National Post

Why the UN says atrocities aren’t genocide

- National Post sgelis@nationalpo­st.com

In its recent ruling neither Croatia or Serbia committed genocide, the UN’s highest court showed how high the bar is set to prove genocide. Intent is an important factor, as well as the numbers killed, The Post’s Steven Gelis reports:

What’s the definition of genocide? The UN’s convention says it must be “committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group.” This was not proved in either Serbia or Croatia in the war that led to the breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990s, the Internatio­nal Court of Justice said. “[While] there is evidence of crimes by Serbia and Croatia of atrocities that are consistent with genocide, [the judges] are saying that they do not find specific intent to destroy substantia­l portions of the target groups,” notes Adam Jones, a genocide scholar at the University of British Columbia Okanagan.

So what counts? In the Serbia/Croatia cases, the court “would have expected to see more systematic, physical killing and corralling and exterminat­ing of population­s to more clearly meet the intent requiremen­t,” says Mr. Jones. Adds political scientist David B. MacDonald at the University of Guelph, “It’s not enough to kill people, or move them around and steal their land. You have to be able to prove that [the perpetrato­rs] had this bigger motivation to destroy the group in whole or in part.”

Some clear examples Intent is unmistakab­le in cases such as Rwanda, Cambodia and Srebrenica genocide, when Serbian paratroope­rs killed more than 8,000 Bosnian Muslim men and boys in the Bosnian War. Canada also considers the Holocaust, the Ukrainian famine in the 1930s Soviet Union and the Ottoman Empire killings of Armenians as genocide.

What sort of numbers? In Cambodia, the Khmer Rouge under dictator Pol Pot is estimated to have killed as many as two million people in 1975-79. In Rwanda, up to 800,000, mainly ethnic Tutsis, perished in a matter of 100 days in 1994, killed by ethnic Hutu extremists.

What about Canada? Some scholars argue Canada has its own history of genocide. They point to residentia­l schools and continuing violence against First Nations’ peoples, especially women. “The residentia­l school system in Canada, and certainly the structural exterminat­ion of native peoples in many other parts of the colonized world, qualifies because of the mortality involved,” says Mr. Jones.

Local pushback Electronic music group A Tribe Called Red pulled out of performing at the opening festivitie­s for the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg because they felt the museum misreprese­nted and downplayed “the genocide that was experience­d by indigenous people in Canada by refusing to name it genocide.”

 ?? Darko Bandic/ The Associated Press ?? The war victims cemetery in Vukovar, Croatia. The United Nations’ top court ruled last week
that Serbia and Croatia did not commit genocide against each other in their 1990s wars.
Darko Bandic/ The Associated Press The war victims cemetery in Vukovar, Croatia. The United Nations’ top court ruled last week that Serbia and Croatia did not commit genocide against each other in their 1990s wars.
 ?? The Associated Press ?? A Yugoslav soldier leads a captured Croatian guardsman in 1991.
The Associated Press A Yugoslav soldier leads a captured Croatian guardsman in 1991.

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