U.N. Security Council, Esq.

BY DAVID L. BOSCO | JULY 1, 2004

Columbia Journal of Transnational Law,
Vol. 42, No. 2, January 2004, New York

In May 2003, Iraqi and Jordanian plaintiffs sought to indict U.S. Army Gen. Tommy Franks in a Belgian court for human rights abuses committed during the recent Iraq war. They chose Belgium because, in 1993, its legislature enacted a universal jurisdiction statute allowing its courts to try certain human rights cases regardless of where the alleged abuse occurred or the nationality of those involved. The case exemplified the potential excesses of universal jurisdiction: Even Belgium's foreign minister, Louis Michel, called the case an "abuse of the law." Under U.S. pressure, Belgium quashed the case a month later and eventually modified the law to cover only cases with a clear link to Belgium.

Belgium's retreat has not soothed critics of international criminal law's new reach, who decry what they consider an increasing imbalance between power and law. From Spanish judge Baltasar Garzón humbling former Chilean dictator Gen. Augusto Pinochet by seeking his extradition for human rights abuses to jurists on the new International Criminal Court (ICC) determining the criminal responsibility of national politicians and military officers, new players are taking charge in the international law realm.

Persistent concerns about such legal forays have sparked a backlash against the international criminal justice industry. Surprisingly, a decision by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) -- the United Nations' principal judicial body -- bolstered this backlash. In 2002, the ICJ ruled that Belgium must withdraw an arrest warrant issued for then Congolese Foreign Minister Abdoulaye Yerodia Ndombasi, who allegedly incited massacres against ethnic Tutsis in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 1998. The ICJ decided that national courts must respect the immunity from criminal prosecution traditionally accorded high-ranking government officials -- even when they are charged with heinous crimes. The court reasoned that diplomats threatened by prosecution could not fulfill their important responsibilities.

Writing in the Columbia Journal of Transnational Law, British barrister Jonathan H. Marks (a veteran of the Pinochet case) chastises the world court for "arguably retrograde" reasoning in the Congo case. In an attempt to integrate power and law, he goes on to suggest that the U.N. Security Council should decide when to lift sovereign immunity. Marks points out that the council already played this role by setting up the Yugoslav and Rwandan tribunals, both of which have prosecuted senior government officials.

 

David L. Bosco is senior editor at FOREIGN POLICY.

Facebook|Twitter|Digg
 SUBJECTS: UNITED NATIONS