A weblog for students engaged in doctoral studies in the field of human rights. It is intended to provide information about contemporary developments, references to new publications and material of a practical nature.
Resources on PhD studies
▼
Tuesday, 30 April 2013
Monday, 29 April 2013
Chemical Weapons: Is it a Crime?
The conflicting reports about Syria’s alleged use of chemical weapons raises an interesting point about international crimes. It is being widely reported that the use of chemical weapons is a war crime. But is it?
The
Rome Statute contains four relevant provisions, in article 8, where a complete
and exhaustive list of war crimes is set out:
(xvii) Employing poison or poisoned weapons;(xviii) Employing asphyxiating, poisonous or other gases, and all analogous liquids, materials or devices;(xix) Employing bullets which expand or flatten easily in the human body, such as bullets with a hard envelope which does not entirely cover the core or is pierced with incisions;(xx) Employing weapons, projectiles and material and methods of warfare which are of a nature to cause superfluous injury or unnecessary suffering or which are inherently indiscriminate in violation of the international law of armed conflict, provided that such weapons, projectiles and material and methods of warfare are the subject of a comprehensive prohibition and are included in an annex to this Statute, by an amendment in accordance with the relevant provisions set forth in articles 121 and 123;
These provisions only
apply to international armed conflict and are therefore not applicable to the
Syrian civil war. And it isn’t really complete or exhaustive. But it is what
the Rome Conference could agree upon.
At the Kampala Review
Conference, held in June 2010, amendments were adopted extending the same
provisions to non-international armed conflict. The amendments have only been
ratified by a few States and obviously not by Syria, which is not a State Party
to the Rome Statute, nor by some of the States that are accusing Syria of
committing war crimes through the use of chemical weapons in a
non-international armed conflict. But they also haven’t been ratified by some
of the States that are now condemning Syria.
Even assuming that these
provisions do apply, in a general sense, to the conflict in Syria, - the
consequence of a Security Council resolution, for example - do they prohibit
chemical weapons? The issue was certainly debated at the Rome Conference where
the relevant paragraphs in article 8 were adopted. In the course of
negotiations, only a week before the conclusion of the Conference, the Bureau
proposed a text that was the ancestor of article 8 containing six paragraphs
dealing with prohibited weapons, not four as in the final version. The two that
did not make it to the final draft read as follows:
iv) Bacteriological (biological) agents or toxins for hostile purposes or in armed conflict;(v) Chemical weapons as defined in and prohibited by the 1993 Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons and on Their Destruction;
The penultimate draft that contained reference to
bacteriological and chemical weapons also contained a broad prohibition on
weapons that cause unnecessary suffering and superfluous harm and that are
indiscriminate. Indeed it was broad enough to cover nuclear weapons.
The removal of an explicit reference to bacteriological
and chemical weapons coincided with a removal of the broad general provision
capable of covering nuclear weapons. This was a compromise designed to appease
some non-nuclear states, who felt that excluding nuclear weapons alone smacked
of hypocrisy. After all, chemical weapons were the ‘poor man’s’ weapon of mass
destruction.
By an exercise of interpretation, it is possible to
view chemical weapons as falling under the category of ‘poison or poisoned weapons’ or
‘asphyxiating, poisonous or other gases, and all analogous liquids, materials
or devices’. Of course it is also arguable that nuclear weapons are also ‘poison
weapons’.
Perhaps
the most likely place to find chemical weapons is in the fourth paragraph of
the relevant provision in article 8 of the Rome Statute, paragraph xx, with its
reference to ‘weapons, projectiles and material and methods of warfare which
are of a nature to cause superfluous injury or unnecessary suffering or which
are inherently indiscriminate’. That provision refers to an annex to the
Statute. But alas, there is no annex. In preparation for the Review Conference,
Belgium initially proposed the adoption of such an annex but there was
insufficient interest from other States.
Of
course, there should be an annex. And it should contain both chemical and
nuclear weapons. That is the only position consistent with the general
principle set out in 1869 in the St. Petersburg Declaration. And the vast
majority of States Parties to the Rome Statute would have no difficulty with
such a prohibition.
The
deficient provisions in the Rome Statute on prohibited weapons are best
explained by the fact that the most powerful States possess important
stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction that are potentially far more harmful
to humanity than isolated chemical weapons used on the battlefield. Not only do
they merely retain nuclear weapons; these States continue to develop them, in
defiance of their obligations under international law and in particular under
the Non-Proliferation Treaty. And all the while, they continue to lecture Iran
and North Korea and any other rogue upstart.
Also
of interest in this discussion is the observation that the two United Nations
ad hoc tribunals established to deal with essentially non-international
conflicts, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda and the Special Court
for Sierra Leone, do not have any jurisdiction over the use of prohibited
weapons. Only the Statute of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia has a text on the subject. Article 3 of its Statute lists as a crime
the ‘employment of poisonous weapons or other weapons calculated to cause
unnecessary suffering’. It has not been prosecuted, however, nor has the
Tribunal ever had to decide whether this war crime, whose text is drawn from
rather archaic instruments that only concern international armed conflict, may
also apply to non-international armed conflict.
Finally,
the Chemical Weapons Convention of 1993 requires a mention. It of course
prohibits the use of chemical weapons, but it does not make their use an
international crime. It has been widely ratified, but I did not find either
Syria or Israel on the list of States Parties.
The
point here is not to suggest that Syria’s use of chemical weapons, if that is
indeed the case, constitutes innocent or excusable behaviour. If the
allegations are true, Syria has perpetrated an appalling atrocity. But the
rather facile manner by which political leaders in powerful states that possess
and continue to develop nuclear weapons describe the use of chemical weapons as
a war crime does indeed smack of hypocrisy. One of the States condemning Syria
on the matter of chemical weapons possesses a substantial arsenal of nuclear
weapons, some of them aimed at Syria itself.
We
should express outrage on the existence of such appalling illegal weapons. But
rather than echo the United States, the United Kingdom and Israel, who
themselves stockpile horrible weapons of mass destruction, we should insist
that they put their money where their mouths are.
Sunday, 28 April 2013
Leiden University Wins International Criminal Court Moot
A team of Leiden University students has won the International Criminal Court moot, held at the the Court. Leiden's team consisted of: John Doyle,
Sophie Beelaerts van Blokland, Uzay Aysev, Alexander Wills, Joe Holt, Daniel Huck and Adrian Plevin. Thirty-seven teams from twenty-seven countries competed in the moot. For the Court's press release and a photo of the team with Judge Howard Morison, who presided over the final, see here.
Sunday, 21 April 2013
Irish Famine Tribunal
The Irish Famine Tribunal is being held this weekend at Fordham University School of Law, in New York City. It is a bit of a cross between a Russell Tribunal and a student law moot. The Tribunal is considering whether the responsibility of the United Kingdom – acknowledged by Prime Minister Tony Blair in 1997 (‘Those who governed in London at the time failed their people through standing by while a crop failure turned into a massive human tragedy’) – can be examined using modern-day definitions of genocide and crimes against humanity.
From left, Adam Assahli, Elaine Marum, Justice Hardiman, Judge Ingram, myself and Conor Campbell. |
The
case was presented as a simulated application by Ireland against the United
Kingdom before the International Court of Justice. The three-judge panel
consisted of Justice Adrian Hardiman of the Supreme Court of Ireland, Judge
John G. Ingram of the Kings County Supreme Court in Brooklyn, and myself.
Written submissions are to follow and a decision will be issued in the future
(don’t worry, we won’t take as long as the International Criminal Tribunal for
Rwanda or the Special Court for Sierra Leone).
The
issues raised are quite fascinating, and are not without relevance to the
attribution of international criminal responsibility in other situations of
famine, such as the Ukrainian famine of the 1930s and the massive deaths from
disease and starvation under the Khmer Rouge in the 1970s. The discussions also
looked at the responsibility of a government to assist its own people when
circumstances that are not of its making bring terrible hardship. In 1846, the
prevailing Whig policy applied by the United Kingdom Parliament seemed rooted
in the view that it was not the government’s responsibility to care for its
people, and that if they wanted to survive the crisis they would have to give
up their possessions and work for their food. Yesterday’s discussion was
reminiscent of some of the Tory drivel we hear today about welfare reform.
Another
fascinating issue concerns the application of the international criminal law
framework to the 1840s. The United Kingdom government today takes the view that
the notion of genocide cannot be applied to events prior to 1948, when the
Convention was adopted, but its cynical justification is driven by a fear of
angering Turkey were it to label the 1915 attacks on the Armenians with the
‘g-word’. Yet in 1915, when it was at war with Turkey and not concerned about
irritating a NATO ally, the United Kingdom condemned ‘these new crimes of
Turkey against humanity and civilisation’. If the United Kingdom recognised the
concept of crimes against humanity in 1915, why not in 1846?
Even
if the crimes themselves can be deemed applicable to events 170 years ago, that
still leaves the question of whether the United Kingdom’s neglect of the Irish
people during the famine was actually intentional conduct intended to destroy
the Irish people, in whole or in part, and therefore genocide according to the
modern definition, or whether it constituted a ‘widespread or systematic
attack’ on the Irish people, and therefore crimes against humanity. I expect
these issues to be addressed in the final judgment.
An
interesting discussion of the historiography of the Irish famine was published by
Breandán Mac Suibhne last week in the Dublin Review of Books.
Tuesday, 16 April 2013
Drafting history of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
My new book on the drafting history of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights will be published officially by Cambridge University Press on Thursday. It actually consists of three books and 3,150 pages, and comes in a box. I hope everyone will buy the books, but they are expensive so I won't begrudge friends for not laying out the dosh, but librarians should certainly be informed about getting them for their collection. Information on the books is available here. It is possible to buy them at a significant discount using the discount code of the recent American Society of International Law conference: ME3ASIL.
The three volumes contain all of the United Nations documents related to the drafting of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It is a project that has been dear to my heart for more than 15 years. In 1998, some students made for me a set of photocopies of the relevant documents, but it was not complete and moreover it was not indexed in any way. And I lost the copies when I moved to Ireland a few years later.
There is also, on the website of the United Nations, a collection of scanned documents related to the drafting of the Declaration. But it too is not really complete, and there is no way of searching the materials by keyword or article.
For the first time, then, the relevant materials are assembled in a comprehensive and systematic way, and they are thoroughly indexed. There are also detailed annotations to assist the reader.
My belief is that this will make the drafting history of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights much more accessible to scholars and researchers. And this may lead to new understandings and insights.
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights is a hugely important document whose significance has often been understated by statements like 'it's not binding'. The Declaration is one of the bases of the Universal Periodic Review undertaken by states at the Human Rights Council. It is also a source of common understandings of human rights that contributes to our appreciation of customary international law and 'fundamental principles of humanity'. These ideas are developed in the lengthy introduction to the three volumes.
Besides the bound volumes, Cambridge will issue this soon in an electronic version.
The three volumes contain all of the United Nations documents related to the drafting of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It is a project that has been dear to my heart for more than 15 years. In 1998, some students made for me a set of photocopies of the relevant documents, but it was not complete and moreover it was not indexed in any way. And I lost the copies when I moved to Ireland a few years later.
There is also, on the website of the United Nations, a collection of scanned documents related to the drafting of the Declaration. But it too is not really complete, and there is no way of searching the materials by keyword or article.
For the first time, then, the relevant materials are assembled in a comprehensive and systematic way, and they are thoroughly indexed. There are also detailed annotations to assist the reader.
My belief is that this will make the drafting history of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights much more accessible to scholars and researchers. And this may lead to new understandings and insights.
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights is a hugely important document whose significance has often been understated by statements like 'it's not binding'. The Declaration is one of the bases of the Universal Periodic Review undertaken by states at the Human Rights Council. It is also a source of common understandings of human rights that contributes to our appreciation of customary international law and 'fundamental principles of humanity'. These ideas are developed in the lengthy introduction to the three volumes.
Besides the bound volumes, Cambridge will issue this soon in an electronic version.
Sunday, 14 April 2013
General Assembly Debate on International Justice
The
United Nations General Assembly held a controversial ‘debate’ last week on the
subject of international criminal justice and reconciliation. I was invited to
participate in one of the expert panels, and a copy of my prepared remarks can
be found here. For the General Assembly, check here.
Arriving
at United Nations headquarters in New York on Wednesday morning, I was taken by
surprise to learn about a storm that had been brewing around this event. When I
had been invited to participate several weeks earlier, by the President of the
General Assembly, panellists listed for the expert sessions included Kenneth
Roth, former head of Human Rights Watch, David Tolbert, former deputy prosecutor
of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, and Tiina
Intelmann, President of the Assembly of States Parties of the International
Criminal Court. There was nothing to suggest that eloquent advocates favouring
the international criminal justice institutions would not be present.
But
by Wednesday morning, Ken, David and Tiina had all withdrawn. I was told that
others, like President Meron of the International Criminal Tribunal for the
former Yugoslavia, had declined an invitation to participate. Moreover, a
European diplomat I met before the meeting started told me that the EU would be
boycotting the afternoon session. In its statement during the morning session,
the EU cast aspersions on the integrity of the panellists, something that I did
not particularly appreciate. I was told that Canada was staying away, but I
certainly saw someone take the nameplate for Canada and attend the morning
session.
The
General Assembly debate was opened on Wednesday morning by Ban Ki Moon. The
morning portion of the meeting consisted of statements by members of the
General Assembly, with priority given to the two heads of state in attendance:
Tomislav Nikolić of Serbia and Nebojša Radmanović of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Predictably, the two presidents were very critical of the International
Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. There was much talk about bias in
the selection of defendants and in the length of sentences that have been
imposed, as well as complaints about the recent acquittal of Croatian general
Gotovina and Kosovar politician Haradinaj. I don’t think either of them
mentioned the more recent acquittal of Serb general Perisic. They were followed
by a number of other speakers, some of them very supportive of international
criminal justice, like the EU and some of the Latin American and Caribbean
states, and others more sceptical, like Namibia and China. I had some
satisfaction seeing the nameplate of the ‘State of Palestine’ and listening to
the remarks of its delegate.
Rwanda
was represented by its minister of justice, Tharcisse
Karugarama, who had his own critique of international justice, although his
arguments were hardly the same as those of the two Serb presidents. The Rwandan
minister claimed that the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda had not
contributed to reconciliation, although how he could know this is a mystery to
me. He seemed to think that there was reconciliation in Rwanda, but that it was
due to the gacaca trials. Perhaps. But perhaps both the International Tribunal
and the gacaca trials contributed to the process. It is interesting that Minister
Karugarama seems to think that there has been a degree of reconciliation, something
the Serb presidents denied entirely. But the latter seemed to confuse
reconciliation with anger about the Gotovina acquittal.
There
was also much discussion of the International Criminal Court. Several delegates
singled out problems with the Security Council referrals to the Court, noting
that this did not contribute to the independence and impartiality of the
institution. Illegal clauses in the resolutions concerning funding of the Court
and immunity for certain categories of individual were mentioned specifically.
When
the time came for my panel, late in the day, I felt compelled to adjust my prepared
remarks on reconciliation in order to answer much of the unreasonable and
unfair criticism that had been made of international justice. I was left largely
alone, because those who were most friendly to international justice, not to
mention representatives of the International Criminal Court and the
International Tribunals, were absent. The panellists were a mixed bag, and some
of them strayed far from the topic at hand. There was some unproductive harping
on oldarguments that are no longer of any significance, like the now irrelevant
grumble that the Security Council has no authority to create tribunals.
Finally,
I didn’t need to change that much of what I had planned to say, because the
main point in my prepared remarks was that reconciliation is only one of
several objectives of international justice. There is much evidence that the
other purposes – principally peace and deterrence – have been achieved.
International justice can’t take sole credit for the fact that the former
Yugoslavia, Rwanda and Sierra Leone have been at peace for more than a decade.
But nor is it reasonable to gainsay the contribution that the institutions have
made. As for reconciliation, this is something that takes much longer, probably
many decades and generations. It is plainly wrong to dismiss the significance
of the international criminal tribunals by claiming that they have failed to
achieve reconciliation.
At the close of the day, the President of the General Assembly said there had been unprecedented interest in the debate, and that the session would continue at least into the next day because many delegations had requested the right to speak. I could not stay in New York, but there is a press release on the remainder of the debate. For the press release on Wednesday's meeting, see here.
I’m
not a big fan of boycotting debates, especially when they take place in a forum
of such importance as the United Nations General Assembly. The expression of
views that took place last Wednesday was unprecedented. What did it show,
finally?
The
voices that might be characterised as truly hostile to international justice
were not really very numerous. The criticisms that were made on Wednesday
tended to be too harsh and one-sided, and this certainly undermined their
credibility. The Serb president, for example, might have acknowledged the acquittal
of General Perisic. For that matter, he might have recognised that Serbia as a
state has not generally had responsibility attributed to it for the atrocities
that took place during the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina. I suppose that had
Bosnia and Herzegovina been represented by a Bosniac president instead of a
Serb president, we might have heard a different complaint about the Tribunal.
As for Rwanda, to the extent it wants to claim that there is indeed a degree of
justice and reconciliation, some recognition of the contribution by the
Tribunal might be in order.
Criticism
is good for the international tribunals and for the International Criminal
Court. Many supporters of this movement rarely hear the voices of the sceptics,
most of whom come from the global south. The objections need to be taken
seriously and they need to be addressed rather than ignored or dismissed.
The
President of the General Assembly will be preparing a report on the debate.
Human Rights Summer Schools in Galway
The Irish Centre for Human Rights at the
School of Law at the National University of Ireland, Galway is pleased to
announce the updated details of their summer school programmes for 2013.
The International Criminal Court summer school 2013
17-21
June 2013, NUI Galway, Ireland
The annual International Criminal Court
summer school at the Irish Centre for Human Rights is the premiere summer
school specializing on the International Criminal Court. The summer school
allows participants the opportunity to attend a series of intensive lectures
over five days. The lectures are given by leading academics on the subject and
by legal professionals working at the International Criminal Court. The summer
school is attended by legal professionals, academics, postgraduate students and
NGOs. Participants are provided with a detailed working knowledge of the
establishment of the Court, its structures and operations, and the applicable
law. Participants are also given the opportunity to network with the speakers
throughout the week. Lectures also speak to related issues in international
criminal law, including: genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity, the
crime of aggression, universal jurisdiction, immunities, and the role of
victims.
For more information and to register please
visit our website at http://conference.ie/Conferences/index.asp?Conference=199
or email iccsummerschool@gmail.com.
The closing date for applications is 31 May 2013.
Summer School in Cinema, Human Rights and Advocacy
27th June to 6th July 2013, NUI Galway, Ireland
Following the success of the last seven
years in Venice and Galway, this is the fourth year that this summer school is hosted
in Galway jointly by the Irish Centre for Human Rights and the Huston School of
Film & Digital Media, NUIG. Elements of the summer school include
information on the fundamentals of human rights, how to raise awareness of
human rights on camera, the development of ideas and how these ideas should be
pitched. This year’s programme will feature the Human Rights Cinema Event on
5th and 6th July, organized in collaboration with Amnesty International,
Ireland and Galway One World Centre, in order to give participants the chance
to assist human rights films which forms a basis for critical discussion.
The closing date for applications is 30th April 2013.
Limited scholarships available!
For
faculty and speakers, this year's program, and more information please visit
www.chra.ie or email to info@chra.ie. All
events associated with the summer school could be followed from our Face Book
page, http://www.facebook.com/pages/Summer-School-in-Cinema-Human-Rights-and-Advocacy/128962737217375.
Summer School on Human Rights, Migration and Globalization
8 to 12 July 2013,
NUI, Galway
The Irish Centre for Human Rights will host
its inaugural Summer School on Human Rights, Migration and Globalization from 8
to 12 July 2013. The inaugural year’s subtopic is Defining and Promoting Human
Rights of Migrants in an Era of Globalization. The five days of intensive
sessions will be led by leading specialists including Professor Francois Crépeau, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights
of Migrants. The Summer School will familiarise participants with the sources
of migrants’ rights and the available protection mechanisms. It will also
provide participants with an understanding of the major tensions underlying the
issue of the protection of migrants’ rights and of how globalization shapes
these tensions. The programme will include social activities that will allow
participants to network with each other and the panel in a relaxed environment.
The Summer School is open to anyone interested in the contemporary challenges
of migration and human rights protection. Participants will have an opportunity
to propose their research ideas for discussion.
For more information,
please visit: http://www.nuigalway.ie/human_rights
Please address any
additional queries to: hrandmigrationsummerschool@gmail.com
The closing date for
applications is 31 May 2013.