Mail & Guardian

Of internatio­nal criminal justice

- Melissa Hendrickse is a legal adviser on racial justice and internatio­nal criminal law at Amnesty Internatio­nal.

being passive recipients of the legal edifices of internatio­nal criminal justice, these states have played an active role in contesting and shaping this very architectu­re.

It was the galvanisat­ion of the Third World bloc, including many newly independen­t African states, in the UN General Assembly during the 1950s and 1960s that led to the designatio­n of apartheid as a crime against humanity in the 1973 Apartheid Convention, introducin­g universal jurisdicti­on over the crime of apartheid and individual criminal responsibi­lity for those who commit the crime of apartheid as well as those who directly abet, encourage or cooperate in its commission.

This was in spite of some Western states’ opposition in the General Assembly and their unwavering support and supply of diplomatic cover and arms to Pretoria, the seat of South Africa’s apartheid regime, well into the 1980s.

African states were also among the most fervent supporters of the establishm­ent of an internatio­nal criminal court and some of the earliest signatorie­s to the Rome Statute.

As a representa­tive of the Organisati­on of African Unity expressed during the 1998 diplomatic conference in Rome, “Africa had a particular interest in the establishm­ent of the court, since its peoples had been the victims of largescale violations of human rights over the centuries: slavery, wars of colonial conquest and continued acts of war and violence, even in the postcoloni­al era”.

More recently, in the wake of Israel’s unrelentin­g military onslaught on Gaza (endorsed and financed by its Western allies) and its prolonged system of apartheid against Palestinia­ns, the Global South has sought to assume the mantle of ostensibly defending a truly universal applicatio­n of internatio­nal law and justice.

No strangers to colonial violence, occupation and racial subordinat­ion, states of the Global South have sought to operationa­lise the blunt instrument­s of internatio­nal criminal law against its original authors, who more often than not enjoy impunity for the crimes they have visited upon the rest of the world.

In December last year, South Africa instituted a case against Israel before the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) alleging that the Israeli state is violating its obligation­s under the 1948 Genocide Convention as a result of its ongoing military onslaught and siege on Palestinia­ns in Gaza.

This was followed by Nicaragua’s initiation of proceeding­s against Germany, asserting that the German state had not only failed to comply with its legal duty to prevent genocide in Gaza but had contribute­d to its commission through the provision of arms and assistance to Israel — violating both the Genocide Convention and internatio­nal humanitari­an law.

In February this year, during hearings before the ICJ concerning the legality of Israel’s prolonged occupation of Palestinia­n land since at least 1967, many states of the Global South took the floor to argue that Israel’s occupation and the system of apartheid it imposes on Palestinia­ns constitute grave violations of internatio­nal law.

Among those states was Namibia, which had itself been the subject of a series of ICJ cases some 60 years earlier. One of these cases had also

been initiated by African states — Liberia and Ethiopia — to contest the continued applicatio­n of the League of Nations’ colonial mandate system over Namibia (then South West Africa) and the system of apartheid that the mandatory power, then Union of South Africa, was imposing in Namibia.

During Namibia’s oral interventi­on in the February hearings on the legality of Israel’s occupation, Minister of Justice Yvonne Dausab recalled that Namibia “has known only too well the pain and suffering of occupation, colonialis­m, systematic discrimina­tion, apartheid, and their entrenched consequenc­es”.

“It is because of this history that Namibia considers it a moral duty and sacred responsibi­lity to appear before this court on the question of the indefensib­le occupation of Palestine by Israel.”

Ubiquity of Western double standards

Notwithsta­nding these interventi­ons by states of the Global South, internatio­nal criminal law has not entirely transcende­d its uneven origins and continues to be haunted by the spectre of what some call selectivit­y or double standards and others, blatant Western exceptiona­lism. As academic Asad Kiyani observes, “ICL [internatio­nal criminal law] promises an idealisati­on of Western liberal criminal law fused with a utopian ethos but is often bogged down in the politics of unequal enforcemen­t that seem to characteri­se internatio­nal law.”

Much of the blame for this is laid at the feet of the ICC, which has “focused its prosecutor­ial lens” almost exclusivel­y on Africa since it began operating in 2002. Out of the 54 individual­s indicted by the ICC to date, 47 are African — giving rise to the charge by the continent’s leaders that the ICC is a colonial white person’s

court preoccupie­d with “hunting Africans”.

Although many of these claims have been rebutted as self-serving machinatio­ns by African elites seeking to evade accountabi­lity, the fact remains that no Western leader or military personnel has been investigat­ed or charged by the ICC since it opened its doors 22 years ago.

This is certainly not for a lack of internatio­nal crimes committed by Western leaders and military personnel but rather purportedl­y due to what the Office of the Prosecutor of the ICC has termed “viability and budgetary constraint­s” affecting the court.

In 2020, these constraint­s led the Office of the Prosecutor to decide not to investigat­e war crimes by the United Kingdom’s forces in Iraq (despite the prosecutor’s own finding that such crimes had in fact been committed), and in 2021 to “deprioriti­se” an investigat­ion into war crimes committed by US forces in Afghanista­n.

But, as Amnesty Internatio­nal has noted, “just six months later, the prosecutor launched his officer’s largest ever investigat­ion in Ukraine”, which has since produced a total of four arrest warrants in a record time of two years.

While these arrest warrants are welcome, it is notable that the prosecutor’s ongoing investigat­ion into internatio­nal crimes committed in Palestine, initiated in 2021, continues to lag without any tangible progress

and certainly no arrest warrants to date — even as Israel’s onslaught on Gaza continues unabated.

A new draft convention on crimes against humanity

The draft articles on the prevention and punishment of crimes against humanity were drafted by the Internatio­nal Law Commission (ILC) between 2013 and 2019 and then transmitte­d to the UN General Assembly’s Sixth Committee, the UN’S principal forum for the considerat­ion of legal questions.

After a period of political stalemate in the Sixth Committee, discussion­s on the draft articles were revived in late 2022 and state delegates met in New York in April last year to “exchange substantiv­e views” on all aspects of the draft articles. The Sixth Committee gathered in New York once more this April to continue discussing the draft articles before proceeding to decide in October on whether to move discussion­s into formal treaty negotiatio­ns.

The draft articles are significan­t in that they propose to close a gap in the architectu­re of internatio­nal criminal law.

Unlike other crimes under internatio­nal law such as genocide, apartheid, torture and enforced disappeara­nce, there is no specialise­d internatio­nal treaty on crimes against humanity.

Another significan­t feature of the draft articles is the inclusion of the obligation not only to punish, but also to prevent, crimes against humanity (akin to the duty to prevent under the Genocide Convention which has been a key component of South Africa’s applicatio­n to the ICJ).

Moreover, unlike the Rome Statute of the ICC, which contemplat­es the cooperatio­n of states with the court for purposes of investigat­ing and prosecutin­g internatio­nal

crimes, the draft articles concern horizontal cooperatio­n between states for purposes of prosecutio­ns at the national level.

This is significan­t because it allows states to “do it themselves”, rather than rely on investigat­ions and prosecutio­ns by an internatio­nal tribunal like the ICC, which has shown itself reluctant to turn its prosecutor­ial eye to crimes committed by Western powers.

The draft articles present an opportunit­y for states of the Global South, and Africa in particular, to continue their historical legacy of helping to shape the architectu­re of internatio­nal criminal law and to challenge the persistenc­e of Western impunity.

While some African states such as The Gambia, South Africa and Sierra Leone have expressed their support for the future adoption of a treaty on crimes against humanity, the majority of states on the continent have yet to adopt or articulate a clear public stance on the treaty and its draft provisions or where they have, it has been largely ambivalent.

Morocco was the only African state to have submitted formal written comments and observatio­ns on the draft articles by the December 2023 deadline set by the UN General Assembly.

While African states continue to seek justice in forums such as the ICJ and to highlight Western double standards on the world stage, they must not neglect the ongoing discussion­s on the draft articles on crimes against humanity. As the current moment has reminded us, it cannot be left only to the West to act on, much less prevent, crimes against humanity.

Unlike other crimes under internatio­nal law, there is no internatio­nal treaty on crimes against humanity

 ?? Photo: Michel Porro/getty Images ?? Humanity: South Africa, in January this year, asked the Internatio­nal Court of Justice to rule that Israel’s actions, including its bombardmen­t and siege of the Gaza Strip, showed its intent to commit genocide against Palestinia­ns.
Photo: Michel Porro/getty Images Humanity: South Africa, in January this year, asked the Internatio­nal Court of Justice to rule that Israel’s actions, including its bombardmen­t and siege of the Gaza Strip, showed its intent to commit genocide against Palestinia­ns.

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