Rights Watch: U.S. Plans for Iraq Tribunals "A Mistake"
BBSNews - 2003-04-08 -- New York, April 7, 2003 -- Iraqis responsible for past crimes should
be prosecuted before an international tribunal, not the U.S.-sponsored,
Iraqi-led judicial process outlined at the Pentagon today, Human Rights
Watch said.
A tribunal composed of Iraqi jurists selected by the United States would
not have the capacity to adjudicate the staggering scope of crimes by
the Iraqi government, including genocide, crimes against humanity, and
war crimes.
Iraq's Revolutionary Courts, State Security Courts, and Special
Provisional Courts have been instruments of repression rather than
impartial judicial institutions, Human Rights Watch said. The Iraqi
state has also interfered with other civil and criminal courts.
Meanwhile, scholars, lawyers, and jurists in the Iraqi exile community
should not be expected to shoulder the burden of handling a high volume
of politically charged prosecutions, Human Rights Watch said.
"After decades of Ba'ath Party rule, the Iraqi judiciary has been deeply
compromised," said Richard Dicker, director of the International Justice
Program at Human Rights Watch. "The Iraqis should certainly be involved
in this process, but the country's justice system just doesn't have the
capacity to handle a series of highly complicated trials. The local
solution proposed by the U.S. government would be a mistake."
Dicker said the United States should support a tribunal composed of
international jurists, or a "mixed" tribunal composed of local and
international legal experts.
Human Rights Watch estimates that in the 1988 Anfal campaign, more than
100,000 Kurds, mostly men and boys, were trucked to remote sites and
executed. Since the late 1970s, as many as 290,000 people were
"disappeared" in Iraq. Between 1977 and 1987, some 4,500-5,000 Kurdish
villages were systematically destroyed and their inhabitants forced to
live in "resettlement camps."
Iraq's ethnic and religious composition may also complicate the
establishment of local tribunals. For example, a judicial panel composed
of victims of the Ba'ath regime, such as Kurds or Shi'ites, could not be
considered impartial.
Reforming the current courts and training judges for an Iraqi-led
tribunal would take considerable time, Dicker said.
"The U.S. government can't solve this problem by offering some technical
assistance to the Iraqi judicial system," said Dicker. "That system
needs to be rebuilt from the ground up."
To read more on the war in Iraq, please see:
http://www.hrw.org/campaigns/iraq/
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Michael Hess is the Editor of BBSNews in Charlotte, NC. Write to the editor here. Not all submissions are published. Or visit the completely new BBSNews Blog and Forum on our front page - Please Participate in BBSNews!
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