Complaints to the International Criminal Court

Complaints to the International Criminal Court

The International Criminal Court's founding treaty, the Rome Statute, provides that individuals or organizations may submit information on crimes within the jurisdiction of the Court.[1] These submissions are referred to as "communications" or complaints to the International Criminal Court.

As of end September 2010, the Office of the Prosecutor had received 8,874 communications about alleged crimes. After initial review, 4,002 of these communications were dismissed as “manifestly outside the jurisdiction of the Court”.[1] As of March 2011, the ICC has launched investigations into six situations, all in Africa: Northern Uganda, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Central African Republic, Darfur (Sudan), Kenya[2] and Libya. Several other situations have been subject to "intensive analysis", including Afghanistan, Chad, Colombia, Côte d'Ivoire, the Gaza Strip, Georgia.[3][4].

Some of the communications received by the Prosecutor alleged that crimes had been committed on the territory of states parties to the Court, or by nationals of states parties: in such cases, the Court may automatically exercise jurisdiction. Other communications concerned conduct outside the jurisdiction of states parties: in these cases, the Court can only act if it has received a referral by the United Nations Security Council or a declaration by the relevant state allowing the Court to exercise jurisdiction.

Communications from individuals and organisations should not be confused with referrals from states parties or the United Nations Security Council.[5]

Contents

Procedure

The court's founding treaty, the Rome Statute, provides that individuals or organizations may submit to the Prosecutor information on crimes within the jurisdiction of the Court. These submissions are referred to as "communications". Before an investigation is opened, each communication is subject to three levels of analysis: initial review, basic reporting and intensive analysis.[1]

Initial review

Analysis of the 1732 complaints received before 1 February 2006. After initial review, 80% of the complaints were dismissed as "manifestly outside the jurisdiction of the Court"; only 20% warranted further analysis.

Every time a complaint is received, the Prosecutor must "analyse the seriousness of the information received"[6] and decide whether there is a reasonable basis to open an investigation. The process begins with an initial review, during which many of the communications received are dismissed as "manifestly outside the jurisdiction of the Court". Of the communications received before 1 February 2006, 80% were dismissed for the following reasons:

  • 5% concerned events prior to 1 July 2002. The court can only investigate crimes committed on or after that date.
  • 24% concerned allegations "manifestly outside the subject-matter jurisdiction of the Court". The court can only prosecute three types of crime: genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes. Communications have been received about such topics as immigration issues, medical negligence, social security and pension complaints, and employment law. The court has also received complaints about the crime of aggression, over which the court cannot currently exercise jurisdiction.
  • 13% concerned crimes that were "manifestly outside the personal or territorial jurisdiction of the Court". The Court can generally only prosecute crimes committed on the territory of, or by nationals of, states parties, and crimes referred by the United Nations Security Council.
  • 38% of communications were "manifestly ill-founded because they faltered on multiple jurisdictional grounds or otherwise did not provide a basis for analysis. Examples include general conspiracy claims without specific details; general concerns about local or national politics; or communications failing to provide facts susceptible to analysis."

Analysis and investigation

Once it has been determined that a communication is not manifestly outside the court's jurisdiction, the situation is subject to "basic reporting". This involves "simple factual and legal analysis, drawing on communications, referrals, and readily available public information". It was reported that between June 2003 and February 2006, 23 situations had been subject to basic reporting.

Where warranted, a situation may then be subject to "intensive analysis". This involves collecting detailed information from open sources; conducting systematic crime analysis; examining factors such as gravity, complementarity and the interests of justice; seeking additional information; and, in advanced cases, planning for potential investigation. As of February 2006, 10 situations had been subject to intensive analysis; as of August 2008, the situations under analysis included Afghanistan, Chad, Colombia, Côte d'Ivoire, Georgia[3] and Kenya.

In deciding whether to open a formal investigation, the Prosecutor must consider four factors:

  • whether there is a reasonable basis to believe that a crime within the jurisdiction of the Court has been committed;
  • the gravity of the crimes;
  • complementarity with national proceedings; and
  • interests of justice.

Complaints received

As of end September 2010, the Office of the Prosecutor had received 8,874 communications about alleged crimes. After initial review, 4,002 of these communications were dismissed as “manifestly outside the jurisdiction of the Court”.[1] Communications were received from individuals or groups in at least 103 different countries but, as of 1 February 2006, 60% of the communications originated in just four countries: the United States, the United Kingdom, France and Germany.

The situations listed below have been cited in the media as where complaints have been submitted to the court.

Complaints concerning states parties

As of February 2011, 114 countries are states parties to the Court.[7]

Afghanistan

Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have both accused the Taliban of deliberately targeting civilians in Afghanistan, including teachers and aid workers.[8] Allegations have also been made of torture and prisoner abuse at the United States army base at Bagram Air Base[9] and by Afghan government ministers who were former warlords.[10] In April 2008, the Prosecutor confirmed he was undertaking an analysis of the situation there. Speaking in September 2009, he said he was investigating the Taliban, al-Qaeda and troops from the International Security Assistance Force. Allegations had included torture, "massive attacks" and excessive "collateral damage" and information has been obtained from NGOs operating there.[4]

Burundi

In February 2005 the United Nations Secretary General said [11] that three parties to the civil war in Burundi (a state party of the court) were using child soldiers or committing war crimes against children:

The Chief Prosecutor has not announced whether he will formally decide to open an investigation into this matter.

Colombia

In February 2005 the United Nations Secretary General said that three parties to the armed conflict in Colombia (a state party of the court, but which has temporarily opted out of war crimes jurisdiction, for up to seven years) were using child soldiers or committing war crimes against children:[12]

File:Guerr2.jpg
Colombian rebels have been accused of using child soldiers

In April 2006, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights office in Colombia said that FARC's attacks on civilians were war crimes within the jurisdiction of the ICC.[13]

FIDH has called on the court to investigate the AUC for crimes against humanity.[14]

During the 2008 South American diplomatic crisis, the Colombian President Álvaro Uribe called on the court to prosecute Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez for financing FARC's "genocidal" actions.[15]

The Prosecutor has confirmed that the situation in Colombia is under analysis.

Gambia

The Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative stated in September 2007 that they would make a complaint to the court concerning 44 Ghanaians who were allegedly executed in 2005 on the orders of the President of the Gambia, Yahya Jammeh after being accused of planning a coup against him.[16]

Georgia

A complaint has been received alleging that ethnic cleansing has been carried out by the Abkhazian government (legally part of Georgia, a state party of the court) against ethnic Georgians. The Georgian state Minister for Conflict Resolution agreed that "human rights violations as well as crimes against humanity committed during the Georgian-Abkhaz conflict are difficult to dispute". The court has stated in a letter to the complainant that an investigation committee started looking into the case in 2004 and requested further information. However, a formal investigation has not yet been opened. The court only has jurisdiction over events that have taken place since its founding in July 2002.

In September 2009, the Prosecutor confirmed that he was gathering information about possible war crimes committed during the 2008 South Ossetia war.[4]

Honduras

In November 2010 the Prosecutor confirmed that he had started preliminary investigations into events surrounding the 2009 Honduran coup d'état. [17]

Iraq

Saddam Hussein's lawyers wrote to the ICC claiming he had been the victim of war crimes

In March 2003, the United States and its allies, the United Kingdom, Australia and Poland invaded Iraq. The UK, Australia and Poland are all states parties to the ICC Statute and therefore their nationals are liable to prosecution by the court for any relevant crimes. As the United States is not a state party, American citizens can only be prosecuted by the court if the crime takes place in the territory of another state party (e.g. Jordan), or if the situation is referred to it by the Security Council.

The Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court reported in February 2006 that it had received 240 communications in connection with the invasion of Iraq in March 2003 which alleged that various war crimes had been committed. Many of these complaints concerned the British participation in the invasion, as well as the alleged responsibility for torture deaths whilst in detention in British-controlled areas.[18]

On 9 February 2006, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, published a letter [19] that he had sent to all those who had communicated with him concerning the above, which set out his conclusions on these matters, following a preliminary investigation of the complaints. He explained in his decision letter, that essentially two sets of complaints were involved.

  1. Complaints concerning the legality of the invasion itself;
  2. Complaints concerning the conduct of hostilities between March and May 2003, which included allegations in respect of
    1. the targeting of civilians or clearly excessive attacks;
    2. willful killing or inhuman treatment of civilians.

The Prosecutor's conclusions were as follows:

  1. He did not have authority to consider the complaint about the legality of the invasion. Although the ICC Statute includes the crime of "aggression", it indicates that the Court may not exercise jurisdiction over the crime until a provision has been adopted which defines the crime and sets out the conditions under which the Court may exercise jurisdiction with respect to it.
  2. The available information did not provide sufficient evidence for proceeding with an investigation of the complaints in connection with targeting of civilians or clearly excessive attacks.
  3. The available information did provide a reasonable basis for believing that there had been an estimated 4 to 12 victims of willful killing and a limited number of victims of inhuman treatment, totaling in all less than 20 persons. However this on its own was not sufficient for the initiation of an investigation by the ICC because the Statute requires consideration of admissibility before the Court, in light of the gravity of the crimes. Bearing in mind that a key consideration in this regard is the number of victims of particularly serious crimes, he concluded that the situation did not appear to meet the "gravity" threshold.

On 7 July 2006, the defense lawyers for Saddam Hussein wrote to the court, saying that the treatment of Hussein was a breach of the Geneva Conventions and hence a war crime.[20]

Italy

A complaint has been submitted to the court accusing the government of Italy of crimes against humanity in connection to the expulsion of Romani immigrants in Rome in October 2007.[21]

Kenya

Following the disputed Kenyan presidential election of 2007, hundreds of people were killed and thousands raped and displaced. Much of the violence was on tribal lines. A spokesman for President of Kenya Mwai Kibaki complained of "ethnic cleansing", whilst the opposition leader, Raila Odinga accused the government of being "guilty, directly, of genocide." [22] In April 2008 the Prosecutor confirmed he was analysing the situation, had requested information from the Kenyan authorities and had held discussions with UN mediator Kofi Annan.[23]

Korea

In December 2010, the Prosecutor announced a preliminary examination regarding the shelling of Yeonpyeong Island on 23 November 2010, which resulted in the killing of South Korean marines and civilians and the injury of many others, and the sinking of the South Korean warship Cheonan by a torpedo allegedly fired from a North Korean submarine on 26 March 2010, which resulted in the death of 46 persons.[24]

Nigeria

Sixteen foreign NGOs have called for an investigation into the killing of civilians as part of the Conflict in the Niger Delta, including the prosecution of Nigerian Army General Sarkin Yarkin-Bello.[25]

The "Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project" wrote to the International Criminal Court in 2010, asking them to investigate the 2010 Jos riots for potential crimes against humanity. The Prosecutor said the situation was being analysed to see if a case should be opened. [26] In January 2011 the Prosecutor said the government had been "very co-operative" and he would prepare a provisional report in the next six months. [27] In November it was stated that the report on teh preliminary investigations in Jos would be published the next month. [28]

South Africa

Lawyers representing Khalid Rashid have made a complaint to the court regarding his arrest in South Africa and alleged extraordinary rendition. The court refused his lawyer's request for assistance in finding Rashid, saying his case was outside the jurisdiction of the court.[29]

Venezuela

On April 11, 2002 clashes between supporters and opponents of President Hugo Chávez during the attempted coup led to a complaint in January 2003 on behalf of some fifty individuals who allegedly suffered injuries, charging Chávez and 24 other officials with crimes against humanity and acts of terrorism. In February 2006, the court Prosecutor, concluded that, thus far, there was no evidence of a widespread or systematic attack against any civilian population and hence the court could not continue the investigation.[30]

On December 17, 2008 a group of Venezuelan lawyers filed a complaint against Hugo Chávez before the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, accusing Venezuela's current president of crimes against humanity based on recurrent violations of human rights of political and common prisoners in the country.[31][32]

Complaints not concerning states parties

The following complaints relate to crimes that are not alleged to have been committed in the territory of a state party or by a national of a state party. In these cases, the Court can only exercise jurisdiction if:

  • the situation is referred to the Prosecutor by the UN Security Council acting under Chapter VII of the Charter of the United Nations; or
  • the state on whose territory the crime is alleged to have occurred, or the state whose national is accused of the crime, declares that it accepts the Court's jurisdiction with respect to the crime in question[33]

To date, the Security Council has referred two situations (Darfur and Libya) to the Court, and only one non-state party (Côte d'Ivoire) has declared that it accepts the Court's jurisdiction. The Palestinian National Authority has also made a declaration accepting the Court's jurisdiction but, since the Palestinian territories are not recognised as a sovereign state, it is unclear whether the Palestinian Authority has the power to make such a declaration.[34][35]

Algeria

The Algerian Minister of National Solidarity Djamel Ould-Abbes in December 2007 said the government would file a complaint against Al-Jazeera at the court, saying they were spokesmen for the Al-Qaeda Organization in the Islamic Maghreb and complicit in the 11 December 2007 Algiers bombings. However, some of the victims' families said the minister was using Al-Jazeera as a way of avoiding the issue of amnesties.[36]

Bhutan

Nepali-speaking refugees from Bhutan have accused the Bhutanese government of "rape, torture and ethnic cleansing" in respect of the expulsion of Nepalese from Bhutan, and have said they will file a complaint with the court.[37]

Côte d'Ivoire

On 15 February 2005, the Court confirmed that Côte d'Ivoire, which is not a state party, had made a declaration in accordance with Article 12, paragraph 3 of the Rome Statute, accepting "the exercise of jurisdiction by the International Criminal Court with respect to crimes committed on its territory since the events of 19 September 2002".[38]

In May 2006 Human Rights Watch called on the court to send a mission to the country in order to bring an end to a culture of impunity.[39] It cited continuing human rights abuses against civilians by state security forces, militia and the New Forces rebels.

People accused of human rights abuses who could be tried include Simone Gbagbo, wife of President Laurent Gbagbo and Guillaume Soro the head of the New Forces rebel army.[40]

In October 2006 a United Nations report recommended that politicians obstructing the peace process should face trial at the ICC.[41]

In November 2006 the Prosecutor confirmed that the situation in Côte d'Ivoire was under analysis.

Israel / Palestine

In November 2006, the government of Yemen called on the UN Security Council to refer Israel to the court "to look into barbarian crimes and inhuman acts committed by Israeli forces in Beit Hanoun and Jeneen of Gaza." This was in connection with the 2006 Israel–Gaza conflict.[42] Amnesty International has also characterized the allegedly deliberate attacks by Israeli forces against civilian property and infrastructure in the Gaza Strip as "war crimes".[43] Iran and Yemen also called for the court to prosecute Israeli leaders for "war crimes" committed during the 2008 Israel-Gaza conflict.[44][45] However a referral is considered unlikely as it would require UN Security Council approval and this is likely be opposed by the United States.

The Israeli emergency service, Zaka and the Sderot Municipal Authority meanwhile called on the court to investigate Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal for crimes against humanity by the shelling of Sderot by rockets fired from Gaza in 2007.[46]

On 22 January 2009, the Palestinian National Authority made a declaration accepting the Court's jurisdiction but, since the Palestinian territories are not recognised as a sovereign state, it is unclear whether the Palestinian Authority has the power to make such a declaration.[34][35] The Prosecutor has received more than 200 requests to investigate war crimes allegedly committed during the 2008–2009 Israel–Gaza conflict.[35]

Lebanon

The Lebanese Foreign Minister, Fawzi Salloukh, has called for Israelis to be prosecuted at the court in connections with the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict. He accused Israelis of committing a war crime with the bombing of Qana.[47], and this was repeated by the Interior Minister, Ahmad Fatfat on 2 August 2006, who said "a file was being prepared".[48][49] On 3 August Justice Minister Charles Rizk said that he would be submitting a file to the Security Council asking them to create a special court, similar to the Rwanda Tribunal, as neither Lebanon nor Israel are members of the ICC.[50] On 2 September Rizk formed a committee of legal and media personnel to gather evidence of war crimes for possible submission to the court.[51] Individuals have also made official complaints to the court Prosecutor.[52][53]

In July Jean Ziegler, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, called for an investigation into whether Israel committed war crimes by attacking supplies of food and water.[54] Israel has admitted using white phosphorus during the war, a weapon that is banned by Protocol III of the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons when used as an incendiary device against civilians or in civilian areas, but allowed when used for illumination or concealment. (It should be noted, however, that Israel is not party to this protocol.[55]) Doctors in southern Lebanon said they suspected burns victims had been caused by white phosphorus.[56]

Meanwhile a human rights lawyer in the United Kingdom - a member of the court - is taking legal action under the International Criminal Court Act, accusing British government officials of complicity in Israeli war crimes by allowing the transfer of weapons from the United States via UK airports.[57]

Another British law firm has suggested that Israeli use of cluster bombs would also be a war crime.[58]

On September 14, 2006, Amnesty International released a report accusing Hezbollah of war crimes during the 2006 conflict with Israel.[59]

Myanmar

The European Parliament called in May 2008 for leaders of the Myanmar State Peace and Development Council to be referred to the court for crimes against humanity, for blocking relief aid following Cyclone Nargis.[60] This call has been echoed by the government of Australia[61], a shadow minister from the United Kingdom[62] and a parliamentarian from the governing party in France.[63]

Somalia

In May 2006 a Somali warlord, Musa Sudi Yalahow was reported to have ordered his militiamen to take over Keysaney Hospital in northern Mogadishu, a move that may contravene the laws against war crimes. A Somali NGO, the Somali Justice Advocacy office wrote to the court requesting that it investigate this as a war crime.

Somalia is not a party to the court, and therefore would have to consent or be referred by the UN Security Council in order for the court to have jurisdiction.

In June 2006 the regional body IGAD threatened to do this to warlords it termed "spoilers".[64]

In April 2007, an observer in Somalia from the European Union claimed that soldiers from Ethiopia and Somalia's Transitional Federal Government had targeted Somali civilians as part of the ongoing War in Somalia, and that Ugandan peacekeepers from the African Union Mission to Somalia had stood by while this happened. Although neither Somalia nor Ethiopia are court members, Uganda and three other AMISOM troop-contributors are, and could be charged with complicity in the war crime.[65]

In November 2007 the UN Secretary-General's special envoy to Somalia, Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, called for the court to prosecute war crimes suspects.[66]

Sri Lanka

In July 2006 a Sri Lankan American expatriate organisation, the Sri Lankan Patriots, called on the Tamil Tigers to be prosecuted for using child soldiers.[67] Some Tamils have also called for government members to be prosecuted before the court for an alleged attack on a girls' school in LTTE-controlled territory in August 2006.[68]

Sri Lanka is not a party to the court, and therefore would have to consent or be referred by the UN Security Council in order for the court to have jurisdiction.

Thailand

Former Senator Kraisak Choonhavan called in November 2006 for former premier Thaksin Shinawatra to be investigated for crimes against humanity connected to 2,500 alleged extrajudicial killings carried out in 2003 against suspected drug dealers. This would first require Thailand to ratify the court and to accept retrospective jurisdiction.[69] In response, the Justice Minister, Charnchai Likhitjitta, said that ratification had been discussed by the cabinet but needed "careful deliberation" as any decision would affect all Thais.[70]

The UN Security Council has been urged to refer Robert Mugabe to the ICC

Zimbabwe

Since 2005, various calls have been made for the situation in Zimbabwe to be referred to the court by the Security Council, including:

A Zimbabwe government spokesman described the calls as spurious and "an attempt to tarnish the image of the president and country".[78]

Notes and references

  1. ^ a b c d International Criminal Court, September 2010, Communications, Referrals and Preliminary Examinations, Accessed 27 February 2011
  2. ^ International Criminal Court, 2010. Situations and cases Accessed 1 January 2010.
  3. ^ a b International Criminal Court 20 August 2008. "ICC Prosecutor confirms situation in Georgia under analysis". Accessed on 20 August 2008.
  4. ^ a b c "ICC prosecutor eyes possible Afghanistan war crimes", Reuters, 2009-09-09
  5. ^ International Criminal Court. "Referrals and Communications"PDF. Accessed 20 March 2008.
  6. ^ Article 15 of the Rome Statute. Accessed 20 March 2008.
  7. ^ International Criminal Court. The States Parties to the Rome Statute. Accessed 2011-02-27.
  8. ^ "Taliban attack civilians to spread fear: Amnesty". Reuters. 24 April 2007. Archived from the original on 2007-05-14. http://web.archive.org/web/20070514111954/http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070419/wl_nm/afghan_rights_dc_2. Retrieved 2007-12-09. 
  9. ^ See Bagram torture and prisoner abuse
  10. ^ Afghanistan: Warlords Implicated in New Abuses July 29, 2003
  11. ^ http://www.un.org/special-rep/children-armed-conflict/English/index.html
  12. ^ CHILDREN AFFECTED BY CONFLICT, United Nations.
  13. ^ Unicef Seeks More Funds to Help Children Caught in Colombia's Civil Conflict, News Blaze, 2006-04-20, accessed 2007-10-05.
  14. ^ RIGHTS-COLOMBIA: Paramilitary Crimes Should Be Tried by ICC, Inter Press Service, 2007-10-05, accessed on 2007-10-05
  15. ^ Colombia seeks criminal charges against Chavez, International Herald Tribune, 2008-03-04, accessed on 2008-03-05
  16. ^ Gambian killings – case to go to International Court, My Joy Online, 2007-10-09, accessed on 2007-10-10
  17. ^ Netherlands: Court Starts 2 Inquiries, New York Times, 2010-11-18
  18. ^ Richard Norton-Taylor (May 6, 2005). "International court hears anti-war claims". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/print/0,3858,5187283-111289,00.html. 
  19. ^ http://www.icc-cpi.int/library/organs/otp/OTP_letter_to_senders_re_Iraq_9_February_2006.pdf
  20. ^ Saddam lawyers invoke international criminal court
  21. ^ Racism: Italy reported for crimes against humanity, IndyBay, 2008-01-23, accessed on 2008-01-27; see also BRUTAL ATTACK IN ROME - Italy Cracks Down on Immigrant Crime Wave, Der Spiegel, 2007-11-02
  22. ^ Kenya diplomatic push for peace, BBC, 2008-01-02, accessed on 2008-01-06
  23. ^ Kenya: Spokesman - ICC Analyses Country's Situation, Hirondelle News Agency via allafrica.com, 2008-04-22
  24. ^ ICC Prosecutor: alleged war crimes in the territory of the Republic of Korea under preliminary examination International Criminal Court, press release 2010-12-06
  25. ^ 16 foreign groups drag Yar’Adua, JTF to International Criminal Court, Punch, 2009-05-25
  26. ^ ICC is Analysing Jos Crisis, Says Prosecutor, Daily Trust, 2010-11-08
  27. '^ International Court to publish criminal findings on Nigeria, Next, 2011-01-27
  28. ^ ICC report on Jos crises ready next month, The Nation, 2011-11-08
  29. ^ 'New facts' open doors in 'deportation' case, Legalbrief.co.za, 2007-01-08, accessed on 2007-01-08.
  30. ^ OTP letter to senders re Venezuela, International Criminal Court, 2006-02-09, accessed on 2007-01-08.
  31. ^ Venezuela's Chavez Accused of Violating Human Rights at International Criminal Court Latin American Herald Tribune (December 19, 2008)
  32. ^ Complaint against Chávez at the International Criminal Court "El Universal" Daily News (December 17, 2008)
  33. ^ See Articles 12 & 13 of the Rome Statute. Accessed 2006-11-23.
  34. ^ a b Sebastian Rotella (5 February 2009). "International Criminal Court to consider Gaza investigation". Los Angeles Times. Accessed 11 February 2009.
  35. ^ a b c Marlise Simons (10 February 2009). "Court moves to study claims of Gaza crimes". International Herald Tribune. Accessed 11 February 2009.
  36. ^ Liberte (Algeria), December 24, 2007 and El-Watan, December 24, 2007. Referenced in Algerian Press Declares War on ‘Terrorist’ Al-Jazeera, MEMRI, 2007-12-28
  37. ^ Oli repeats govt stance: Allow refugees to return, The Rising Nepal, 2006-12-29.
  38. ^ international Criminal Court, 15 February 2005. Registrar confirms that the Republic of Côte d’Ivoire has accepted the jurisdiction of the Court. Accessed 27 June 2007.
  39. ^ Human Rights Watch. The Price of Continuing Impunity in Côte d’Ivoire, May 2006. Accessed 27 June 2007.
  40. ^ UN confirms existence of blacklist of human rights abusers, IRIN, 2005-01-31.
  41. ^ UN reports puts Côte d’Ivoire’s leaders on notice to make progress towards elections, African News Dimension, 2006-10-19.
  42. ^ Yemen condemns Israeli crimes in Gaza, Yemen Observer 2006-11-11.
  43. ^ "Israel/Occupied Territories: Deliberate attacks a war crime". Amnesty International. 2006-06-30. http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/MDE15/061/2006/en/aee67edf-fa03-11dd-b1b0-c961f7df9c35/mde150612006en.pdf. 
  44. ^ Iran calls on ICC to bring to justice Israeli war criminals, Islamic Republic News Agency, 2008-03-02, accessed 2008-03-03
  45. ^ Saudi likens Gaza assault to Nazi war crimes, AFP, 2008-03-02, accessed 2008-03-03
  46. ^ Zaka, Sderot mayor suing Hamas leader Mashaal, Jerusalem Post, 2007-11-21, accessed on 2007-11-22
  47. ^ "Douste-Blazy touts efforts to secure truce", Daily Star (Lebanon), 1 August 2006.
  48. ^ Dr Ahmad Fatfat on the Middle East conflict, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 2 August 2006.
  49. ^ Lebanon minister to sue Israel, Malaysia Sun, 1 August 2006.
  50. ^ Jumblatt accuses Hizbullah of serving Iranian, Syrian agenda, Daily Star (Lebanon), 3 August 2006.
  51. ^ Officials study evidence to sue Israel for war crimes, Daily Star (Lebanon), 2008-09-02.
  52. ^ Destruction of Lebanon July 2006 - Call for Investigation and Possible Prosecution of WAR CRIMES by the International Criminal Court, Dr. Yvonne Schmidt, 2006-07-25.
  53. ^ War-crime trial appeal, Daily News (Bahrain), 2006-08-17.
  54. ^ Israel responsible for food rights violation in Lebanon - UN official, Kuwait News Agency, 2005-07-06.
  55. ^ [1], State Parties to the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons
  56. ^ Israel admits phosphorus bombing, BBC, 2006-10-22.
  57. ^ Legal action plan over arms flights, Daily Express, 2 August 2006.
  58. ^ Israel may be guilty of Iraq-style war crimes, say lawyers, Islamic Republic News Agency, 2008-08-25.
  59. ^ "Israel/Lebanon Under fire: Hizbullah's attacks on northern Israel". Amnesty International. 2006-09-14. http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/engmde020252006. Retrieved 2006-09-14. 
  60. ^ EU assembly seeks criminal trial for Burmese junta, EUObserver, 2008-05-23
  61. ^ Canberra urged to uphold vow to act on Burma crimes, The Age, 2008-06-02
  62. ^ Tory calls Burma's leaders 'evil', BBC, 2008-05-24
  63. ^ Burma aid must have 'no strings attached', RTE, 2008-06-01
  64. ^ Somali PM seeks deployment of foreign peacekeepers
  65. ^ EU ambassador in Nairobi: Strong grounds to believe violated the International Criminal Court, Han Geeska Afrika Online, 2007-04-06, accessed on 2007-04-09
  66. ^ European parliament calls for war crimes probe in Somalia, AFP, 2007-11-15, accessed on 2007-11-16
  67. ^ Bring LTTE Leaders to International Criminal Court for War Crimes against Children
  68. ^ Canadian Tamils demonstrate against Canada's approval for massacre of school girls, SiberNews, 2006-08-16.
  69. ^ War on drugs returns to bite Thaksin, Bangkok Post, 2006-11-23.
  70. ^ DSI panel to probe 4 drug deaths cases, Bangkok Post, 2006-12-08.
  71. ^ a b New Zealand, Australia lobby UN on Mugabe indictment, New Zimbabwe, 2005-08-31.
  72. ^ IBA calls for International Criminal Court trial for Mugabe, New Zimbabwe, 2004-10-12.
  73. ^ We will not play tyrant Mugabe’s game, says tired MDC challenger, Aberdeen Press and Journal, 2008-06-23, accessed on 2008-07-19
  74. ^ Violence could force MDC to withdraw from Zimbabwe poll, The Herald (Scotland), 2008-06-21, accessed on 2008-07-19
  75. ^ Mugabe Could Be Headed for the Hague, Zimbabwe Standard, 2006-10-23
  76. ^ Outraged - Anti-Mugabe March in Windhoek, The Namibian, 2007-02-23, accessed on 2007-02-23
  77. ^ Try Mugabe for abuses - DA, The Star (South Africa), 2008-06-30, accessed on 2008-07-06
  78. ^ Zimbabwe Scoffs at Call to Have Mugabe Indicted, Voice of America, 2006-01-02.

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