News Story
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ICC takes key steps
to bring justice to Darfur
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Human Rights Watch
June 6, 2005
(New York) - The decision today by the International Criminal
Court's prosecutor, Luis Moreno Ocampo, to start an
investigation into atrocities in Darfur is a key step toward
bringing justice for those crimes.
"The ICC prosecutor's decision to investigate mass
slaughter and rape in Darfur will start the wheels of justice
turning for the victims of these atrocities," said Richard
Dicker, director of Human Rights Watch's International Justice
Program. "As a U.N. member state, Sudan is obligated to
cooperate with the ICC investigation."
On March 31, the United Nations Security Council voted to
refer the situation in Darfur to the International Criminal
Court by adopting Resolution 1593.
Under the court's statute, the prosecutor's initiation of
an investigation reflects his assessment that the Sudanese
authorities are "unwilling or unable" to prosecute crimes
within the ICC mandate, namely genocide, war crimes, and
crimes against humanity. This is consistent with Human Rights
Watch's finding that the Sudanese authorities have not taken
any meaningful steps to hold those most responsible for
serious international crimes to account since the armed
conflict began in February 2003.
While the Sudanese government has recently announced its
intention to establish a special tribunal in Sudan to try
perpetrators of serious crimes in Darfur, such a tribunal
would require Khartoum to take enormous and effective efforts
to ensure the tribunal's independence and credibility.
A credible, independent tribunal prosecuting lower-level
perpetrators could potentially serve as a useful complementary
effort to ICC prosecutions. However, Human Rights Watch
believes such a tribunal cannot replace what will be a limited
number of prosecutions by the ICC of those most responsible.
Other local measures such as compensation for stolen livestock
and looted assets are also essential steps for restitution of
the many victims in Darfur.
Through the course of its investigation, the ICC must
protect its witnesses and conduct an active outreach campaign
to explain the court's mandate and purpose.
"Protecting those who come forward to testify and informing
those most at risk in Darfur about the ICC are not luxury
accessories to the court's investigation in Darfur," said
Dicker. "These measures are necessary for justice to be fully
realized."
To move ahead with an effective investigation, the Office
of the Prosecutor will also need a sufficiently staffed
investigative team and adequate support. Canada has provided a
voluntary contribution of $500,000 to assist the
investigation, increasing resources available through the
court's existing budget. Other states can demonstrate their
commitment to achieving justice in Darfur by making voluntary
contributions to support the ICC's prosecution of crimes
committed there.
Background on Sudan and the ICC
More than two million people among Darfur's population of
six million have been forcefully displaced from their homes
since February 2003 as a result of a government-supported
campaign of "ethnic cleansing" carried out in the context of
an internal armed conflict. Despite overwhelming evidence of
the Sudanese government's role in committing atrocities
alongside ethnic militia allies known as "Janjaweed," the
government continues to deny its role in the abuses and
minimize the scale of the crisis.
Almost two million of the displaced persons remain in camps
and towns, entirely dependent on humanitarian aid, and cannot
return to their homes and farms due to ongoing attacks, rape,
looting, and assault by the government-backed militias as well
as other armed actors. An additional million people require
food and other assistance as a result of the collapsed economy
and pervasive insecurity.
In the past few months, direct hostilities between government
forces and rebel groups have lessened, but attacks on
civilians continue due to the proliferation of armed groups,
the collapse of law and order, and an ongoing climate of
impunity. Given the lack of harvest in recent years, there are
fears of a potential food crisis.
Since Sudan is not a party to the Rome Statute of the ICC,
the ICC could only investigate and prosecute crimes in Darfur
following a referral by the U.N. Security Council.
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