How The Loac Is Triggered
How The Loac Is Triggered
How The Loac Is Triggered
(LOAC) IS TRIGGERED
HOW THE LOAC IS TRIGGERED
Once triggered, the LOAC intrudes upon the sovereignty of the regulated
State by limiting the means and methods of its application of violence in
combat, and by imposing obligations to respect and protect certain persons
and places.
State Sovereignty
LOAC tells combatants and the commanders that there are certain
minimum standards of behavior in conflict which, if sensibly and
professionally applied, can and will reduce the suffering of the victims of
the fighting
Law of Armed Conflict RULES
Arises when one State unilaterally uses armed force against another State
even if the latter does not or cannot respond by military means.
There is no requirement that the use of armed force between the Parties
reach a certain level of intensity before it can be said that an IAC exists.
One example is the use of the States armed forces against dissident, rebel
or insurgent groups. Another is two or more armed groups fighting within a
State, but not necessarily with the involvement of government troops.
1. ORGANIZATION (NIAC)
the blocking or besieging of towns and the heavy shelling of these towns;
the extent of destruction and the number of casualties caused by shelling
or fighting; the quantity of troops and units deployed;
existence and change of front lines between the parties;
the occupation of territory, and towns and villages;
the deployment of government forces to the crisis area;
the closure of roads; cease fire orders and agreements, and the attempt of
representatives from international organizations to broker and enforce
cease fire agreements.
Internal Disturbances
It refers to the articles that are common to all four of the 1949 Geneva
Conventions. Some of the Common Articles are identically numbered, while
others are worded virtually the same but numbered differently in various
Conventions.
For example, the article dealing with special agreements is Article 6 of the
first three Conventions, but Article 7 of the fourth Convention.
COMMON ARTICLES (GC)
Example:
Armed conflicts in which peoples are fighting against colonial
domination and alien occupation and against racist regimes in
the exercise of their right of self determination
II. Common Article 3 Non-International
Armed Conflict (NIAC)
The human rights system and the law of armed conflict should
be seen as complementary. Respect for human rights should not
be fragmented into time of peace and conflict. It is after all in
conflict situations that those rights are most at risk and that
civilians will look to the armed forces for protection.
Principle of Complementarity