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Why Genocide Is Difficult To Prosecute

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  • Why Genocide Is Difficult To Prosecute

    WHY GENOCIDE IS DIFFICULT TO PROSECUTE
    By Robert Marquand | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

    Christian Science Monitor
    April 30 2007

    Protesters in 35 nations and more than 280 US cities rallied Sunday
    for protecting those being killed in the Darfur war.

    The Hague - As public consciousness of the grim situation in Darfur
    grows, the difficulty of prosecuting what is often popularly called
    genocide is becoming clearer.

    For years, the term genocide was used to describe the ultimate crime.

    But that crime was rarely - if ever - charged, since international
    courts were too weak.

    Now, the mechanics of international justice are modestly rising to
    confront man's inhumanity to man: take, for example, the International
    Criminal Court and the Yugoslavia and Rwanda Tribunals here at
    The Hague.

    Yet at the same time, the political sensitivity surrounding a genocide
    charge, which requires nations to intervene under international law,
    is creating friction. The cases of Rwanda, Bosnia, and now Darfur
    demonstrate this.

    Sunday, protesters in 35 nations and more than 280 US cities marched
    against what a UN mission calls "apocalyptic" scenes still emerging
    from the Darfur war, now spreading from Sudan to Chad. Protest groups,
    including Amnesty International, called on Britain and the US to help
    create a peacekeeping force.

    So is Darfur a genocide? A US Holocaust Memorial Museum committee
    and Colin Powell have said it is. So do at least two human rights
    reports. One French expert, Marc Lavergne, calls it "worse than a
    genocide" since mass killings are not done out of racial hatred,
    but because Darfurians are simply "in the way" of Sudan's plans to
    control land.

    Yet many Sudanese experts and an International Criminal Court (ICC)
    don't term it genocide. They say it doesn't fit the 1948 Geneva
    Convention definition to win a case. This requires absolute proof
    of "mental intent" to kill or displace based on national, ethnic,
    or religious identity. Hence, an ICC prosecutor this winter did not
    charge a Sudanese interior minister and a rebel Janjaweed militia
    leader with "genocide," but crimes against humanity.

    'An explicit call to action'

    The word genocide raises deep legal and moral conundrums in a
    globalizing world, experts say: The term has gained popular usage
    in a media age to describe mass atrocities, as in Darfur, Rwanda,
    Bosnia. Yet prosecutors and world courts are ever more cautious
    about leveling the charge, even when it may apply - since it raises
    a requirement to intervene.

    "Genocide is an explicit call to action under the 1948 treaty, a call
    to prevent and punish," says Diane Orentlicher at American University
    in Washington. Recent court rulings show that "if you wait until there
    is a legal certainty to prove genocide, you have waited too long,"
    she adds.

    That's where politics enter. A party or state charged with genocide
    will likely be isolated and stigmatized in the global community,
    perhaps even making the situation worse. This is disputed on Darfur.

    Some Darfur activists feel Sudan hasn't been charged with genocide
    because that would make it impossible for governments to deal with
    Khartoum.

    The politics of genocide rose in a ruling on Bosnia this February.

    The International Court of Justice (ICJ) at The Hague did not find
    Serbia guilty of genocide in the ethnic cleansing of Bosnian Muslims
    in the early 1990s. Rather, it found Serbia culpable in not preventing
    genocide in the Srebrenica massacre, and awarded no damages.

    The ruling outraged scholars like Ruth Wedgwood of Johns Hopkins
    University who told the Monitor it "appeared to be a posthumous
    acquittal of [then President] Slobodan Milosevic for genocide. The
    court didn't look at a pattern of crimes in Bosnia, but selectively
    picked its evidence."

    Early this month it came to light that ICJ judges did not read and
    did not seek to investigate a huge range of materials from Belgrade
    that were used as evidence by the UN-sanctioned Yugoslavia Tribunal,
    just down the street in this city.

    New York Times reporter Marlise Simons wrote that the ICJ ruling
    "raised some eyebrows because aspects of Serbian military involvement
    are already known from records of earlier [Tribunal] trials.... In
    late 1993, for instance, more than 1,800 officers and noncommissioned
    men from the Yugoslav Army were serving in the Bosnian Serb Army,
    and were deployed, paid, promoted, or retired by Belgrade [and] given
    dual identities" through a secret office known as the 30th Personnel
    Center of the General Staff."

    ICJ defenders say it is a civil not a criminal court, and that its
    purpose is to settle disputes between nations to keep amity and
    peace intact. Critics say the ruling seemed more about conciliation
    than justice.

    "A lot has changed in the past 12 years; the EU is anxious to normalize
    relations with Serbia," says an American jurist with ties to The Hague,
    who requested anonymity. "I'm sure there are political pressures. The
    court probably didn't want to send Serbia back to the 1990s, isolate
    it, make it a pariah state in perpetuity.... When it came to the
    legal standard required to prove genocide, the court shrank."

    (Serb fugitives Radovan Karadzic and Gen. Ratko Mladic, architects
    of ethnic cleansing in Bosnia, still face genocide charges at the
    tribunal.)

    Tension between peace, justice

    UNHCR head Louise Arbour, who as chief prosecutor at the Yugoslav
    tribunal charged Mr. Milosevic with genocide, told the Monitor that
    courts should resist politics: "At the end of the day, there's going
    to be tension between peace and justice. By saying that genocide is
    a destabilizing charge [to the country accused], you politicize the
    justice issue," she said. Regarding Darfur, she said, "The UN embraced
    a responsibility to protect citizens from genocide.... But in Darfur,
    [head of the ICC investigation Antonio] Cassese looked for three
    months with a large staff and could find no genocidal intent.

    He couldn't find a case."

    That document, "The 2005 Report of the International Commission
    of Inquiry on Darfur to the UN Secretary-General," finds that the
    brutality in Darfur is for "purposes of counter-insurgency warfare."

    Yet legal scholar Nsongurua Udombana at Central European University
    in Budapest, Hungary, states bluntly that the Cassesse report finds
    no genocide in Darfur - to avoid an obligation to act.

    In a closely argued essay, "An Escape from Reason" in the Spring 2006
    issue of The International Lawyer, he says Darfur is prima facie far
    closer to genocide than the report finds.

    One conundrum: "It is impossible to determine genocide while it is
    actually happening," Mr. Udombana says. He adds, "By not calling
    it a genocide, it appears to make the issue less urgent than it
    actually is."

    Indeed, mass killings can create new on-the-ground dynamics, he
    suggests: Whether or not precise causes of intent can be determined by
    outside investigators, still, as rapes and murders continue on their
    bloody way, war can breed an intent to exterminate on the grounds of
    group identity.

    He agrees with Samantha Powers, author of "The Age of Genocide," that
    Darfur has spawned a dynamic in which Arabs are killing Africans, and
    lighter skinned and darker skinned groups are set against each other.

    He says a confession by a high ranking Sudanese official isn't needed
    to prove genocidal intent. It can be shown via a common standard of
    "practice and pattern" of crime.

    Two motives in prosecuting

    Mr. Lavergne of the National Center for Scientific Research in Paris
    says prosecuting mass crimes boils down to two often different motives:
    an effort to change behavior, or an effort to punish. In the midst
    of a nightmare like Darfur, he says, a genocide charge may not be the
    best way to change behavior, though he admits the problem is ambiguous.

    He also questions if Darfur is a genocide. The extermination is not
    aimed at Darfurian identity: "Darfurians who live in Khartoum are
    not targeted," he notes.

    For years "genocide" was a sanctified word, emerging from the
    Holocaust, and it defined mass atrocities like the Armenian genocide,
    or the killing fields of Pol Pot in Cambodia. But its popular use
    rose in the midst of the Rwanda and Bosnia wars.

    French scholar Jacques Semelin, author of the book "Purify and
    Destroy: The Political Uses of Massacres and Genocide," notes that
    "In Nuremburg, the charges were crimes against humanity. Genocide
    didn't come into the legal framework until 1948 in Geneva."

    Bosnia was an early instance of systematic mass killings in close
    proximity to a region, Europe, with an incorporated value system
    based on history that contained an assumption that such crimes would
    "never again" take place.

    Reports of mass killings along the Drina River in 1992, with Bosnian
    Muslim villages purged and teachers and elders shot, created a dilemma
    for Europe and the US. The US State Department's initial downplaying
    of killings and prison camps led one mid-level US diplomat, Richard
    Johnson, to write "The Pin-Stripe Approach to Genocide" - an early
    effort to pair the term with an event that seemed to warrant it.

    At the time, little notion existed of international courts as a tool
    to deal with mass crimes. That has changed. The Rwanda and Yugoslavia
    tribunals, the 1998 Treaty of Rome, the decision of the UN Security
    Council to empower indictments on Darfur by the ICC, the pressure on
    Serbia and Croatia to hand over war criminals - have created pressure
    on regimes to change behavior, though not a preventive one.

    For John Packer of Human Rights Internet in Ottawa, the world is in an
    "awkward moment" between the old Westphalian system of adjudication,
    "based on sovereign states and designed to create peace and stability
    between them, and a new developing model of international law."

    The ICJ ruling on Bosnia "brings this awkward moment into relief,"
    he says. "The court was caught willfully disregarding evidence showing
    Serbia's culpability, to avoid being put in a difficult spot."
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