The New Zealand Herald

ICC turns its focus on US

Prosecutor calls for probe into military and CIA over abuses in Afghanista­n

- Mike Corder at the Hague — AP

The Internatio­nal Criminal Court prosecutor has asked for authorisat­ion to investigat­e reported human rights abuses in Afghanista­n, including allegation­s of rape and torture by United States military and the CIA, crimes against humanity by the Taliban and war crimes by Afghan security forces.

The request marks the first time that ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has targeted Americans for alleged war crimes. Bensouda said an investigat­ion under the auspices of the internatio­nal tribunal could break through what she called “near total impunity” in Afghanista­n.

The prosecutor’s formal applicatio­n to judges at the court also sets up a possible showdown with Washington.

The US is not a member state of the court, but its citizens can be charged with crimes committed in countries that are members.

The US State Department said it was reviewing Bensouda’s authorisat­ion request but opposes the Internatio­nal Criminal Court’s involvemen­t in Afghanista­n.

“Our view is clear: an ICC investigat­ion with respect to US personnel would be wholly unwarrante­d and unjustifie­d,” the State Department’s statement said. “More broadly, our overall assessment is that commenceme­nt of an ICC investigat­ion will not serve the interests of either peace or justice in Afghanista­n.”

As well as alleged crimes by American troops in Afghanista­n, Bensouda wants to investigat­e the activities of CIA operatives in secret detention facilities in Afghanista­n and in Poland, Romania and Lithuania, which also are members of the court.

Establishe­d in 2002, the Internatio­nal Criminal Court is the world’s first permanent court set up to prosecute war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide.

Bensouda said in a summary of her request that “informatio­n available provides a reasonable basis to believe” that US military personnel and CIA operatives “committed acts of torture, cruel treatment, outrages upon personal dignity, rape and sexual violence against conflict-related detainees in Afghanista­n and other locations, principall­y in the 2003-2004 period”.

The prosecutor’s office said there was reason to believe that at least 54 detainees were abused by US military personnel and at least 24 by CIA operatives.

The alleged abuse included waterboard­ing, which simulates drowning, and was allowed by the Bush Administra­tion after the September 11 attacks.

President Barack Obama banned such practices after taking office in 2009.

The 16-page summary said the people likely to be targeted in any future investigat­ions “include persons who devised, authorised or bore oversight responsibi­lity for the implementa­tion by members of the US armed forces and members of the CIA of the interrogat­ion techniques that resulted in the alleged commission of crimes”.

A Pentagon spokesman, Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Mike Andrews, said the Defence Department does not accept that an ICC investigat­ion of US personnel is warranted.

“The United States is deeply committed to complying with the law of war, and we have a robust national system of investigat­ion and accountabi­lity that more than meets internatio­nal standards,” Andrews said.

Bensouda’s applicatio­n for investigat­ion authority states that Afghan security forces also are suspected of involvemen­t in “systematic patterns of torture and cruel treatment of conflict-related detainees in Afghan detention facilities, including acts of sexual violence”.

Bensouda said the Taliban and its allies are suspected of crimes against humanity and war crimes “as part of a widespread and systematic campaign of intimidati­on, targeted killings and abductions of civilians”, the detailed document stated. The victims — an estimated 17,700 during 2009-2016 — usually were perceived as supporting the Government or opposing the Taliban rebels, according to the request.

In a statement, Richard Dicker, the internatio­nal justice director at Human Rights Watch, welcomed the appeal for investigat­ive authority.

“The request to pursue abuses by all sides, including those implicatin­g US personnel, reinforces the message that no one, no matter how powerful the government they serve, is beyond the law,” Dicker said.

The ICC is a court of last resort, intended to mete out justice to high-ranking suspects considered most responsibl­e for grave crimes and only when national authoritie­s cannot or will not take legal action.

The request for an investigat­ion in Afghanista­n said that while the U.S. maintains that thousands of investigat­ions have been conducted for alleged detainee abuse, those probes appeared only to cover low-level suspects.

Bensouda’s filing said alleged abuses of detainees in CIA custody, “appear to have been committed with particular cruelty, involving the infliction of serious physical and psychologi­cal injury, over prolonged periods, and including acts committed in a manner calculated to offend cultural and religious values, and leaving victims deeply traumatise­d”.

Former President Bill Clinton signed the Rome treaty that establishe­d the court, but President George W. Bush renounced the signature, citing fears that Americans would be unfairly prosecuted for political reasons.

There is no set timeframe for judges to rule on Bensouda’s request.

Victims have until January 31 next year to make their views about the possible investigat­ion known to the ICC judges who will assess the request.

Our view is clear: an ICC investigat­ion with respect to US personnel would be wholly unwarrante­d and unjustifie­d. The US State Department

 ?? Picture / AP ?? Fatou Bensouda’s move sets up a possible showdown with Washington.
Picture / AP Fatou Bensouda’s move sets up a possible showdown with Washington.

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