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INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT. Background 1970s/1980s human rights groups lobbied for a permanent tribunal for placing suspected war criminals on trial.

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Presentation on theme: "INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT. Background 1970s/1980s human rights groups lobbied for a permanent tribunal for placing suspected war criminals on trial."— Presentation transcript:

1 INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT

2 Background 1970s/1980s human rights groups lobbied for a permanent tribunal for placing suspected war criminals on trial International community has used ad hoc tribunals (as needed basis) – Rwanda – Yugoslavia

3 Rome Statute of the International Court July 1, 2002 treaty ratified by 60 states Mandate of court to place individuals rather than states on trial to prosecute crimes such as: – Genocide Genocide covers those specifically listed prohibited acts (e.g. killing, causing serious harm) committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group. – war crimes (include breaches of the Geneva conventions) War crimes cover grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions of 1949 and other serious violations, as listed in the Statute, committed on a large scale in international armed conflicts. – crimes against humanity (rape, torture, enslavement, persecution) Crimes against humanity cover those specifically listed prohibited acts when committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack directed against any civilian population. Such acts include murder, extermination, rape, sexual slavery, the enforced disappearance of persons and the crime of apartheid.

4 International Criminal Court Located at the Hague Primary responsibility to try crimes will belong to member states – Court will take action if national legal systems are unwilling to act

5 Interesting Point The United States sided with China, Libya, and Saudia Arabia in voting against the Rome Statute. Why?

6 Why? The U.S was afraid of losing jurisdiction and sovereignty and about the prospect of American soldiers being unjustly prosecuted.


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