ProsecutionsProsecutionsCriminal justice is an essential part of an integrated response to massive human rights violations and should be pursued whenever possible. Prosecutions must focus on individual accused, yet these efforts also have the potential to reveal how large-scale crimes are committed and restore victims' dignity and public confidence in the rule of law. Domestic
courts for such prosecutions remain the preferred forum to bring lasting change.
In the past, however, trials at the domestic level have been rare. This has led
to significant advances in international justice efforts, such as the creation
of ad hoc international criminal tribunals, various hybrid courts, and the International Criminal Court (ICC). Domestic ProsecutionsDomestic prosecution initiatives can have tremendous impact but also often experience problems of capacity and political will. It remains a challenge to determine which domestic prosecutions deserve support. Prominent
recent examples of the challenges faced in such prosecutions are the trials of
members of the former regime of Saddam Hussein in Iraq. The Iraqi High Tribunal (IHT) suffers
from a variety of problems, including political interference and perceived lack
of legitimacy resulting from U.S.
involvement. The ICTJ has been at the forefront of international on-the-ground
monitoring of the proceedings before the IHT. It was one of only two
organizations to observe the Dujail and Anfal trials in person in Baghdad from beginning to
end. It has produced several briefing papers on the IHT and the trials as a
result of collaboration by Miranda Sissons, other members of the MENA unit, and
the Prosecutions Program. Through this collaboration the ICTJ also made
available reliable translations of major documents produced by the IHT. In 2008 one of the ICTJ's major focus areas will be the pursuit of prosecutions in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, with special emphasis on providing recourse in the domestic courts for gender-based violence. Uganda may also seek to exercise its domestic jurisdiction through a special division of the High Court of Uganda for the conflict in northern Uganda under the provisions of a pending peace agreement. This would entail Uganda challenging the jurisdiction of the ICC for senior Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) leaders under the complementarity provisions of the Rome Statute. Members of the ICTJ prosecutions team, particularly Marieke Wierda and Richard Bailey, have been involved in advising the Court. The prosecution of former heads of state is a particular trend that the ICTJ has identified and closely observed over the past few years. Recent efforts have included the trials of Slobodan Milosevic, Charles Taylor, Saddam Hussein, Alberto Fujimori, and Hissène Habré, as well as proceedings against Augusto Pinochet in Chile. A book on this subject, edited by Ellen Lutz and Caitlin Reiger of the ICTJ prosecutions program, will be published by Cambridge University Press in late 2008. In late 2004 the ICTJ prepared a policy tool for the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) on considerations governing domestic and hybrid prosecution initiatives. It is currently distributed to UN missions around the world. In recent years another question that has become increasingly prominent in domestic settings is best practices to rebuild domestic justice systems in relation to other post-conflict goals, including transitional justice. In this regard the ICTJ has engaged consultant Nicolas Guinard to produce a six-month study of these dilemmas, based on fieldwork in Kosovo, Guatemala, and the DRC. A rule-of-law assessment is also under way in Afghanistan, and efforts to prosecute in third countries because of limitations on domestic prosecutions are being explored in relation to several other countries where the ICTJ works. Hybrid TribunalsThe ICTJ has had specific experience with hybrid tribunals in Sierra Leone, Timor-Leste, Kosovo, Bosnia, Cambodia, and Lebanon. Hybrid courts generally
operate where the crimes occurred but employ international personnel, and
usually have jurisdiction to try international crimes. These courts offer an
important model for bolstering national capacity with adherence to
international standards while ensuring that the proceedings have relevance for
affected communities. The latest hybrid tribunal for Lebanon was established in October 2007. The Special Tribunal for Lebanon is unique, as it will have very limited jurisdiction over political assassinations that have occurred in Lebanon since 2004. In 2007 the ICTJ held a comparative workshop for Lebanese judges and lawyers on the Special Tribunal. It also produced a briefing paper and several academic articles on this development in collaboration with the ICTJ MENA unit, particularly Habib Nassar and Lynn Maalouf. The Center recently collaborated with the UN Office of the High Commissioner for
Human Rights on another policy tool on legacy issues, measuring the
potential for positive impact of hybrid courts on domestic legal systems; The
tool was published in April 2008. This project included fieldwork in Sierra Leone, Timor-Leste, Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Kosovo,
and Cambodia. The International Criminal CourtThe ICTJ attaches particular importance to the advent of the International Criminal Court and its potential global impact. The Center's focus to date has been on select issues, such as complementarity, the "interests of justice," and victims' issues, including outreach, the Trust Fund for Victims, victim participation, and survey work. Additional work with the ICC is primarily through its country programs in Uganda, the DRC, and Sudan. In
Uganda
the ICTJ produced a population-based survey, "When the War Ends," as
a follow-up to the 2005 "Forgotten
Voices" report. Undertaken during the peace talks in Juba and in partnership with the University of California,
Berkeley, and Tulane University,
the survey found generally higher levels of support for non-prosecution-oriented
measures, indicating a shift from 2005, when many respondents preferred
punishment of crimes committed by the LRA and the Ugandan army. In 2007, 60
percent of respondents had heard of the ICC, compared to 27 percent in 2005. A
similar survey from the DRC will be published in 2008. In June 2007 the ICTJ cohosted a major conference on peace and justice with the governments of Germany, Finland, and Jordan and the Conflict Management Initiative in Germany. The conference, "Building a Future on Peace and Justice," was attended by 350 diplomats, practitioners, prominent personalities, and grass-roots activists from around the world. It resulted in the drafting of the "Nuremberg Declaration on Peace and Justice," which soon will be publicly available. Prosecutions NetworkIn May 2005 the ICTJ and the Foundation for Human Rights of South Africa held a major international conference on domestic prosecutions near Johannesburg. This conference was the first of its kind and was attended by representatives of some 15 countries involved in prosecutions. The conference was
intended to stimulate interchange between domestic prosecutors and to encourage
a re-examination of post-TRC prosecutions in South Africa. Since the conference
the ICTJ has worked on establishing a prosecutions network of experienced
practitioners in the field. The network exists to provide an organized forum
for the exchange of investigative strategies and legal approaches for the
promotion of domestic prosecutions. In November 2006 members of the network met
in New York
to discuss challenges of trying heads of state and senior political officials.
The meeting on "Planning for Residual Issues for International and Hybrid
Tribunals," organized with the University of Western Ontario and the Open
Society Justice Initiative, was also a network activity. In February 2007
another network activity, a meeting on legacy and residual issues related to ad
hoc tribunals, took place in New York.
In November 2007 Caitlin Reiger participated in the Fourth Colloquium of
International Prosecutors in Phnom
Penh, Cambodia. In another major initiative headed by Thomas Unger, the ICTJ is producing a handbook for NGOs on gathering documentation in ways that assist or do not hinder future prosecutions. The production of this handbook has involved widespread consultation efforts with various tribunals, as well as on-the-ground consultations with NGOs about the content and utility of the handbook, which will be published in the first half of 2008. (Updated April 2008) Criminal Justice Resources
ICTJ News Coverage24 Jun 08: Voice of America | ICC to Hear Arguments Tuesday About the Possible Release of Congo Rebel Leader Lubanga24 Jun 08: AllAfrica | Congo-Kinshasa: ICC Lubanga Case and the FutureICTJ Press Releases11 Feb 08: ICTJ Report Assesses War Crimes Mechanisms in Serbia8 June 07: ICTJ Applauds Chilean Prosecutor's Opinion on Fujimori Extradition27 Feb 07: ICTJ Welcomes Naming of Darfur War Crimes Suspects by ICC Prosecutor11 Feb 07: Iraq: Don't Add Death Penalty to Dujail Sentence27 Dec 06: Iraq Tribunal Chooses Speed over Justice in Final Ruling5 Nov 06: Shortcomings in First Hussein Trial Must Be Corrected in Appeals Process17 Aug 06: Tribunal Must Improve Efforts in Anfal Trial19 Oct 05: Saddam Trial Adjournment Increases Chances for Fair Trial17 Oct 05: Briefing Paper: The First Trials Before the Iraqi TribunalICTJ Features23 Jun 08: ICC: Lubanga Case and the Future11 Jun 08: Handbook: Administration of International Courts27 May 08: Africa and the ICC21 May 08: Luis Moreno-Ocampo, The Rome Statute and the ICTJ15 May 08: Letter: The Security Council Must Demand the Arrest of ICC AccusedICTJ PublicationsApr 08: OHCHR Rule of Law Tools for Post Conflict States: The legacy of hybrid courts (developed in part by Caitlin Reiger and Marieke Wierda)Feb 08: Against the Current: War Crimes Prosecutions in Serbia (Bogdan Ivanisevic)Dec 07: When the War Ends: A General Population-Based Survey on Attitudes to Peace and Justice in Northern Uganda (with University of California, Berkeley, and Tulane University)May 07: Pursuing Justice in Ongoing Conflict: A Discussion of Current Practice (for the Nuremberg conference)Mar 07: Sensibilisation a la CPI en RDC : Sortir du Profil BasApr 07: Was the Dujail Trial Fair? Miranda Sissons; Ari S. Bassin Journal of International Criminal Justice 2007
Nov 06: Comments on Draft Internal Rules for the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts Of CambodiaApr 06: OHCHR Rule of Law Tools for Post Conflict States: Prosecution initiatives (developed in part by Marieke Wierda) Arabic | English | French | SpanishApr 06: Lessons from the Deployment of International Judges and Prosecutors in KosovoApr 06: The Serious Crime Process in Timor-Leste: In RetrospectApr 06: The Special Court for Sierra Leone Under ScrutinyOct 05: Creation and First Trials of the Supreme Iraqi Criminal TribunalJun 05: Justice Abandoned? An Assessment of the Serious Crimes Process in East TimorJun 05: The International Criminal Court and Conflict MediationJun 04: A Promise Unfulfilled? The Special Prosecutor's Office in MexicoApr 04: Reparations and the International Criminal Court: A Prospective Role for the Trust Fund for VictimsMar 04: The Special Court for Sierra Leone: The First Eighteen MonthsAug 03: Intended to Fail: The Trials Before the Ad Hoc Human Rights Court in JakartaSep 02: Ex-Combatant Views of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and the Special Court in Sierra LeoneJun 02: Exploring the Relationship Between the Special Court and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Sierra LeoneRelated Pages on this SiteBosnia and HerzegovinaThe Democratic Republic of the CongoGhanaGuatemalaIndonesiaIraqLiberiaMexicoNepal
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