Global Policy Forum

ICC to Get Evidence of 'Illegality' of War

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Sanjay Suri

Inter Press Service
January 20, 2004

A strong case arguing the illegality of the invasion of Iraq will be handed soon to the International Criminal Court at The Hague. Prepared by eight leading international lawyers and professors of law drawn from four countries, the report makes a strong case against the illegality of the war. The professors came together for the study within an independent group Peacerights. It was funded largely by shows done last year by British comedian Mark Thomas in a campaign he called 'White Ribbon'. "We will be presenting the report first to the Attorney-General in Britain," solicitor Phil Shiner from Peacerights said at a meeting called by the group Tuesday. The Attorney-General is not expected to respond, given his official advice to the government last year that it would be legal for Britain to join an invasion of Iraq. The ICC will be given a copy of the report, but asked formally to proceed only after the Attorney-General in Britain turns down the request to prosecute British leaders. The dossier prepared by the experts is expected to be handed to Luis Moreno Ocampo, the prosecutor at the International Criminal Court (ICC), next month at the Court's headquarters in The Hague, capital of the Netherlands. Since his appointment as prosecutor in April last year, Ocampo has received around 500 investigation requests from about 66 countries, but has asked for a full inquiry in only one case relating to the Democratic Republic of Congo. However, there are indications that the prosecutor will study the law professors' report seriously. "The prosecutor knows what we are doing, and his office is waiting for the information we are sending," William Bowring, who headed the panel of law experts, told IPS. "We know there is interest in the prosecutor's office." The prosecutor will have to study the professors' report, and can take it to the ICC to demand a full inquiry if he finds merit in it. A full inquiry could mean that British Prime Minister Tony Blair and his senior ministers (and possibly George Walker Bush and his regime) could be called to face charges.


If the prosecutor orders a formal investigation, then the ICC would have wide-ranging powers to interview people. As a strong supporter of the ICC, Britain would be under enormous obligation to cooperate, Bowring said. And given the precedent from Serbia that has brought former president Slobodan Milosevic to The Hague to face trial, British leadership would not be exempt, Bowring said. The United States has stayed away from the ICC and can therefore claim immunity from any ICC procedures. But there remains the question of complicity in a joint enterprise, Bowring told media representatives Tuesday. If Britain and the United States acted together, and if war crimes were committed, then there is a real question of war crimes committed by the United States that would be before the ICC. The legal team plans to make the United States liable by association by focusing its inquiries on the role of Britain, which played a strong role in supporting creation of the ICC. The eight law experts gathered evidence from a wide range of sources, and also spoke directly to witnesses over two days in London in November. Evidence was gathered from witnesses on the ground such as Spanish medical teams, and from weapons experts. The experts' report focused particularly on cluster bombs used by the British. The Ministry of Defence in London has admitted to dropping 70 cluster bombs from the air, each of them containing 147 'bomblets'. In addition, British artillery fired more than 2,000 shells, each containing about 40 smaller bombs. The report, a full version of which is due to be released about two weeks from now, also takes a close look at the targeting of media by way of attacks on the offices of Al Jazeera and Abu Dhabi TV, and on the targeting of the Palestine Hotel in Baghdad. "We want to make it clear that we are not levelling accusations," Shiner said. "We are pointing to questions that need answers, and we are demanding an investigation into these." The Peacerights group did not have access to all the information that would be needed in order to make a charge against the government, Shiner said. "We would need to know what the military objectives were, who took the decision to risk civilian casualties, what the targeting data was before those who took the decisions and other such information. We do not have that information, but the prosecutor could ask for it." The lawyers who carried out the study include William Schabas, professor of human rights law at the national University of Ireland, Christine Chinkin, professor of international law at the London School of Economics, Bill Bowring, professor of human rights and international law at London Metropolitan University, and Reni Provost, associate professor at the faculty of law at McGill University in Canada. Other lawyers are Paul Tavernier, professor at the Faculti Nean Monnet in Paris, Nick Grief, professor of law at the University of Bournemouth in Britain, Guy Goodwin-Gill, senior research fellow at All Souls College in Oxford, and Upendra Baxi, professor of international law at Warwick University in Britain.


More Information on International Justice
More Information on the International Criminal Court
More Information on International Law Aspects of the Iraq War and Occupation

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FAIR USE NOTICE: This page contains copyrighted material the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Global Policy Forum distributes this material without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. We believe this constitutes a fair use of any such copyrighted material as provided for in 17 U.S.C § 107. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.