Tagged: jurisdiction

ICC Annual Summary: Reports on 2014 Preliminary Examination Activities

To follow up on our previous post, the International Criminal Court (ICC) in its December 2, 2014 press release published its annual Report on Preliminary Examination Activities conducted between Nov. 1, 2013 and Oct. 31, 2014. “Preliminary Examination” is a process by which the ICC determines whether a situation referred to it meets the legal criteria established by the Rome Statute to warrant investigation by the Prosecutor.

As the annual report explains in its introduction,

preliminary examination of a situation by the Office may be initiated on the bases of: a) information sent by individuals or groups, States, [IGOs], or [NGOs]; b) a referral from a State Party or the Security Council; or c) a declaration accepting the jurisdiction of the Court lodges pursuant to article 12(3) by a State which is not a Party to the Statute.

Article 53(1)(a)-(c) establishes that the Office shall consider jurisdiction, admissibility and the interest of justice when determining whether there is a reasonable basis to proceed with an investigation. The preliminary examination is an independent analysis of facts and information available. The ‘reasonable basis’ standard has been defined by Pre-Trial Chamber II to require that “there exists a sensible or reasonable justification for a belief that a crime falling within the jurisdiction of the Court has been or is being committed.”

During this past year, the ICC conducted preliminary examination in eleven situations: Afghanistan, Central African Republic, Colombia, Georgia, Guinea, Honduras, Iraq, Nigeria, Republic of North Korea, Registered Vessels of Comoros, Greece and Colombia, and Ukraine. In three situations the preliminary examination has been concluded. The Court found reasonable basis to proceed with an investigation into the Situation in the Central African Republic II and announced the opening of new investigation. Two situations (Republic of North Korea and Registered Vessels of Comoros, Greece, and Cambodia) were closed because the Prosecutor did not find reasonable basis to proceed with investigation. 

There are eight situations remaining in the preliminary examination stages. Five (Afghanistan, Colombia, Georgia, Guinea, and Nigeria) situations are in the third phase of examination when the Office considers admissibility by looking at the complementarity and gravity principle articulated in article 17. Three (Honduras, Iraq, and Ukraine) situations are in the second phase when the Office considers jurisdiction (temporal, either territorial or personal, and material).

With respect to the situation in Ukraine, the annual report outlines the Office’s activities since the situation was referred to the Court via article 12(3) declaration and it states that it focused on “gathering available information from reliable sources in order to assess whether the alleged crimes fall within the subject-matter jurisdiction of the Court.” The Office requested information from the Government of Ukraine, from representatives of Ukrainian civil society, delegation of members of the Ukrainian Parliamentary Committee on the Rule of Law and Justice, and the Office also conducted a mission in Kiev. The Office concludes that it will continue to

gather, verify, and analyse” information to determine whether “there is a reasonable basis to believe that crimes within the jurisdiction of the Court have been committed during the Maidan event in Ukraine.

ICC Opens Second Investigation into Central African Republic

On September 24, 2014 Fatou Bensouda, the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC), announced in a press release her decision to open a second investigation in the Central African Republic (CAR). Pursuant to Arts. 13(a) and 14 of the Rome Statute, the transitional government of CAR referred its situation “regarding crimes allegedly committed on CAR territory since 1 August 2012” to the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP). Once such a State Party referral is received, the Prosecutor opens a preliminary examination, according to Article 18, to assess whether the OTP can proceed with an investigation. In accordance with article 53(1), the Prosecutor’s office conducted an independent preliminary examination and concluded that

[t]he information available provides a reasonable basis to believe that both the Séléka and the anti-balaka groups have committed crimes against humanity and war crimes including murder, rape, forced displacement, persecution, pillaging, attacks against humanitarian missions and the use of children under fifteen in combat. The list of atrocities is endless. I cannot ignore these alleged crimes, [Prosecutor Bensouda stated].

Article 53(1) Report of the Situation in the Central African Republic II outlines the scope of preliminary examination conducted by the OTP, which includes analysis of the preconditions to Court’s jurisdiction, the Court’s subject-matter jurisdiction over the alleged crimes, the admissibility issues articulated in Article 17, and the overall interest of justice. The conclusions of the preliminary examination provided reasonable basis for the OTP to initiate an investigation. You may follow the developments in both situations on the Court’s website:

Three More Countries Ratify Amendments to the Rome Statute on the Crime of Aggression

In a 9/29/14 press release, the President of the Assembly of States Parties to the Rome Statute announced that Latvia, Poland, and Spain deposited their respective instruments of ratification of the 2010 amendments to the Rome Statute on the crime of aggression. Article 5 of the Rome Statute enumerates the crimes within the subject matter jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court (ICC). Although article 5(d) always listed the crime of aggression as one of the crimes within the Court’s jurisdiction (since 1998), it was not until the June 2010 Review Conference of the Rome Statute, that article 8 bis (Crime of Aggression) was articulated, amending so the Rome Statute. Article 8 bis and all other amendments related to the crime of aggression were inserted in the Rome Statute by resolution RC/Res. 6 of 11 June 2010

Further, as stated in article 15 bis (2), “[t]he Court may exercise jurisdiction only with respect to crimes of aggression committed one year after the ratification or acceptance of the amendments by thirty States Parties,” leaving States Parties with ample time to decide whether to ratify the amendments or not. Lichtenstein became the first State Party to ratify the crime of aggression amendments on 8 May 2012, followed by Samoa, Trinidad & Tobago, and most recently Latvia, Poland, and Spain. There are so far 18 States Parties that have ratified or accepted the amendments on the crime of aggression as articulated during the 2010 Review Conference held in Kampala, Uganda.

The crime of aggression amendments were not the only amendments achieved during the 2010 review conference. Additionally, as stated in resolution RC/Res. 5 of 10 June 2010, a set of amendments pertaining to article 8 of the Rome Statute were also adopted. These amendments addressed “the characterization of the use of certain weapons during non-international armed conflict as war crimes.” There are so far 21 States Parties that have ratified or accepted these amendments pertaining to article 8, also including Latvia, Poland, and Spain.

ICC Prosecutor Responds to Criticism Regarding the Court and Gaza

POST WRITTEN BY: Prof. Peter Widulski, Assistant Director of the First Year Legal Skills Program and the Coach of International Criminal Moot Court Team at Pace Law School.

On September 2, 2014, the ICC Prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, issued a public statement in which she rejected as “baseless” criticisms in “[r]ecent media reports and commentaries,” which she said “have erroneously suggested that the International Criminal Court (ICC) has persistently avoided opening an investigation into alleged war crimes in Gaza due to political pressure.”

The Prosecutor stated that these criticisms were without merit because of the Rome Statute’s jurisdictional requirements. The Prosecutor did not (and could not, without investigation) argue that any alleged crimes committed by any participant in the conflict failed to meet the Statute’s subject matter requirements for genocide, war crimes, or crimes against humanity. The problem, rather, was the Statute’s other jurisdictional requirements that authorize the ICC to open an investigation only with respect to crimes alleged to have occurred on the territory of a State or by nationals of a State that has ratified the Rome Statute or has accepted ICC jurisdiction by an ad hoc declaration pursuant to Article 12(3) of the Statute. At this time, neither Israel nor the Palestinian Authority is a State Party to the Rome Statute, nor has either as yet filed an Article 12(3) declaration. (Palestine did file such a declaration in 2009, but it was found invalid for lack of standing.)

The Prosecutor noted that her Office after examination has concluded that because of UN General Assembly Res. 67/19 issued on November 29, 2012 upgrading Palestine’s status to a “non-member observer State,” Palestine could now accede to the Rome Statute or lodge an Article 12(3) declaration conferring jurisdiction to the ICC over the situation in Gaza. But it has not yet done so.

The Prosecutor in her statement referred to an additional mechanism through which the ICC could obtain authorization to investigate the situation in Gaza. Pursuant to Article 13(b) of the Rome Statute, the UN Security Council can act under its Chapter VII powers to authorize an ICC investigation, even if the alleged crimes were not committed on the territory of a State Party or by a national of a State Party. The Security Council has not taken such action as yet with respect to Gaza (nor has it done so with respect to the violence in Syria).

Amnesty International, a non-governmental organization whose mission is to protect human rights internationally, has called for the UN Security Council, the Palestinian Authority, and Israel to provide the ICC with jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute any persons responsible for committing war crimes and crimes against humanity in the current and past Israeli-Palestinian conflicts.

The Prosecutor concluded her September 2 statement by saying,

It is my firm belief that recourse to justice should never be compromised by political expediency. The failure to uphold this sacrosanct requirement will not only pervert the cause of justice and weaken public confidence in it, but also exacerbate the immense suffering of the victims of mass atrocities. This, we will never allow.

The ICC has been the target of many political criticisms and challenges, starting from its foundational conferences in the 1990s, and these challenges will, no doubt, continue for years to come. The ICC Prosecutor is to be commended for being proactive in addressing these challenges in an effort to support the credibility of the Court.

Ukraine: The ICC’s Authority Grows as Another Non-State Party Accepts Its Jurisdiction

Ukraine gained its independence from the former Soviet Union in 1991 when its parliament adopted the Act of Independence. Since then, Ukraine has worked to stabilize and grow as a new sovereign and independent state with the hope of joining the European Union. That hope was quashed in late 2013 when Viktor F. Yanukovych, then-president of Ukraine, won election for the third time (whether he actually won and whether it was done democratically is debated to date) and began to work closely with Russia rather than the European Union.

In November 2013, protests in Kiev and across Ukraine began. These protests continue today, resulting in almost one hundred dead and thousands injured. In light of the situation, Ukraine, not a party to the International Criminal Court (ICC) referred the situation to the Court, via declaration dated April 9, 2014, and accepted the Court’s jurisdiction. The Registrar of the ICC received this declaration on April 17, 2014.

In the Declaration of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine, Ukraine asks the Court to hold senior officials of Ukraine criminally liable for alleged crimes against humanity committed during peaceful protests that took place in Ukraine between Nov. 21, 2013 and Feb. 22, 2014,

namely Yanukovych Viktor Fedorovych – the President of Ukraine – and other officials to be determined by the Prosecutor….

Ukraine utilized the mechanism under Article 12(3) of the Rome Statute, which “enables a State not party to the Statute to accept the exercise of jurisdiction of the Court.” With acceptance of the jurisdiction comes the cooperation obligations described and enumerated under Part 9 of the Rome Statute. The next step is for the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) to decide whether to initiate investigation into the referred situation. On Friday, April 25, 2014, as reported in the ICC’s press release, Fatima Bensouda

has decided to open preliminary examination into the situation in Ukraine in order to establish whether the Rome Statute criteria for opening an investigation are met.

This is the second time a State that is not party to the Rome Statute referred a situation to the Court. The first situation referred to the Court via the Article 12(3) mechanism was the Situation in the Republic of Côte d’Ivoire. Both situations, Côte d’Ivoire and Ukraine, present an interesting step in the evolution of the ICC’s jurisprudence that was anticipated in the Rome Statute (Article 12(3)) but used only twice. Cases currently pending at the ICC were either referred to the ICC by a State party or the Security Council, or investigation was initiated proprio motu by the Prosecutor. However, Article 12(3) offers a State that has not signed onto and ratified the Rome Statute, an international multilateral treaty, the chance to nevertheless accept the obligations and protections thereunder on a temporary basis.

One may argue that the 12(3) mechanism is circumventing the checks and balances guaranteed in Article 17 of the Statute, which makes the ICC’s jurisdiction complementary to a national jurisdiction. Article 17 states that a case is inadmissible to the ICC where

the case is being investigated or prosecuted by a State which has jurisdiction over it, unless the State is unwilling or unable genuinely to carry out the investigation or prosecution.

But because the process under Article 12(3) is initiated by a State not party to the Statute and is voluntary, it is the State that effectively gives up its own jurisdiction protected via Article 17 and accepts the one of ICC.

And how does this development affect the authority and power of the ICC? Greatly, because it is viewed as an authority with ability to carry out justice even by those who have not yet signed and ratified the Statute.

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