Prosecutor V Dusko Tadic
Prosecutor V Dusko Tadic
Prosecutor V Dusko Tadic
Appellant now alleges error of law on the part of the Trial Chamber.
3. As can readily be seen from the operative part of the judgement, the Trial
Chamber took a different approach to the first ground of contestation, on
which it refused to rule, from the route it followed with respect to the last
two grounds, which it dismissed. This distinction ought to be observed and
will be referred to below.
From the development of the proceedings, however, it now appears that the
question of jurisdiction has acquired, before this Chamber, a two-tier
dimension:
Mr.Richard Goldstone,
Prosecutor
Mr. Grant Nieman
Mr. Alan Tieger
Mr. Michael Kiegan
Ms. Brenda Hollis
I. INTRODUCTION
A. The Judgement Under Appeal
1. The Appeals Chamber of the International Tribunal for the Prosecution of
Persons Responsible for Serious Violations of International Humanitarian
Law Committed in the Territory of Former Yugoslavia since 1991
(hereinafter "International Tribunal") is seized of an appeal lodged by
Appellant the Defence against a judgement rendered by the Trial Chamber
II on 10 August 1995. By that judgement, Appellant's motion challenging
the jurisdiction of the International Tribunal was denied.
2. Before the Trial Chamber, Appellant had launched a three-pronged
attack:
a) illegal foundation of the International Tribunal;
b) wrongful primacy of the International Tribunal over national courts;
c) lack of jurisdiction ratione materiae.
The judgement under appeal denied the relief sought by Appellant; in its
essential provisions, it reads as follows:
"THE TRIAL CHAMBER [. . . ]HEREBY DISMISSES the motion insofar
as it relates to primacy jurisdiction and subject-matter jurisdiction under
Articles 2, 3 and 5 and otherwise decides it to be incompetent insofar as it
challenges the establishment of the International Tribunal HEREBY
DENIES the relief sought by the Defence in its Motion on the Jurisdiction
of the Tribunal." (Decision on the Defence Motion on Jurisdiction in the
Trial Chamber of the International Tribunal, 10 August 1995 (Case No.
IT-94-1-T), at 33 (hereinafter Decision at Trial).)
Appellant in his original Brief. They are offered under the following
headings:
a) unlawful establishment of the International Tribunal;
b) unjustified primacy of the International Tribunal over competent
domestic courts;
c) lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.
The Appeals Chamber proposes to examine each of the grounds of appeal in
the order in which they are raised by Appellant.
II. UNLAWFUL ESTABLISHMENT OF THE INTERNATIONAL
TRIBUNAL
9. The first ground of appeal attacks the validity of the establishment of the
International Tribunal.
A. Meaning Of Jurisdiction
10. In discussing the Defence plea to the jurisdiction of the International
Tribunal on grounds of invalidity of its establishment by the Security
Council, the Trial Chamber declared:
"There are clearly enough matters of jurisdiction which are open to
determination by the International Tribunal, questions of time, place and
nature of an offence charged. These are properly described as jurisdictional,
whereas the validity of the creation of the International Tribunal is not truly
a matter of jurisdiction but rather the lawfulness of its creation
[. . .]" (Decision at Trial, at para. 4.)
There is a petitio principii underlying this affirmation and it fails to explain
the criteria by which it the Trial Chamber disqualifies the plea of invalidity
of the establishment of the International Tribunal as a plea to jurisdiction.
What is more important, that proposition implies a narrow concept of
jurisdiction reduced to pleas based on the limits of its scope in time and
space and as to persons and subject-matter (ratione temporis, loci, personae
and materiae). But jurisdiction is not merely an ambit or sphere (better
described in this case as "competence"); it is basically - as is visible from
the Latin origin of the word itself, jurisdictio - a legal power, hence
necessarily a legitimate power, "to state the law" (dire le droit) within this
ambit, in an authoritative and final manner.
This is the meaning which it carries in all legal systems. Thus, historically,
in common law, the Termes de la ley provide the following definition:
"jurisdiction' is a dignity which a man hath by a power to do justice in
causes of complaint made before him." (Stroud's Judicial Dictionary, 1379
(5th ed. 1986).)
16. In treating a similar case in its advisory opinion on the Effect of Awards
of the United Nations Administrative Tribunal, the International Court of
Justice declared:
"[T]he view has been put forward that the Administrative Tribunal is a
subsidiary, subordinate, or secondary organ; and that, accordingly, the
Tribunal's judgements cannot bind the General Assembly which established
it.
The question cannot be determined on the basis of the description of the
relationship between the General Assembly and the Tribunal, that is, by
considering whether the Tribunal is to be regarded as a subsidiary, a
subordinate, or a secondary organ, or on the basis of the fact that it was
established by the General Assembly. It depends on the intention of the
General Assembly in establishing the Tribunal and on the nature of the
functions conferred upon it by its Statute. An examination of the language
of the Statute of the Administrative Tribunal has shown that the General
Assembly intended to establish a judicial body." (Effect of Awards of
Compensation Made by the United Nations Administrative Tribunal, 1954
I.C.J. Reports 47, at 60-1 (Advisory Opinion of 13 July) (hereinafter Effect
of Awards).)
17. Earlier, the Court had derived the judicial nature of the United Nations
Administrative Tribunal ("UNAT") from the use of certain terms and
language in the Statute and its possession of certain attributes. Prominent
among these attributes of the judicial function figures the power provided
for in Article 2, paragraph 3, of the Statute of UNAT:
"In the event of a dispute as to whether the Tribunal has competence, the
matter shall be settled by the decision of the Tribunal." (Id. at
51-2, quoting Statute of the United Nations Administrative Tribunal, art. 2,
para. 3.)
18. This power, known as the principle of "Kompetenz-Kompetenz" in
German or "la comptence de la comptence" in French, is part, and indeed
a major part, of the incidental or inherent jurisdiction of any judicial or
arbitral tribunal, consisting of its "jurisdiction to determine its own
jurisdiction." It is a necessary component in the exercise of the judicial
function and does not need to be expressly provided for in the constitutive
documents of those tribunals, although this is often done (see, e.g., Statute
of the International Court of Justice, Art. 36, para. 6). But in the words of
the International Court of Justice:
"[T]his principle, which is accepted by the general international law in the
matter of arbitration, assumes particular force when the international
But this is beside the point. The question before the Appeals Chamber is
whether the International Tribunal, in exercising this "incidental"
jurisdiction, can examine the legality of its establishment by the Security
Council, solely for the purpose of ascertaining its own "primary"
jurisdiction over the case before it.
21. The Trial Chamber has sought support for its position in some dicta of
the International Court of Justice or its individual Judges, (see Decision at
Trial, at paras. 10 - 13), to the effect that:
"Undoubtedly, the Court does not possess powers of judicial
review or appeal in respect of decisions taken by the United
Nations organs concerned." (Legal Consequences for States of the
Continued Presence of South Africa in Namibia (South-West
Africa) Notwithstanding Security Council Resolution 276 (1970),
1971 I.C.J. Reports 16, at para. 89 (Advisory Opinion of 21 June)
(hereafter theNamibia Advisory Opinion).)
All these dicta, however, address the hypothesis of the Court exercising
such judicial review as a matter of "primary" jurisdiction. They do not
address at all the hypothesis of examination of the legality of the decisions
of other organs as a matter of "incidental" jurisdiction, in order to ascertain
and be able to exercise its "primary" jurisdiction over the matter before it.
Indeed, in the Namibia Advisory Opinion, immediately after the dictum
reproduced above and quoted by the Trial Chamber (concerning its
"primary" jurisdiction), the International Court of Justice proceeded to
exercise the very same "incidental" jurisdiction discussed here:
"[T]he question of the validity or conformity with the Charter of General
Assembly resolution 2145 (XXI) or of related Security Council resolutions
does not form the subject of the request for advisory opinion. However, in
the exercise of its judicial function and since objections have been advanced
the Court, in the course of its reasoning, will consider these objections
before determining any legal consequences arising from those
resolutions." (Id. at para. 89.)
The same sort of examination was undertaken by the International Court of
Justice, inter alia, in its advisory opinion on the Effect of Awards Case:
"[T]he legal power of the General Assembly to establish a tribunal
competent to render judgements binding on the United Nations has
been challenged. Accordingly, it is necessary to consider whether
the General Assembly has been given this power by the
Charter." (Effect of Awards, at 56.)
Obviously, the wider the discretion of the Security Council under the
Charter of the United Nations, the narrower the scope for the International
Tribunal to review its actions, even as a matter of incidental jurisdiction.
Nevertheless, this does not mean that the power disappears altogether,
particularly in cases where there might be a manifest contradiction with the
Principles and Purposes of the Charter.
22. In conclusion, the Appeals Chamber finds that the International Tribunal
has jurisdiction to examine the plea against its jurisdiction based on the
invalidity of its establishment by the Security Council.
2. Is The Question At Issue Political And As Such Non-Justiciable?
23. The Trial Chamber accepted this argument and classification. (See
Decision at Trial, at para. 24.)
24. The doctrines of "political questions" and "non-justiciable disputes" are
remnants of the reservations of "sovereignty", "national honour", etc. in
very old arbitration treaties. They have receded from the horizon of
contemporary international law, except for the occasional invocation of the
"political question" argument before the International Court of Justice in
advisory proceedings and, very rarely, in contentious proceedings as well.
The Court has consistently rejected this argument as a bar to examining a
case. It considered it unfounded in law. As long as the case before it or the
request for an advisory opinion turns on a legal question capable of a legal
answer, the Court considers that it is duty-bound to take jurisdiction over it,
regardless of the political background or the other political facets of the
issue. On this question, the International Court of Justice declared in its
advisory opinion on Certain Expenses of the United Nations:
"[I]t has been argued that the question put to the Court is
intertwined with political questions, and that for this reason the
Court should refuse to give an opinion. It is true that most
interpretations of the Charter of the United Nations will have
political significance, great or small. In the nature of things it could
not be otherwise. The Court, however, cannot attribute a political
character to a request which invites it to undertake an essentially
judicial task, namely, the interpretation of a treaty
provision." (Certain Expenses of the United Nations, 1962 I.C.J.
Reports 151, at 155 (Advisory Opinion of 20 July).)
25. The Appeals Chamber does not consider that the International Tribunal
is barred from examination of the Defence jurisdictional plea by the socalled "political" or "non-justiciable" nature of the issue it raises.
C. The Issue Of Constitutionality
26. Many arguments have been put forward by Appellant in support of the
contention that the establishment of the International Tribunal is invalid
under the Charter of the United Nations or that it was not duly established
by law. Many of these arguments were presented orally and in written
submissions before the Trial Chamber. Appellant has asked this Chamber to
incorporate into the argument before the Appeals Chamber all the points
made at trial. (See Appeal Transcript, 7 September 1995, at 7.) Apart from
the issues specifically dealt with below, the Appeals Chamber is content to
allow the treatment of these issues by the Trial Chamber to stand.
27. The Trial Chamber summarized the claims of the Appellant as follows:
"It is said that, to be duly established by law, the International
Tribunal should have been created either by treaty, the consensual
act of nations, or by amendment of the Charter of the United
Nations, not by resolution of the Security Council. Called in aid of
this general proposition are a number of considerations: that before
the creation of the International Tribunal in 1993 it was never
envisaged that such an ad hoc criminal tribunal might be set up;
that the General Assembly, whose participation would at least have
guaranteed full representation of the international community, was
not involved in its creation; that it was never intended by the
Charter that the Security Council should, under Chapter VII,
establish a judicial body, let alone a criminal tribunal; that the
Security Council had been inconsistent in creating this Tribunal
while not taking a similar step in the case of other areas of conflict
in which violations of international humanitarian law may have
occurred; that the establishment of the International Tribunal had
neither promoted, nor was capable of promoting, international
peace, as the current situation in the former Yugoslavia
demonstrates; that the Security Council could not, in any event,
create criminal liability on the part of individuals and that this is
what its creation of the International Tribunal did; that there
existed and exists no such international emergency as would justify
the action of the Security Council; that no political organ such as
the Security Council is capable of establishing an independent and
impartial tribunal; that there is an inherent defect in the creation,
after the event, of ad hoc tribunals to try particular types of
10
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be rooted in the rule of law and offer all guarantees embodied in the
relevant international instruments. Then the court may be said to be
"established by law."
43. Indeed, there are three possible interpretations of the term "established
by law." First, as Appellant argues, "established by law" could mean
established by a legislature. Appellant claims that the International Tribunal
is the product of a "mere executive order" and not of a "decision making
process under democratic control, necessary to create a judicial organisation
in a democratic society." Therefore Appellant maintains that the
International Tribunal not been "established by law." (Defence Appeal
Brief, at para. 5.4.)
The case law applying the words "established by law" in the European
Convention on Human Rights has favoured this interpretation of the
expression. This case law bears out the view that the relevant provision is
intended to ensure that tribunals in a democratic society must not depend on
the discretion of the executive; rather they should be regulated by law
emanating from Parliament. (See Zand v. Austria, App. No. 7360/76, 15
Eur. Comm'n H.R. Dec. & Rep. 70, at 80 (1979); Piersack v. Belgium, App.
No. 8692/79, 47 Eur. Ct. H.R. (ser. B) at 12 (1981); Crociani, Palmiotti,
Tanassi and D'Ovidio v. Italy, App. Nos. 8603/79, 8722/79, 8723/79 &
8729/79 (joined) 22 Eur. Comm'n H.R. Dec. & Rep. 147, at 219 (1981).)
Or, put another way, the guarantee is intended to ensure that the
administration of justice is not a matter of executive discretion, but is
regulated by laws made by the legislature.
It is clear that the legislative, executive and judicial division of powers
which is largely followed in most municipal systems does not apply to the
international setting nor, more specifically, to the setting of an international
organization such as the United Nations. Among the principal organs of the
United Nations the divisions between judicial, executive and legislative
functions are not clear cut. Regarding the judicial function, the International
Court of Justice is clearly the "principal judicial organ" (see United Nations
Charter, art. 92). There is, however, no legislature, in the technical sense of
the term, in the United Nations system and, more generally, no Parliament
in the world community. That is to say, there exists no corporate organ
formally empowered to enact laws directly binding on international legal
subjects.
It is clearly impossible to classify the organs of the United Nations into the
above-discussed divisions which exist in the national law of States. Indeed,
Appellant has agreed that the constitutional structure of the United Nations
does not follow the division of powers often found in national constitutions.
12
The Trial Chamber has analysed Appellant's submissions and has concluded
that they cannot be entertained.
49. The second ground of appeal attacks the primacy of the International
Tribunal over national courts.
51. Before this Chamber, Appellant has somewhat shifted the focus of his
approach to the question of primacy. It seems fair to quote here Appellant's
Brief in appeal:
13
"The defence submits that the Trial Chamber should have denied
it's [sic] competence to exercise primary jurisdiction while the
accused was at trial in the Federal Republic of Germany and the
German judicial authorities were adequately meeting their
obligations under international law." (Defence Appeal Brief, at
para. 7.5.)
However, the three points raised in first instance were discussed at length by
the Trial Chamber and, even though not specifically called in aid by
Appellant here, are nevertheless intimately intermingled when the issue of
primacy is considered. The Appeals Chamber therefore proposes to address
those three points but not before having dealt with an apparent confusion
which has found its way into Appellant's brief.
52. In paragraph 7.4 of his Brief, Appellant states that "the accused was
diligently prosecuted by the German judicial authorities"(id., at para 7.4
(Emphasis added)). In paragraph 7.5 Appellant returns to the period "while
the accused was at trial." (id., at para 7.5 (Emphasis added.)
These statements are not in agreement with the findings of the Trial
Chamber I in its decision on deferral of 8 November 1994:
After the Trial Chamber had found that that condition was satisfied, the
request for deferral followed automatically. The conditions alleged by
Appellant in his Brief were irrelevant.
But there is more to it. Appellant insists repeatedly (see Defence Appeal
Brief, at paras. 7.2 & 7.4) on impartial and independent proceedings
diligently pursued and not designed to shield the accused from international
criminal responsibility. One recognises at once that this vocabulary is
borrowed from Article 10, paragraph 2, of the Statute. This provision has
nothing to do with the present case. This is not an instance of an accused
being tried anew by this International Tribunal, under the exceptional
circumstances described in Article 10 of the Statute. Actually, the
proceedings against Appellant were deferred to the International Tribunal on
the strength of Article 9 of the Statute which provides that a request for
deferral may be made "at any stage of the procedure" (Statute of the
International Tribunal, art. 9, para. 2). The Prosecutor has never sought to
bring Appellant before the International Tribunal for a new trial for the
reason that one or the other of the conditions enumerated in Article 10
would have vitiated his trial in Germany. Deferral of the proceedings
against Appellant was requested in accordance with the procedure set down
in Rule 9 (iii):
This first point is not contested and the Prosecutor has conceded as much.
But it does not, by itself, settle the question of the primacy of the
International Tribunal. Appellant also seems so to realise. Appellant
therefore explores the matter further and raises the question of State
sovereignty.
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B. Sovereignty Of States
55. Article 2 of the United Nations Charter provides in paragraph 1: "The
Organization is based on the principle of the sovereign equality of all its
Members."
15
16
537 and 604 of the penal code)." (13 March 1950, in Rivista
Penale 753, 757 (Sup. Mil. Trib., Italy 1950; unofficial
translation).1
Twelve years later the Supreme Court of Israel in the Eichmann case could
draw a similar picture:
"[T]hese crimes constitute acts which damage vital international
interests; they impair the foundations and security of the
international community; they violate the universal moral values
and humanitarian principles that lie hidden in the criminal law
systems adopted by civilised nations. The underlying principle in
international law regarding such crimes is that the individual who
has committed any of them and who, when doing so, may be
presumed to have fully comprehended the heinous nature of his
act, must account for his conduct. [. . .]
Those crimes entail individual criminal responsibility because they
challenge the foundations of international society and affront the
conscience of civilised nations.
[. . .]
[T]hey involve the perpetration of an international crime which all
the nations of the world are interested in preventing."(Israel v.
Eichmann, 36 International Law Reports 277, 291-93 (Isr. S. Ct.
1962).)
58. The public revulsion against similar offences in the 1990s brought about
a reaction on the part of the community of nations: hence, among other
remedies, the establishment of an international judicial body by an organ of
an organization representing the community of nations: the Security
Council. This organ is empowered and mandated, by definition, to deal with
trans-boundary matters or matters which, though domestic in nature, may
affect "international peace and security" (United Nations Charter, art 2. (1),
2.(7), 24, & 37). It would be a travesty of law and a betrayal of the universal
need for justice, should the concept of State sovereignty be allowed to be
raised successfully against human rights. Borders should not be considered
as a shield against the reach of the law and as a protection for those who
trample underfoot the most elementary rights of humanity. In the Barbie
case, the Court of Cassation of France has quoted with approval the
following statement of the Court of Appeal:
"[. . .]by reason of their nature, the crimes against humanity [. . .]
do not simply fall within the scope of French municipal law but are
subject to an international criminal order to which the notions of
17
63. The objection founded on the theory of jus de non evocando was
considered by the Trial Chamber which disposed of it in the following
terms:
The Trial Chamber denied Appellant's motion, concluding that the notion of
international armed conflict was not a jurisdictional criterion of Article 2
and that Articles 3 and 5 each apply to both internal and international armed
conflicts. The Trial Chamber concluded therefore that it had jurisdiction,
regardless of the nature of the conflict, and that it need not determine
whether the conflict is internal or international.
18
Parties to the conflict, not just to the vicinity of actual hostilities. Certainly,
some of the provisions are clearly bound up with the hostilities and the
geographical scope of those provisions should be so limited. Others,
particularly those relating to the protection of prisoners of war and civilians,
are not so limited. With respect to prisoners of war, the Convention applies
to combatants in the power of the enemy; it makes no difference whether
they are kept in the vicinity of hostilities. In the same vein, Geneva
Convention IV protects civilians anywhere in the territory of the Parties.
This construction is implicit in Article 6, paragraph 2, of the Convention,
which stipulates that:
"[i]n the territory of Parties to the conflict, the application of the
present Convention shall cease on the general close of military
operations." (Geneva Convention IV, art. 6, para. 2 (Emphasis
added).)
Article 3(b) of Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions contains similar
language. (Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August
1949, and Relating to the Protection of Victims of International Armed
Conflicts, 12 December 1977, art. 3(b), 1125 U.N.T.S. 3
(hereinafter Protocol I).) In addition to these textual references, the very
nature of the Conventions - particularly Conventions III and IV - dictates
their application throughout the territories of the parties to the conflict; any
other construction would substantially defeat their purpose.
69. The geographical and temporal frame of reference for internal armed
conflicts is similarly broad. This conception is reflected in the fact that
beneficiaries of common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions are those
taking no active part (or no longer taking active part) in the hostilities. This
indicates that the rules contained in Article 3 also apply outside the narrow
geographical context of the actual theatre of combat operations. Similarly,
certain language in Protocol II to the Geneva Conventions (a treaty which,
as we shall see in paragraphs 88 and 114 below, may be regarded as
applicable to some aspects of the conflicts in the former Yugoslavia) also
suggests a broad scope. First, like common Article 3, it explicitly protects
"[a]ll persons who do not take a direct part or who have ceased to take part
in hostilities." (Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August
1949, and Relating to the Protection of Victims of Non-International Armed
Conflicts, 12 December 1977, art. 4, para.1, 1125 U.N.T.S. 609 (hereinafter
Protocol II). Article 2, paragraph 1, provides:
"[t]his Protocol shall be applied [. . . ] to all persons affected by an
armed conflict as defined in Article 1."(Id. at art. 2, para. 1
(Emphasis added).)
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that the allegations at issue here bear the required relationship. The
indictment states that in 1992 Bosnian Serbs took control of the Opstina of
Prijedor and established a prison camp in Omarska. It further alleges that
crimes were committed against civilians inside and outside the Omarska
prison camp as part of the Bosnian Serb take-over and consolidation of
power in the Prijedor region, which was, in turn, part of the larger Bosnian
Serb military campaign to obtain control over Bosnian territory. Appellant
offers no contrary evidence but has admitted in oral argument that in the
Prijedor region there were detention camps run not by the central authorities
of Bosnia-Herzegovina but by Bosnian Serbs (Appeal Transcript; 8
September 1995, at 36-7). In light of the foregoing, we conclude that, for
the purposes of applying international humanitarian law, the crimes alleged
were committed in the context of an armed conflict.
B. Does The Statute Refer Only To International Armed Conflicts?
1. Literal Interpretation Of The Statute
71. On the face of it, some provisions of the Statute are unclear as to
whether they apply to offences occurring in international armed conflicts
only, or to those perpetrated in internal armed conflicts as well. Article 2
refers to "grave breaches" of the Geneva Conventions of 1949, which are
widely understood to be committed only in international armed conflicts, so
the reference in Article 2 would seem to suggest that the Article is limited to
international armed conflicts. Article 3 also lacks any express reference to
the nature of the underlying conflict required. A literal reading of this
provision standing alone may lead one to believe that it applies to both
kinds of conflict. By contrast, Article 5 explicitly confers jurisdiction over
crimes committed in either internal or international armed conflicts. An
argument a contrario based on the absence of a similar provision in Article
3 might suggest that Article 3 applies only to one class of conflict rather
than to both of them. In order better to ascertain the meaning and scope of
these provisions, the Appeals Chamber will therefore consider the object
and purpose behind the enactment of the Statute.
2. Teleological Interpretation Of The Statute
72. In adopting resolution 827, the Security Council established the
International Tribunal with the stated purpose of bringing to justice persons
responsible for serious violations of international humanitarian law in the
former Yugoslavia, thereby deterring future violations and contributing to
the re-establishment of peace and security in the region. The context in
which the Security Council acted indicates that it intended to achieve this
purpose without reference to whether the conflicts in the former Yugoslavia
were internal or international.
20
As the members of the Security Council well knew, in 1993, when the
Statute was drafted, the conflicts in the former Yugoslavia could have been
characterized as both internal and international, or alternatively, as an
internal conflict alongside an international one, or as an internal conflict
that had become internationalized because of external support, or as an
international conflict that had subsequently been replaced by one or more
internal conflicts, or some combination thereof. The conflict in the former
Yugoslavia had been rendered international by the involvement of the
Croatian Army in Bosnia-Herzegovina and by the involvement of the
Yugoslav National Army ("JNA") in hostilities in Croatia, as well as in
Bosnia-Herzegovina at least until its formal withdrawal on 19 May 1992. To
the extent that the conflicts had been limited to clashes between Bosnian
Government forces and Bosnian Serb rebel forces in Bosnia-Herzegovina,
as well as between the Croatian Government and Croatian Serb rebel forces
in Krajina (Croatia), they had been internal (unless direct involvement of
the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Serbia-Montenegro) could be proven).
It is notable that the parties to this case also agree that the conflicts in the
former Yugoslavia since 1991 have had both internal and international
aspects. (See Transcript of the Hearing on the Motion on Jurisdiction, 26
July 1995, at 47, 111.)
73. The varying nature of the conflicts is evidenced by the agreements
reached by various parties to abide by certain rules of humanitarian law.
Reflecting the international aspects of the conflicts, on 27 November 1991
representatives of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, the Yugoslavia
Peoples' Army, the Republic of Croatia, and the Republic of Serbia entered
into an agreement on the implementation of the Geneva Conventions of
1949 and the 1977 Additional Protocol I to those Conventions. (See
Memorandum of Understanding, 27 November 1991.) Significantly, the
parties refrained from making any mention of common Article 3 of the
Geneva Conventions, concerning non-international armed conflicts.
By contrast, an agreement reached on 22 May 1992 between the various
factions of the conflict within the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina
reflects the internal aspects of the conflicts. The agreement was based on
common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions which, in addition to setting
forth rules governing internal conflicts, provides in paragraph 3 that the
parties to such conflicts may agree to bring into force provisions of the
Geneva Conventions that are generally applicable only in international
armed conflicts. In the Agreement, the representatives of Mr. Alija
Izetbegovic (President of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the
Party of Democratic Action), Mr. Radovan Karadzic (President of the
Serbian Democratic Party), and Mr. Miljenko Brkic (President of the
Taken together, the agreements reached between the various parties to the
conflict(s) in the former Yugoslavia bear out the proposition that, when the
Security Council adopted the Statute of the International Tribunal in 1993, it
did so with reference to situations that the parties themselves considered at
different times and places as either internal or international armed conflicts,
or as a mixed internal-international conflict.
75. The intent of the Security Council to promote a peaceful solution of the
conflict without pronouncing upon the question of its international or
internal nature is reflected by the Report of the Secretary-General of 3 May
1993 and by statements of Security Council members regarding their
interpretation of the Statute. The Report of the Secretary-General explicitly
states that the clause of the Statute concerning the temporal jurisdiction of
the International Tribunal was
21
22
23
80. With all due respect, the Trial Chamber's reasoning is based on a
misconception of the grave breaches provisions and the extent of their
incorporation into the Statute of the International Tribunal. The grave
breaches system of the Geneva Conventions establishes a twofold system:
there is on the one hand an enumeration of offences that are regarded so
serious as to constitute "grave breaches"; closely bound up with this
enumeration a mandatory enforcement mechanism is set up, based on the
concept of a duty and a right of all Contracting States to search for and try
or extradite persons allegedly responsible for "grave breaches." The
international armed conflict element generally attributed to the grave
breaches provisions of the Geneva Conventions is merely a function of the
system of universal mandatory jurisdiction that those provisions create. The
international armed conflict requirement was a necessary limitation on the
grave breaches system in light of the intrusion on State sovereignty that
such mandatory universal jurisdiction represents. State parties to the 1949
Geneva Conventions did not want to give other States jurisdiction over
serious violations of international humanitarian law committed in their
internal armed conflicts - at least not the mandatory universal jurisdiction
involved in the grave breaches system.
81. The Trial Chamber is right in implying that the enforcement mechanism
has of course not been imported into the Statute of the International
Tribunal, for the obvious reason that the International Tribunal itself
constitutes a mechanism for the prosecution and punishment of the
perpetrators of "grave breaches." However, the Trial Chamber has
misinterpreted the reference to the Geneva Conventions contained in the
sentence of Article 2: "persons or property protected under the provisions of
the relevant Geneva Conventions." (Statute of the Tribunal, art. 2.) For the
reasons set out above, this reference is clearly intended to indicate that the
offences listed under Article 2 can only be prosecuted when perpetrated
against persons or property regarded as "protected" by the Geneva
Conventions under the strict conditions set out by the Conventions
themselves. This reference in Article 2 to the notion of "protected persons or
property" must perforce cover the persons mentioned in Articles 13, 24, 25
and 26 (protected persons) and 19 and 33 to 35 (protected objects) of
Geneva Convention I; in Articles 13, 36, 37 (protected persons) and 22, 24,
25 and 27 (protected objects) of Convention II; in Article 4 of Convention
III on prisoners of war; and in Articles 4 and 20 (protected persons) and
Articles 18, 19, 21, 22, 33, 53, 57 etc. (protected property) of Convention
IV on civilians. Clearly, these provisions of the Geneva Conventions apply
to persons or objects protected only to the extent that they are caught up in
an international armed conflict. By contrast, those provisions do not include
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himself concedes that the traditional laws of warfare are now more correctly
termed "international humanitarian law" and that the so-called "Hague
Regulations" constitute an important segment of such law. Furthermore, the
Secretary-General has also correctly admitted that the Hague Regulations
have a broader scope than the Geneva Conventions, in that they cover not
only the protection of victims of armed violence (civilians) or of those who
no longer take part in hostilities (prisoners of war), the wounded and the
sick) but also the conduct of hostilities; in the words of the Report: "The
Hague Regulations cover aspects of international humanitarian law which
are also covered by the 1949 Geneva Conventions." (Id., at para. 43.) These
comments suggest that Article 3 is intended to cover both Geneva and
Hague rules law. On the other hand, the Secretary-General's subsequent
comments indicate that the violations explicitly listed in Article 3 relate to
Hague law not contained in the Geneva Conventions (id., at paras. 43-4). As
pointed out above, this list is, however, merely illustrative: indeed, Article
3, before enumerating the violations provides that they "shall include but
not be limited to" the list of offences. Considering this list in the general
context of the Secretary-General's discussion of the Hague Regulations and
international humanitarian law, we conclude that this list may be construed
to include other infringements of international humanitarian law. The only
limitation is that such infringements must not be already covered by Article
2 (lest this latter provision should become superfluous). Article 3 may be
taken to cover all violations of international humanitarian law other than
the "grave breaches" of the four Geneva Conventions falling under Article 2
(or, for that matter, the violations covered by Articles 4 and 5, to the extent
that Articles 3, 4 and 5 overlap).
88. That Article 3 does not confine itself to covering violations of Hague
law, but is intended also to refer to all violations of international
humanitarian law (subject to the limitations just stated), is borne out by the
debates in the Security Council that followed the adoption of the resolution
establishing the International Tribunal. As mentioned above, three Member
States of the Council, namely France, the United States and the United
Kingdom, expressly stated that Article 3 of the Statute also covers
obligations stemming from agreements in force between the conflicting
parties, that is Article 3 common to the Geneva Conventions and the two
Additional Protocols, as well as other agreements entered into by the
conflicting parties. The French delegate stated that:
"[T]he expression 'laws or customs of war' used in Article 3 of the
Statute covers specifically, in the opinion of France, all the
obligations that flow from the humanitarian law agreements in
force on the territory of the former Yugoslavia at the time when the
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99. Before pointing to some principles and rules of customary law that have
emerged in the international community for the purpose of regulating civil
strife, a word of caution on the law-making process in the law of armed
conflict is necessary. When attempting To ascertain State practice with a
view to establishing the existence of a customary rule or a general principle,
it is difficult, if not impossible, to pinpoint the actual behaviour of the
troops in the field for the purpose of establishing whether they in fact
comply with, or disregard, certain standards of behaviour. This examination
is rendered extremely difficult by the fact that not only is access to the
theatre of military operations normally refused to independent observers
(often even to the ICRC) but information on the actual conduct of hostilities
is withheld by the parties to the conflict; what is worse, often recourse is
had to misinformation with a view to misleading the enemy as well as
public opinion and foreign Governments. In appraising the formation of
customary rules or general principles one should therefore be aware that, on
account of the inherent nature of this subject-matter, reliance must primarily
be placed on such elements as official pronouncements of States, military
manuals and judicial decisions.
b. Principal Rules
100. The first rules that evolved in this area were aimed at protecting the
civilian population from the hostilities. As early as the Spanish Civil War
(1936-39), State practice revealed a tendency to disregard the distinction
between international and internal wars and to apply certain general
principles of humanitarian law, at least to those internal conflicts that
constituted large-scale civil wars. The Spanish Civil War had elements of
both an internal and an international armed conflict. Significantly, both the
republican Government and third States refused to recognize the insurgents
as belligerents. They nonetheless insisted that certain rules concerning
international armed conflict applied. Among rules deemed applicable were
the prohibition of the intentional bombing of civilians, the rule forbidding
attacks on non-military objectives, and the rule regarding required
precautions when attacking military objectives. Thus, for example, on 23
March 1938, Prime Minister Chamberlain explained the British protest
against the bombing of Barcelona as follows:
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102. Subsequent State practice indicates that the Spanish Civil War was not
exceptional in bringing about the extension of some general principles of
the laws of warfare to internal armed conflict. While the rules that evolved
as a result of the Spanish Civil War were intended to protect civilians
finding themselves in the theatre of hostilities, rules designed to protect
those who do not (or no longer) take part in hostilities emerged after World
War II. In 1947, instructions were issued to the Chinese "peoples' liberation
army" by Mao Tse-Tung who instructed them not to "kill or humiliate any
of Chiang Kai-Shek's army officers and men who lay down their
arms." (Manifesto of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, in Mao TseTung, 4 Selected Works (1961) 147, at 151.) He also instructed the
insurgents, among other things, not to "ill-treat captives", "damage crops" or
"take liberties with women." (On the Reissue of the Three Main Rules of
Discipline and the Eight Points for Attention - Instruction of the General
Headquarters of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, in id., 155.)
In an important subsequent development, States specified certain minimum
mandatory rules applicable to internal armed conflicts in common Article 3
of the Geneva Conventions of 1949. The International Court of Justice has
confirmed that these rules reflect "elementary considerations of humanity"
applicable under customary international law to any armed conflict, whether
it is of an internal or international character. (Nicaragua Case, at para. 218).
Therefore, at least with respect to the minimum rules in common Article 3,
the character of the conflict is irrelevant.
103. Common Article 3 contains not only the substantive rules governing
internal armed conflict but also a procedural mechanism inviting parties to
internal conflicts to agree to abide by the rest of the Geneva Conventions.
As in the current conflicts in the former Yugoslavia, parties to a number of
internal armed conflicts have availed themselves of this procedure to bring
the law of international armed conflicts into force with respect to their
internal hostilities. For example, in the 1967 conflict in Yemen, both the
Royalists and the President of the Republic agreed to abide by the essential
rules of the Geneva Conventions. Such undertakings reflect an
understanding that certain fundamental rules should apply regardless of the
nature of the conflict.
104. Agreements made pursuant to common Article 3 are not the only
vehicle through which international humanitarian law has been brought to
bear on internal armed conflicts. In several cases reflecting customary
adherence to basic principles in internal conflicts, the warring parties have
unilaterally committed to abide by international humanitarian law.
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109. As is well known, the ICRC has been very active in promoting the
development, implementation and dissemination of international
humanitarian law. From the angle that is of relevance to us, namely the
emergence of customary rules on internal armed conflict, the ICRC has
made a remarkable contribution by appealing to the parties to armed
conflicts to respect international humanitarian law. It is notable that, when
confronted with non-international armed conflicts, the ICRC has promoted
the application by the contending parties of the basic principles of
humanitarian law. In addition, whenever possible, it has endeavoured to
persuade the conflicting parties to abide by the Geneva Conventions of
1949 or at least by their principal provisions. When the parties, or one of
them, have refused to comply with the bulk of international humanitarian
law, the ICRC has stated that they should respect, as a minimum, common
Article 3. This shows that the ICRC has promoted and facilitated the
extension of general principles of humanitarian law to internal armed
conflict. The practical results the ICRC has thus achieved in inducing
compliance with international humanitarian law ought therefore to be
regarded as an element of actual international practice; this is an element
that has been conspicuously instrumental in the emergence or crystallization
of customary rules.
110. The application of certain rules of war in both internal and
international armed conflicts is corroborated by two General Assembly
resolutions on "Respect of human rights in armed conflict." The first one,
resolution 2444, was unanimously4 adopted in 1968 by the General
Assembly: "[r]ecognizing the necessity of applying basic humanitarian
principles in all armed conflicts," the General Assembly "affirm[ed]"
"the following principles for observance by all governmental and
other authorities responsible for action in armed conflict: (a) That
the right of the parties to a conflict to adopt means of injuring the
enemy is not unlimited; (b) That it is prohibited to launch attacks
against the civilian populations as such; (c) That distinction must
be made at all times between persons taking part in the hostilities
and members of the civilian population to the effect that the latter
be spared as much as possible." (G.A. Res. 2444, U.N. GAOR.,
23rd Session, Supp. No. 18 U.N. Doc. A/7218 (1968).)
It should be noted that, before the adoption of the resolution, the United
States representative stated in the Third Committee that the principles
proclaimed in the resolution "constituted a reaffirmation of existing
international law" (U.N. GAOR, 3rd Comm., 23rd Sess., 1634th Mtg., at 2,
U.N. Doc. A/C.3/SR.1634 (1968)). This view was reiterated in 1972, when
the United States Department of Defence pointed out that the resolution was
111. Elaborating on the principles laid down in resolution 2444, in 1970 the
General Assembly unanimously5 adopted resolution 2675 on "Basic
principles for the protection of civilian populations in armed conflicts." In
introducing this resolution, which it co-sponsored, to the Third Committee,
Norway explained that as used in the resolution, "the term 'armed conflicts'
was meant to cover armed conflicts of all kinds, an important point, since
the provisions of the Geneva Conventions and the Hague Regulations did
not extend to all conflicts." (U.N. GAOR, 3rd Comm., 25th Sess., 1785th
Mtg., at 281, U.N. Doc. A/C.3/SR.1785 (1970); see also U.N. GAOR, 25th
Sess., 1922nd Mtg., at 3, U.N. Doc. A/PV.1922 (1970) (statement of the
representative of Cuba during the Plenary discussion of resolution
2675).)The resolution stated the following:
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35
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134. All of these factors confirm that customary international law imposes
criminal liability for serious violations of common Article 3, as
supplemented by other general principles and rules on the protection of
victims of internal armed conflict, and for breaching certain fundamental
principles and rules regarding means and methods of combat in civil strife.
135. It should be added that, in so far as it applies to offences committed in
the former Yugoslavia, the notion that serious violations of international
humanitarian law governing internal armed conflicts entail individual
criminal responsibility is also fully warranted from the point of view of
substantive justice and equity. As pointed out above (see para. 132) such
violations were punishable under the Criminal Code of the Socialist Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia and the law implementing the two Additional
Protocols of 1977. The same violations have been made punishable in the
Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina by virtue of the decree-law of 11 April
1992. Nationals of the former Yugoslavia as well as, at present, those of
Bosnia-Herzegovina were therefore aware, or should have been aware, that
they were amenable to the jurisdiction of their national criminal courts in
cases of violation of international humanitarian law.
136. It is also fitting to point out that the parties to certain of the agreements
concerning the conflict in Bosnia-Herzegovina, made under the auspices of
the ICRC, clearly undertook to punish those responsible for violations of
international humanitarian law. Thus, Article 5, paragraph 2, of the
aforementioned Agreement of 22 May 1992 provides that:
"Each party undertakes, when it is informed, in particular by the
ICRC, of any allegation of violations of international humanitarian
law, to open an enquiry promptly and pursue it conscientiously,
and to take the necessary steps to put an end to the alleged
violations or prevent their recurrence and to punish those
responsible in accordance with the law in force."
(Agreement No. 1, art. 5, para. 2 (Emphasis added).)
Furthermore, the Agreement of 1st October 1992 provides in Article 3,
paragraph 1, that
"All prisoners not accused of, or sentenced for, grave breaches of
International Humanitarian Law as defined in Article 50 of the
First, Article 51 of the Second, Article 130 of the Third and Article
147 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, as well as in Article 85 of
Additional Protocol I, will be unilaterally and unconditionally
released." (Agreement No. 2, 1 October 1992, art. 3, para. 1.)
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145. For the reasons stated above, the third ground of appeal, based on lack
of subject-matter jurisdiction, must be dismissed.
V. DISPOSITION
146. For the reasons hereinabove expressed
and
Acting under Article 25 of the Statute and Rules 72, 116 bis and 117 of the
Rules of Procedure and Evidence,
The Appeals Chamber
(1) By 4 votes to 1,
Decides that the International Tribunal is empowered to pronounce
upon the plea challenging the legality of the establishment of the
International Tribunal.
IN FAVOUR: President Cassese, Judges Deschnes, Abi-Saab and
Sidhwa
AGAINST: Judge Li
(2) Unanimously
Decides that the aforementioned plea is dismissed.
(3) Unanimously
Decides that the challenge to the primacy of the International
Tribunal over national courts is dismissed.
(4) By 4 votes to 1
Decides that the International Tribunal has subject-matter
jurisdiction over the current case.
IN FAVOUR: President Cassese, Judges Li, Deschnes, Abi-Saab
AGAINST: Judge Sidhwa
ACCORDINGLY, THE DECISION OF THE TRIAL CHAMBER OF
10 AUGUST 1995 STANDS REVISED, THE JURISDICTION OF THE
INTERNATIONAL TRIBUNAL IS AFFIRMED AND THE APPEAL
IS DISMISSED.
Done in English, this text being authoritative.*
(Signed) Antonio Cassese,
President
Judges Li, Abi-Saab and Sidhwa append separate opinions to the Decision
of the Appeals Chamber
Judge Deschnes appends a Declaration.
(Initialled) A. C.
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3 "El FMLN procura que sus mtodos de lucha cumplan con lo estipulado
per el artculo 3 comun a los Convenios de Ginebra y su Protocolo II
Adicional, tomen en consideracin las necesidades de la mayora de la
poblacin y estn orientados a defender sus libertades fundamentales."
4 The recorded vote on the resolution was 111 in favour and 0 against. After
the vote was taken, however, Gabon represented that it had intended to vote
against the resolution. (U.N. GAOR, 23rd Sess., 1748th Mtg., at 7, 12,
U.N.Doc. A/PV.1748 (1968)).
5 The recorded vote on the resolution was 109 in favour and 0 against, with
8 members abstaining. (U.N. GAOR, 1922nd Mtg., at 12, U.N.Doc. A/PV.
1922 (1970).)
6 "Dentro de esta lnea de conducta, su mayor preocupacin [de la Fuerza
Armada] ha sido el mantenerse apegada estrictamente al cumplimiento de
las disposiciones contenidas en los Convenios de Ginebra y en El Protocolo
II de dichos Convenios, ya que aún no siendo el mismo aplicable a la
situacin que confronta actualmente el pas, el Gobierno de El Salvador
acata y cumple las disposiciones contenidas endicho instrumento, por
considerar que ellas constituyen el desarrollo y la complementacin del Art.
3, comn a los Convenios de Ginebra del 12 de agosto de 1949, que a su
vez representa la proteccin mnima que se debe al ser humano encualquier
tiempo y lugar."
Back
7 "Ebenso wie ihre Verbndeten beachten Soldaten der Bundeswehr die
Regeln des humanitren Vlkerrechts bei militrischen Operationen in allen
bewaffneten Konflikten, gleichgltig welcher Art."
Back
8 "Der Deutsche Bundestag befrchtet, dass Berichte zutreffend sein
knnten, dass die irakischen Streitkrfte auf dem Territorium des Iraks
nunmehr im Kampf mit kurdischen Aufstndischen Giftgas eingesetzt
haben. Er weist mit Entschiedenheit die Auffassung zurck, dass der Einsatz
von Giftgas im Innern und bei brgerkriegshnlichen Auseinandersetzungen
zulssig sei, weil er durch das Genfer Protokoll von 1925 nicht ausdrcklich
verboten werde..."
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9 "1209. Schwere Verletzungen des humanitren Vlkerrechts sind
insbesondere; -Straftaten gegen geschtzte Personen (Verwundete, Kranke,
Sanittspersonal, Militrgeistliche, Kriegsgefangene, Bewohner besetzter
Gebiete, andere Zivilpersonen), wie vorstzliche Ttung, Verstmmelung,
Folterung oder unmenschliche Behandlung einschliesslich biologischer
41