An
Impartial Tribunal? Really?
by Christopher
Black
The following
article is reprinted from www.swans.com, in our opinion an excellent website
with much original material. Here is Swan's
introduction to Mr. Black's
article:
Last June,[ www.Swans.com
} published a paper
by Christopher Black, a
Canadian lawyer, that reviewed the International
Criminal Tribunal. Chris had recently returned
from Bonn, Germany, where he had been a guest
speaker at a conference on the causes and
consequences of the war in Yugoslavia. Since
then, he has returned to Europe where, in Paris,
France, he presented an expanded version of that
paper at a conference on the war organized by
Diana Johnstone. The expanded revision of his
initial paper contains, according to Chris,
"a new section dealing with the ICTY's rules
of procedure and evidence, new facts relating to
the connection between it and NATO (eg. a
memorandum of understanding between Supreme
Allied Headquarters Europe and the prosecutor
signed May, 1996 which in essence makes NATO the
police force of the Tribunal), treatment of
suspects, and a further analysis which leads to
the conclusion that the ICTY is itself a crime
against peace as its main purpose is to justify
war." Here is a serious analysis that you
will not find in The New
York Times..[End of
introduction]
The indictment of Slobodan
Milosevic for alleged war crimes raises important
questions about the impartiality and, ultimately, the
purpose of the International Criminal Tribunal. For
centuries, the independence of judicial bodies has been
considered one of the fundamental precepts of the quest
for justice. As Lord Hewart stated in 1924, it is
"...of fundamental importance that justice should
not only be done, but should manifestly and undoubtedly
be seen to be done." It has also been said that
there is nothing more important than the public
administration of justice. But in the case of the
International Criminal Tribunal a compelling argument can
be made that private justice has replaced public justice,
that even the appearance of fundamental justice has been
replaced by an open contempt for justice.
It is clear that from the
beginning American,
British, French and German interests were behind the
creation of the Tribunal and worked ceaselessly behind
the scenes in order to create it. They first considered
doing so in regards to Iraq and Saddam Hussein, during
the Gulf War. The idea apparently originated with the
United States Department of the Army, which alone should
tell you something about its true purpose. The rhetoric
used to justify such a body to the general public was of
course heavily seasoned with concerns for "human
rights" the "dignity of the individual",
"genocide" and "democracy".
However, they had a problem. It was generally agreed that no such
tribunal could be created without the mechanism of a
treaty which had to be ratified by all those affected by
it. There was no time to create such a treaty with
respect to Hussein so other methods were used to put
pressure on the Iraqi government. But between 1991 and
1993, the use of an international criminal court as a
means of effecting policy and to be created by the
members of the Security Council, instead of by treaty was
pushed by those four countries. A draft treaty to create
a truly international criminal court, one which applied
to all states, the last in a long list of attempts dating
back to the 1890's, was put together. But its
ratification has not taken place as several important
powers, particularly the United States, refuse to sign it
for fear of being caught in its web. For thirty years the
United States has tried to block such a treaty. It
opposes universal jurisdiction and it opposes an
independent prosecutor. It wants any prosecutions to go
through the Security Council subject to its right of
veto. In fact, Jesse Helms, the conservative US senator
said such a treaty, if presented to congress for
ratification would be "dead on arrival". It
would seem that the treaty is itself nothing more than
window dressing to satisfy the public that the nations of
the world really care about human rights and war crimes
in order to complement their rhetoric about it. For
without ratification by the major powers it is a dead
letter. The United States remains stubborn in its
opposition to this treaty but then it has a bit more to
worry about than most countries.
The next opportunity to try
this experiment was Yugoslavia. In order to accelerate
the break up of that country into quasi-independent
colonies, principally of Germany and the United States,
it was necessary to discredit their leaderships. An
effective propaganda weapon in such an exercise is of
course a tribunal with an international character which
the public will accept as a neutral instrument of justice
but which is controlled for political ends.
The Tribunal was created by the
Security Council in its Resolutions 808 and 827 of 1993.
Both resolutions stated that the situation in Bosnia at
that time, constituted a threat to international peace
and security and that a tribunal to prosecute war
criminals would help to restore peace. It all sounds very
nice until one realizes that there was no basis for the
characterization of the situation in Bosnia as a threat
to international peace. It was a civil war (partly
controlled by the very countries which wanted to create a
tribunal). But the members of the Security Council had to
characterize it that way otherwise the members of the
Security Council had no jurisdiction to act. The setup
for this characterization was Resolution 688 of 1991 in
which the Security Council stated that disregard for
human rights constitutes a threat to international
security and can no longer be treated as an internal
matter. This reinterpretation, this revision of the UN
Charter, which in fact undermines the very basis of the
Charter was forcefully advocated by the German foreign
minister Mr. Genscher in speeches he gave to the German
parliament and to the Canadian parliament in Ottawa and
by British, French and of course American ministers in
speeches and memorandums to each other.
Chapter VII of the UN Charter
requires that there be a threat to the peace or an act of
aggression before the Security Council can make use of
its special powers set out in that Chapter. It has always
been interpreted to mean and was meant to mean a threat
to international peace not national peace. The members of
the Security Council recognized this and so had to
redefine a national problem as an international one. Yet
in all those speeches and memoranda there is not one
compelling reason given for doing this except vague
references to the collapse of the socialist bloc, and the
imperative to establish a new world order. In fact, Mr.
Genscher in his speech to the Canadian parliament stated
unequivocally that no nation would any longer be allowed
to ignore Security Council decisions. Even if this
redefinition were a legitimate interpretation of the UN
Charter, which it is not, the UN Charter only speaks of
economic measures and then military measures, not
judicial or criminal measures.
Chapter VII has to be read in
context with Chapter I of the Charter which speaks of
international cooperation in solving international
problems of an economic, social, cultural or humanitarian
character. It says nothing of humanitarian problems of a
national character. It states that the UN is based on the
principle of the sovereign equality of its members, a
fundamental principle of international law, and the first
guarantee of the right to self-determination of the
world's peoples. If a people does not have the right of
sovereignty, the right to self-determination is a sham.
This principle is completely denied by the creation of
the Tribunal. The Tribunal itself explicitly denies that
this principle applies in its own statements as do its
political supporters, but never, of course, in reference
to themselves. Lastly, the Charter states that nothing
contained in the Charter shall authorize the UN to
intervene in matters which are essentially within the
domestic jurisdiction of any state. This fundamental
principle, put in the Charter so that the UN could not be
used by some members to bully others has also been
fatally undermined by the creation of the Tribunal. The
members of the Security Council, more precisely, the
permanent members, now hold the opposite position, and I
submit, do so for reasons connected more with imperialism
not humanitarianism.
In light of these facts the
Security Council's authority to create such a tribunal is
in my view more than questionable. That it was created is
to be credited to Madeleine Albright, who used some
effective persuasion with the Russian and Chinese members
to vote for its creation in return for economic
consideration and with a view to controlling smaller
states within their own spheres of interest.
Yugoslavia was the first
experiment in using a quasi-judicial international body
to attack the principle of sovereignty. And as the
Americans have learned so well, the best way to get your
domestic population behind you as you proceed to break
another country, economically and militarily is to get
them to hate those in power in that country. The Serb
leadership was targeted, and transformed into caricatures
of evil. There were comparisons to Adolf Hitler, a
comparison used with surprising frequency by the United
States against the long list of nations it has attacked
in the last 50 years, though sometimes they are just
labeled as common criminals, like Manuel Noriega, or mad,
like Ghadaffi, if the leader or the country is too small
to make the Hitler comparison stick. I think Saddam
Hussein was the first to be compared to Hitler, and
declared a common criminal and a madman all at the same
time.
The Tribunal from the outset
was, as I have said, the creation of particular
governments. Their motives are clear from the preliminary
discussions in the Security Council on the creation of
the court which focused almost entirely on crimes
allegedly committed by Serbs and their leadership. Since
its inception it has kept this focus. The majority of
indictments have been directed at Serbs even though there
is substantial evidence of the commission of serious war
crimes by Croats and Bosnian Muslims.
The Tribunal has jurisdiction
over war crimes and crimes against humanity, but crimes
against peace, the worst crime under the Nuremberg
principles, are not within the purview of the tribunal.
The underlying reason for this is that the members of the
Security Council preferred to reserve to themselves
competence in the field of aggression and similar crimes
against peace. The members of the Security Council have a
very keen sense of humor or perhaps more accurately,
self-preservation.
In a statement to the
Secretary-General of the United Nation, Mr.
Boutros-Boutros Ghali, on January 21, 1994, by Antonio
Cassese the Tribunal's political character was made quite
clear when he said in reference to the role of the
Tribunal, "The political and diplomatic response (to
the Balkans conflict) takes into account the exigencies
and the tempo of the international community. The
military response will come at the appropriate
time." In other words, the Tribunal is considered a
political response. He went on to state, "Our
tribunal will not be simply "window dressing"
but a decisive step in the construction of a new world
order."
The governing statute of the
Tribunal states in Article 16 that the Prosecutor shall
act independently as a separate organ of the Tribunal and
shall not seek or receive instruction from any government
or any other source. Article 32 states that the expenses
of the Tribunal shall be borne by the regular budget of
the United Nations. Both of these provisions have been
openly and continuously violated.
The Tribunal itself, through
its senior officials openly brags about its particularly
close ties to the American government. In her remarks to
the United States Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. on
April 5th of this year, Judge Gabrielle Kirk McDonald,
President of the Tribunal, and an American stated,
"We benefited from the strong support of concerned
governments and dedicated individuals such as Secretary
Albright. As the permanent representative to the United
Nations, she had worked with unceasing resolve to
establish the Tribunal. Indeed, we often refer to her as
the "mother of the Tribunal". If she is the
mother then Bill Clinton is the father, as Louise Arbour
confirmed by her action of reporting to the President of
the United States the decision to indict Milosevic two
days before she announced it to the rest of the world, in
blatant violation of her duty to remain independent.
Further, she and the current prosecutor have made several
public appearances with U.S officials, including
Madeleine Albright, and both have openly stated that they
rely on NATO governments for investigations, governments
which have a great interest in the undermining of the
Yugoslavian leadership.
In 1996, the prosecutor met
with the Secretary-General of NATO and the Supreme Allied
Commander in Europe to "establish contacts and begin
discussing modalities of cooperation and
Assistance". On May 9th, 1996 a memorandum of
understanding between the Office of the Prosecutor and
Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE) was
signed by both parties. Further meetings have taken place
since including that of the president of the Tribunal
with General Wesley Clarke. The memorandum of May 9th
spelled out the practical arrangements for support to the
tribunal and the transfer of indicted persons to the
Tribunal. In other words, NATO forces became the
gendarmes of the Tribunal, not UN forces, and the
Tribunal put itself at the disposal of NATO. This
relationship has continued despite the Tribunal's
requirement to be independent of any national government
and, therefore, group of national governments.
The Tribunal has received
substantial funds from individual States, private
foundations and corporations in violation of Article 32
of its Charter. Much of its money has come from the U.S.
government directly in cash and donations of computer
equipment. In the last year for which public figures are
available, 1994/95, the United States provided $700,000
in cash and $2,300,000 worth of equipment. That same year
the Open Society Institute, a foundation established by
George Soros, the American billionaire financier, to
bring "openness" to the former east bloc
countries contributed $150,000 and the Rockefeller
family, through the Rockefeller Foundation, contributed
$50,000 and there have been donations from corporations
such as Time-Warner, and Discovery Products, both US
corporations. It also important to know that Mr. Soros'
foundation not only funds the Tribunal it also funds the
main KLA newspaper in Pristina, an obvious conflict of
interest that has not been mentioned once in the western
press.
The Tribunal also receives
money from the United States Institute for Peace for its
Outreach project, a public relations arm of the Tribunal
set up to overcome opposition in the former Yugoslav
republics to its work and the constant criticisms of
selective prosecution and the application of double
standards; objections which have obvious merit and which
are never answered by anyone at the Tribunal or by any of
its sponsors. The Institute for Peace is stated to be
" an independent, non-partisan federal institution
created and funded by Congress to strengthen the nation's
capacity to promote the peaceful resolution of
international conflict." .Established in 1984 under
Ronald Reagan, its Board of Directors is appointed by the
President of the United States.
The Tribunal also receives
support from the Coalition For International Justice
whose purpose is also to enhance public opinion of the
Tribunal. The CIJ was founded and is funded by, again,
George Soros' Open Society Institute and something called
CEELI, the Central and East European Law Institute,
created by the American Bar Association and lawyers close
to the U.S. government to promote the replacement of
socialist legal systems with free market ones.
These groups also have supplied
many of the legal staff of the Tribunal. In her speech to
the Supreme Court, Judge McDonald said, "The
Tribunal has been well served by the tremendous work of a
number of lawyers who have come to the Tribunal through
the CIJ and CEELI..." It is also interesting to note
that the occasion of Judge McDonalds speech was her
acceptance of an award from the American Bar Association
and CEELI. In the same speech she also said," We are
now seeking funding from states and foundations to carry
out this critical effort."
The new prosecutor Carla Del
Ponte, on September 30, at a press conference, thanked
the director of the FBI for assisting the tribunal and
stated "I am very appreciative of the important
support that the U.S government has provided the
tribunal. I look forward to their continued
support." On September 29th, in response to a
question as to whether the tribunal would be
investigating crimes Committed in Kosovo after June 10,
or crimes committed by others (meaning NATO) in the
Yugoslav theatre of operations, "The primary focus
of the Office of The Prosecutor must be on the
investigation and prosecution of the five leaders of the
FRY and Serbia who have already been indicted." Why
this "must" be is not explained. Why, if the
Tribunal is impartial wouldn't it be just as focussed on
NATO war crimes, the war crimes of Clinton, Schroeder ,
Chirac, Chretien etc? Why did it still need to
investigate to support the indictments against the
leaders of the government and military of Yugoslavia if
there was already evidence to justify those indictments?
Well, we can speculate why when
we consider that the last prosecutor, Louis Arbour, who
was asked to investigate all NATO leaders for war crimes,
instead accepted a job from one of them, the Prime
Minister of Canada, Jean Chretien. She now sits in the
scarlet robes of a judge of the Supreme Court of Canada,
a lifetime appointment, her reward for handing down the
indictment against Mr. Milosevic, despite the lack of
evidence and (if you believe the reports of the Spanish
and RCMP forensic experts recently returned from Kosovo)
the continuing lack of evidence of the systematic crimes
he is accused of.
On April 19th Judge McDonald
"expressed her deep appreciation to the U.S.
Government for its pledge of $500,000 for the Outreach
project which was announced on April 16 by Harold Koh,
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State.
In her speech to the Council On
Foreign Relations in New York on May 12 of this year
Judge McDonald stated," The U.S. government has very
generously agreed to provide $500,000 and to help to
encourage other States to contribute. However, the moral
imperative to end the violence in the region is shared by
all, including the corporate sector. I am pleased,
therefore, that a major corporation has recently donated
computer equipment worth three million dollars, which
will substantially enhance our operating capacity."
From the start, the Office of
the Prosecutor has had meetings with NGO's that are eager
to " cooperate with and assist the tribunal",
many of them linked to George Soros through his Open
Society Foundation. All this money flows through a
special UN account which is financed by assessed
contributions from member states and voluntary
contributions from states and corporations again in
violation of its statute. As an aside it's interesting
that its role as a propaganda tool was indirectly
acknowledged by its own staff when they failed to provide
for a courtroom or holding cells in their first budget of
approximately $ 32 million dollars. The Security Council
sent them back to redraft the budget to include those
items. After all, this was supposed to be a criminal
tribunal! They did so. The difference was an added
expense of $500,000. It's also interesting to know that
three of its first four rooms in the Peace Palace in the
Hague were loaned to them by the Carnegie Foundation.
In order to give itself the
appearance of a judicial body the Tribunal has persons
appointed as judges, prosecutors, clerks, investigators,
and has its own rules of procedure and evidence, its own
prison system. It says it applies the presumption of
innocence. However, unlike criminal courts, with which we
are all familiar (or, perhaps not), the court itself is
involved in the laying of the charges. When a charge is
to be laid the approval of one of the trial judges must
be obtained. That approval is only given if a prima facie
case is established. That is, a case which if not
answered could result in a conviction. Yet, despite this
close relationship between the prosecutor and the judges
and the commitment to the charges the judges have made by
signing the indictment , the rules insist on the
presumption of innocence. This presumption is compromised
in other ways. The most egregious is that upon arrest
detention is automatic. There is no bail, no form of
release pending trial, unless the prisoner proves
"exceptional circumstances". Loss of job, loss
of contact with friends, family, indeed country is not
sufficient. Even ill health has not been sufficient to
get bail. Prisoners are treated as if they had been
convicted. They are kept in cells and have to obey prison
rules, are subject to discipline if they do not, constant
surveillance, censored mail, restricted family visits,
communication with family at their own expense and there
are restrictions on what they can see or hear on radio or
television. Prisoners have had to wait many months before
a trial takes place, sometimes years. Yet, still they
insist these men are presumed innocent. The question is
by whom? By the judges, one of whom laid the charge in
the first place?
Its rules of evidence are
relaxed so that protections on the admission of hearsay
evidence developed over centuries in all national courts
are set aside and replaced by an anything is admissible
if deemed relevant approach even if it is hearsay. There
is no jury. Witnesses can testify anonymously, or not be
shown in court. In its yearbook for 1994, this statement
appears, "The tribunal does not need to shackle
itself with restrictive rules which have developed out of
the ancient trial-by-jury system." There are
provisions in the rules for closed hearings, in
circumstances which are vaguely defined, secret trials,
the very essence of injustice and of political courts. It
is now increasing its use of sealed indictments, so that
no one knows if they have been charged until the military
police swoop down on them on the street in any country.
Suspects, persons not indicted, can be detained for up to
ninety days without charge. We all know from experience
what prisoners can undergo in a day or two at the mercy
of most police forces. Ninety days. Anyone one of us here
could be detained by the Tribunal for that length of
time. All they have to say is they have some reason to
suspect you. This is easily constructed.
Perhaps its most dangerous rule
is Rule 92 that states confessions shall be presumed to
be free and voluntary unless the contrary is established
(by the prisoner). Just think - presumed to be free and
voluntary after 90 days at the mercy of military police
and prosecutors. Almost every other court in the world
presumes the opposite or, because of the notorious
unreliability of confessions made in police custody are
moving to prohibit their use entirely. This Tribunal goes
back to the days of Star Chamber and the justice of the
13th century. Finally, we have imprisonment of those
sentenced in foreign countries so that not only are they
imprisoned, they are at the same time exiled. There is
even a special provision for the obtaining of evidence
from NGO's such as George Soros Open Society Foundation,
whose conflict of interest has already been mentioned.
Accused have the right to choose counsel on paper but in
reality that right is infringed by the Registrar who can
disqualify counsel for all sorts of reasons including
being unfriendly to the Tribunal. Such a counsel will be
supplied if the accuses insists strongly enough but it is
not made easy. There are cases in which the Registrar has
barred lawyers from particular countries because there
are deemed to be too many of them already representing
accused persons, and the use of its contempt powers is a
powerful weapon to intimidate counsel. Lawyers have been
subject to large fines for contempt.
No citizen of any country in
the world would consider themselves fairly tried before a
court that was paid for, staffed and assisted by private
citizens or corporations which had a direct stake in the
outcome of the trial and who were, themselves, in
practical terms, immune from that court. It is a well
established principle of law that a party in a legal
action, whether civil or criminal, is entitled to ask for
the removal of any judge sitting on the case when there
exists a reasonable apprehension of bias. In this
instance, a compelling argument can be made that the bias
is not only apprehended, it is real, that it is not of
one judge but of the entire tribunal, that this is not a
judicial body worthy of international respect but a
kangaroo court, a bogus court, with a political purpose
serving very powerful and identifiable masters. To be
consistent with my thesis I will go further and say that
as a political instrument designed to violate, to
destroy, the integrity and sovereignty of a country, its
creation is a crime against peace under the Nuremberg
Principles. Instead of resolving conflict as it claims,
it is used to justify conflict, instead of creating
peace, it is used to justify war and therefore is an
instrument of war.
Will Slobodan Milosevic receive
a fair trial if they take him? Will the leaders of NATO,
even be investigated let alone indicted for war crimes
committed in the brutal attack on the civilian population
of Yugoslavia, as my colleagues in Canada, South and
Central America, Spain, Norway, Greece, Britain, and the
United States have requested? As the English say, the
proof is in the pudding. Our requests have met with empty
words and no action. We made the requests in order to
bring to the attention of the world the crimes that were
being committed by NATO. We believe we have succeeded in
that. If we have not succeeded in bringing to justice the
war criminals of NATO, it is because we have exposed the
political nature of this Tribunal instead. It is up to
all of us to act on this knowledge.
Christopher Black is a Toronto
defence lawyer and writer and is one of the lawyers who
made the request to the War Crimes Tribunal to indict
NATO leaders for war crimes.
Christopher Black can be
reached at this E-mail
address
***
For a discussion of the
"War Crimes" Tribunal's recent statement on
bodies found by investigators working in Kosovo, click on
Spinning the Kill or go to http://www.globalresistance.com/analysis/spin.htm
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