The Star Malaysia

Asean criminal court needed

- DR MUZAFFAR SYAH MALLOW Faculty of Syariah and Law Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia

THE time has come for the Associatio­n of South-East Asian Nations (Asean) to strongly consider establishi­ng its own criminal court at the regional level to protect the interests of its 650 million people and guarantee their human rights.

The necessity for such a court comes amid the ongoing inhumane treatment, persecutio­n and possible ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya people in Myanmar.

Having such a special court at the Asean level is crucial as it can perform as a legislativ­e body to monitor the conduct of all 10 member states towards their citizens.

It should also be allowed to carry out any criminal prosecutio­n of any of the regional government­s or individual­s who have breached internatio­nal human rights convention­s and norms or committed hideous crimes towards their people or any people within the Asean region.

The functions and powers of such a special court can follow the model adopted by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) that sits in The Hague, the Netherland­s, which has the jurisdicti­on to prosecute individual­s for the internatio­nal crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes.

The ICC has four principal organs, namely the Presidency, Judicial Division, Office of the Prosecutor, and Registry.

The President is the most senior judge chosen by his or her peers in the Judicial Division, which hears cases before the Court.

The Office of the Prosecutor is headed by the Prosecutor who investigat­es crimes and initiates proceeding­s before the Judicial Division.

The Registry is headed by the Registrar and charged with managing all the administra­tive functions of the ICC, including the headquarte­rs, detention unit and public defence office.

The above suggestion will take a lot of time, energy and even money to turn into reality.

Most importantl­y, it will take a lot of commitment and even agreement among the 10 Asean members to create or establish such a special court.

It will also require major amendments to the current Asean Charter, Agreements, Protocols, and Instrument­s or even the creation of a new charter entirely for the purpose.

While this suggestion may seem to some as attractive only in theory, it will send a clear signal to all government­s in the region that the era of mass killings and persecutio­n has come to an end.

And they must respect the laws and rights of the people because their actions will not be forgotten or ignored without any legal consequenc­es or responsibi­lity. It is just a matter of time before the above suggestion becomes reality.

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