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Research Note 10 1999-2000

A War Crimes Tribunal for East Timor?

Nathan Hancock
Law and Bills Digest Group
19 October 1999

Context

On 27 September the UN Human Rights Commission voted for an international inquiry into alleged atrocities in East Timor (Resolution
S-4/1
). This resolution suggests that the UN will proceed to establish an international 'war crimes tribunal' to bring those responsible to justice.

This Research Note examines the legal bases of such a tribunal. Three areas are uncertain: its mandate, its jurisprudence and its jurisdiction.

Mandate

In establishing the International Force for East Timor the Security Council gave an indication that it contemplated a criminal tribunal. It referred to 'systematic, widespread and flagrant violations of international humanitarian and human rights law' and stressed that 'persons committing such violations bear individual responsibility' (Resolution 1264).

The resolution is silent about whether such a tribunal would be international or domestic. However, its language is reminiscent of that associated with the creation of other international criminal tribunals and suggests such a tribunal in this case.

Precedents

There are notable precedents for the tribunal from the post-Second World War and post-Cold War eras: the International Military Tribunals at Nüremberg and Tokyo in 1945 and 1946 respectively and the International Criminal Tribunals for the Former Yugoslavia and Rwanda in 1993 and 1994 respectively. The former investigated 'crimes against peace, war crimes and crimes against humanity'. Inter alia, the latter are investigating war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Arguably, both were expedient responses to conflicts that pushed out the frontiers of international law. The former were established by an agreement among Allied Powers and the latter were established under the UN Charter on the basis that armed conflicts constitute a threat to international peace and security (Chapter VII). Both have broken new ground in respect of their substantive law and procedural law.

International Criminal Court

Recently, there has been a push to establish a permanent international tribunal. In 1998 the UN adopted a statute of the International Criminal Court (the ICC). While the ICC Statute has not yet come into force, it will cover 'genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity and the crime of aggression' (Art.5).

Jurisprudence

The nature and scale of the alleged atrocities in East Timor tend to suggest that genocide and the crime of aggression are not applicable.

Humanitarian Law

There is a long standing prohibition on crimes committed in the context of international armed conflict. The Hague Conventions of 1889 and 1907 codified a number of war crimes or crimes committed by armed forces against each other. Geneva Conventions I-IV of 1949 codify crimes committed by armed forces against civilians during international armed conflict. The Geneva Conventions (Art. 3) and the Additional Protocol II of 1977 prohibit acts committed against civilians in internal armed conflicts.

Crimes Against Humanity

There is now also a prohibition on crimes committed in the context of a widespread or systematic attack. In the Cold War era there were signs that the nexus between crimes against humanity and armed conflict was breaking down. While it is not without controversy, many suggest that the process has been completed in the post-Cold War era. Thus, the ICC Statute refers to 'a widespread or systematic attack directed against any civilian population' (Art. 7). But it defines an 'attack' as 'a course of conduct involving the multiple commission of acts pursuant to a policy' (Art. 7(2)). Thus, crimes must be on a large scale, committed as part of a policy, systematically or across a wide geographic area.

Human Rights Law

In five decades humanitarian and human rights law have converged. In principle, peace is a precondition to the enjoyment of all human rights. In practice, armed conflicts that affect civilians will offend a number of human rights laws. The Genocide Convention (1948) and Torture Convention (1984) are good examples of humanitarian principles making their way into human rights law. Parties are obliged to eliminate torture or genocide even if they are not strictly crimes against humanity.

This has led some to suggest that serious human rights breaches now equate with war crimes. Thus, it is argued, torture and persecution on political, racial and religious should mandate international prosecution in the same way as crimes against humanity. But this may be to mix two distinct areas of law. Whereas humanitarian law operates generally and imposes criminal liability and has been used before to establish criminal tribunals, human rights law operates between parties, rarely criminalises acts and does not require international prosecution.

Jurisdiction

A wide range of crimes is included in the category of crimes against humanity. The UN statutes for the tribunals in Rwanda and Yugoslavia include murder, extermination, enslavement, imprisonment, torture, rape, and deportation. The ICC Statute also includes forced disappearance, grievous bodily harm and arbitrary imprisonment.

Individual Responsibility

Breaches of humanitarian law generally entail individual criminal responsibility. Geneva Conventions I-IV criminalise acts committed during international armed conflict and impose an obligation to prosecute. They do not criminalise all acts committed during internal armed conflicts, but those which constitute 'grave breaches' would entail individual responsibility and an obligation to prosecute. In customary international law, crimes against humanity also entail individual criminal responsibility but it is unclear whether there is an obligation to prosecute. The ICC Statute criminalises many acts including crimes against humanity (Art. 25) but there is no requirement to refer matters to the prosecutor.

Command Responsibility

International law also imposes liability on commanders in respect of the acts of subordinates. At least during international conflicts, commanders may be responsible for widespread crimes by their troops even if they did not have actual knowledge of them. (For example, senior Japanese commanders were prosecuted for acts of their troops during World War II). They may even be responsible for crimes committed by other forces within their area of responsibility if they were implicated and allowed the crimes to proceed. (Such a view was taken of Israeli commanders in respect of incursions by Phalange guerillas into Lebanon in 1982).

This concept applies in relation to international and internal armed conflicts. It also seems to apply in relation to crimes against humanity. For example, under the ICC Statute any person is liable who 'orders, solicits or induces' or 'aids and abets or otherwise assists' the commission of a crime or otherwise 'contributes to the commission or attempted commission of such a crime by a group of persons acting with a common purpose' (Art. 25).

Critique

Strong Indications

There are strong suggestions that an international criminal tribunal for East Timor will be established. The Security Council has declared that the situation constitutes 'a threat to international peace and security' (Resolution 1264). The Human Rights Commission has endorsed the idea (Resolution S-4/1).

There seem to be good precedents for such a tribunal. The ICC Statute and the Statutes for the International Criminal Tribunals for Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia suggest that the Security Council will apply international law to war crimes and crimes against humanity which have been committed during civil unrest.

Uncertain Foundations

The preceding comments suggest at least a degree of uncertainty about the mandate, the jurisprudence and the jurisdiction of such a tribunal. It could be argued that:

  • Neither the Security Council nor the Human Rights Commission would endorse a tribunal in the absence of support from Indonesia or from an independent East Timor. Joint management has been a critical issue for the establish-ment of a tribunal in Cambodia.
  • There may still be doubts regarding the nexus between armed conflict and crimes against humanity, the effect of human rights law, the obligation to prosecute, and the responsibility of 'commanders'.
  • There will be doubts about the facts required to sustain the tribunal: there may not have been a background of armed conflict and the acts may not have been on a sufficiently large scale so as to constitute crimes against humanity.
  • There will be doubt about the precedents: the ICC Statute has not yet come into force, the Rwanda Statute and the Yugoslavia Statute pushed the frontiers of international law and both applied against a background of armed conflict.

 

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