    civilians not taking direct part in hostilities
  • (ii) Intentionally directing attacks against
    buildings, material, medical units and transport,
    and personnel using the distinctive emblems of
    the Geneva Conventions in conformity with
    international law
  • (iii) Intentionally directing attacks against
    personnel, installations, material, units or
    vehicles involved in a humanitarian assistance or
    peacekeeping mission in accordance with the
    Charter of the United Nations, as long as they
    are entitled to the protection given to civilians
    or civilian objects under the law of armed
    conflict
  • Continue to sub-paragraph xii.

27
Some general principles of criminal law in the
Rome statute
  • Superior orders. Does not relieve from criminal
    responsibility unless the person was under a
    legal obligation to obey, the person did not know
    that the order was unlawful and the order was
    not manifestly unlawful. More lenient than in
    Nuremberg and under the ad hoc tribunals
  • Command responsibility Military commanders are
    held responsible for the criminal acts of their
    subordinates which they knew or should have
    known, and fail to prevent, repress or submit to
    prosecution. Other superiors are held responsible
    only with regard to criminal acts that they knew
    about, or they consciously disregarded
    information which clearly indicated crimes.

28
To sum up
  • Implementation of IHL starts with national
    preparations.
  • IHL has to be taken into account in planning
    processes, in order to be properly implemented in
    the actual military operations.
  • Failure by a state to comply with IHL obligations
    can be med with various reactions.
  • Penal prosecution is first and foremost a
    national responsibility.  
  • The International Criminal Court is a court of
    the last resort, which will concentrate on those
    most responsible for the most serious crimes, in
    particular when committed as a part of a plan or
    policy or as part of a large-scale commission of
    such crimes

29
End of lecture
  • Thank you for your attention
  • Any more questions?
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