Universal
Jurisdiction
Still Trying to Try Sharon
Laurie King-Irani
(Laurie
King-Irani, former editor of Middle East Report, is a lecturer
in anthropology at the University of Victoria in British Columbia
and North American Coordinator of the International Campaign for
Justice for the Victims of Sabra and Shatila.)
July 30, 2002
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Further
Info
See
the website of the International Campaign for Justice for
the Victims of Sabra and Shatila at http://www.indictsharon.net
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No sooner had
the dust settled in Gaza following Israel's July 23 assassination
of Hamas leader Salah Shehada -- an operation that took the lives
of 15 civilians, many of them children -- than Palestinian officials
began declaring this act the first war crime committed since the
inauguration of the International Criminal Court (ICC) on July 1,
2002. Calls to bring Israel to book before the new court multiplied,
until legal experts weighed in with deflating news. The 1998 Rome
Statute, which established the ICC, specifies that the court can
only exercise jurisdiction over crimes occurring on the territory
of a state party, or crimes involving an accused who is a national
of a state party. Israel is not a signatory to the Rome Statute.
Further, as Avril McDonald of Amsterdam's Asser Institute noted:
"Palestine is not a country." Until a Palestinian state
is recognized by the international community, and signs the relevant
instruments of international law, Palestinians "cannot pursue
justice independently."
But Palestinians
and others do have alternative venues for pursuing justice and halting
impunity for war crimes and grave human rights violations not covered
by the ICC's mandate. Spain's 1998 extradition of Gen. Augusto Pinochet,
then in London, to stand trial for human rights abuses committed
in Chile from 1973-1990 awakened the world to the possibility of
trials in national courts utilizing the principle of universal jurisdiction.
Lately the
debate over universal jurisdiction has centered on two cases lodged
in Belgium. One charged former Congolese Foreign Minister Yerodia
Ndombasi for inciting and abetting crimes against humanity during
a rebellion against Congolese President Laurent-Desire Kabila. The
other seeks to indict Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, retired
Israeli General Amos Yaron, the late Phalangist leader Elie Hobeika
and others with responsibility for the massacre of Palestinians
at Sabra and Shatila in 1982, crimes for which no one has ever stood
trial. On June 26, a Belgian Court of Appeals ruled that the case
against Sharon and others was inadmissible for trial in Belgium
on the unexpected grounds that the accused were not found on Belgian
soil. But reports of the demise of the Sharon case -- repeated at
each twist in the Belgian proceedings -- are greatly exaggerated.
UNIVERSAL
JURISDICTION: WEAPON OF THE WEAK?
The principle
of universal jurisdiction, encoded in the Fourth Geneva Conventions,
international customary law and the 1984 Convention on Torture,
is based on customary law as well as a consensus, strengthened by
the horrors of World War II, that some crimes are so heinous that
they threaten the entire human race. The jurisdiction for prosecuting
these crimes must be universal, not simply territorial. The Geneva
Conventions specifically state that all signatories to the convention
have not only the right but also the duty to either prosecute or
extradite individuals guilty of war crimes, crimes against humanity
and genocide.
In 1993, five
years before Spain's dramatic attempt to extradite Pinochet from
Britain, the Belgian Parliament had already passed a law formally
incorporating universal jurisdiction for war crimes into Belgium's
criminal code. In 1999, the parliament strengthened the initial
law by passing additional legislation removing immunity for sitting
heads of state accused of genocide and crimes against humanity.
The first complete trial and conviction of individuals accused of
war crimes under this law took place in 2001, when a Belgian court
found four Rwandans -- two nuns, a political leader and the owner
of a match factory -- guilty of complicity in genocidal crimes in
Rwanda and sentenced them to prison for 15 years.
Possibly the
most controversial case to be pursued under the principle of universal
jurisdiction since the Pinochet affair, the case against Sharon
and others was lodged in a Belgian court in June 2001 under the
1993 legislation. The plaintiffs were 23 individuals, stateless
Palestinian refugees and impoverished Lebanese nationals, usually
considered among the least powerful people in the international
political system, who had witnessed and survived a massacre two
decades ago.
Opponents of
the application of universal jurisdiction in national courts argue
that such trials will not deter crimes, but will instead create
an even more dangerous and volatile international milieu by eroding
the necessary comity in relations between sovereign states. Some
detractors of universal jurisdiction have gone so far as to warn
that these trials could dismantle the Westphalian system of sovereign
nation-states itself. Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger,
himself the subject of universal jurisdiction initiatives in Chile,
has compared universal jurisdiction to a "witch hunt"
and warned that it could quickly devolve into a "new Inquisition."
But when Belgian
magistrate Patrick Collignon ruled that the Sabra and Shatila plaintiffs'
case was admissible in Belgium on the same day that former Serbian
President Slobodan Milosevic was transported to a prison cell at
The Hague to face an ad hoc international tribunal, the progressive
evolution of international criminal prosecution seemed to be accelerating
at breathtaking speed.
JUDICIAL
CLIFFHANGER
The case against
Sharon, Yaron and others has not lacked in drama and sudden reversals
of fortune, including several previous attempts, all averted at
the eleventh hour, to abort the effort completely. Three former
Lebanese Forces militia officials (one of whom, Elie Hobeika, was
named in the case) have been assassinated by parties unknown since
January 2002. In February 2002, the International Court of Justice
(ICJ) issued a regressive ruling stating that Belgium erred in putting
out an arrest warrant for Yerodia Ndombasi because he was a sitting
foreign minister at the time. Most recently, the Belgian Appeals
Court decision to halt the Sharon case on June 26 has sparked an
unprecedented joint initiative by national and international human
rights organizations and members of the Belgian Parliament and government
to save and strengthen Belgium's law of universal jurisdiction.
Following the
ICJ ruling, few expected the Court of Appeals to render a decision
in favor of prosecuting Sharon, who was defense minister at the
time of the Sabra and Shatila massacres. But most informed observers
assumed, given Belgian Attorney General Pierre Morlet's consistent
support of the plaintiffs' arguments during a series of pre-trial
hearings, that the Appeals Court would rule that a case could proceed
against Yaron and other Israeli officials, as well as surviving
Lebanese Forces militia members, none of whom enjoy immunity from
prosecution. The Appeals Court's decision to forestall indictment
of anyone in the case caught observers by surprise.
Expressing
"extreme dismay" with the June 26 ruling, Amnesty International
noted that: "This restrictive interpretation of Belgian national
law is inconsistent with international law... The organization believes
that the Belgian Parliament, in enacting the 1993 law providing
for universal jurisdiction over war crimes, as well as in its 1999
amendment to that law extending its scope to crimes against humanity
and genocide, intended to provide Belgian courts with the full extent
of universal jurisdiction over these crimes permitted under international
law."
Explanations
for the Appeals Court's ruling range from speculation that Belgian
judges feared an onset of universal jurisdiction fatigue to conspiratorial
whispers that US-Israeli pressure had shaped the judges' thinking.
GALVANIZING
EFFECT
Regardless
of the reason for the Appeals Court's surprising ruling, it has
galvanized a broad-based coalition of human rights organizations,
victims of war crimes from a variety of countries and politicians
from across Belgium's political spectrum. While lawyers for the
Sabra and Shatila plaintiffs were busy drafting an appeal to Belgium's
Supreme Court arguing that the June 26 ruling violated the spirit
and the letter of the 1993 and 1999 laws, human rights activists
and Belgian parliamentarians were busy drafting new provisions aimed
at sharpening universal jurisdiction legislation as a weapon of
the weak. Legislators feared that the Appeals Court decision could
render the laws of 1993 and 1999 obsolete.
Their unprecedented
legislative initiative has provided an opportunity to bring the
1993 and 1999 legislation into line with the most recent developments
in international criminal prosecution. For instance, the proposed
interpretive law recognizes that sitting foreign and prime ministers
are immune from prosecution until they complete their terms and
return to civilian life, bringing Belgium's universal jurisdiction
law into conformity with the ICJ ruling in February. The law clarifies
the judicial "division of labor" between the ICC and Belgian
courts, which limits victims' invocation of universal jurisdiction
to the following case: those in which the alleged crimes have not
been committed on Belgian territory and the plaintiffs are neither
Belgian nor resident on Belgian territory for one year or more,
and the accused is not on Belgian territory. Hence the interpretive
law clarifies that accused parties need not live in Belgium or be
found on Belgian soil in order to be prosecuted.
The new law
has a good chance of passing the Senate in October before being
sent to the Chamber of Deputies. Should it pass, the Sabra and Shatila
plaintiffs' appeal of the Court of Appeals decision will be rendered
redundant, since the Supreme Court will be bound by the decisions
of Parliament. The proposed interpretive law has the public support
of the president of the Senate's Commission of Justice. Lawyers
for the Sabra and Shatila plaintiffs noted that the June 26 ruling
threatened not only their case, but many others besides. Even conservative
newspapers in Belgium were calling for the defense of the 1993 and
1999 law of universal jurisdiction. Crucial to the parliamentary
effort are politicians, some from the right, who hope to prosecute
the murderers of Belgian peacekeepers in Rwanda in 1994.
A BELLWETHER
CASE
In their analyses
of the strengths and weaknesses of universal jurisdiction, both
Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have stressed that
the political will of governments can make or break the successful
prosecution of international crimes in national courts. With the
current grassroots, multi-party legislative initiative underway
in Belgium, we may be witnessing the collaborative construction
of the necessary political will from the ground up.
For the Sabra
and Shatila survivors who filed the complaint, no less than all
Palestinians subject to grave breaches of international humanitarian
law, developments in Belgium's parliament will be scrutinized closely
over the coming months. As Luc Walleyn, one of the lawyers for the
Sabra and Shatila plaintiffs, noted: "Today, the Palestinian
people lack effective courts of law and have no means of defending
and vindicating their rights as defined by international humanitarian
law and the Geneva Conventions. This absence of judicial recourse
cannot continue. The effort to end impunity will not cease."
The jury is
still out on the effort to indict those responsible for the Sabra
and Shatila massacres, but it is clear that the Sharon case has
highlighted the question at the heart of the debate on international
criminal prosecution: are the needs, interests and rights of states
to be given priority in deciding whether to investigate and prosecute
war crimes and crimes against humanity? Or will international law
prioritize the needs, interests and rights of victims of states
and state officials? The fate of the case against Sharon will be
a bellwether for the future trajectory of universal jurisdiction
in national courts.
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