HRW Iraq: Justice Needs International Role
BBSNews - 2003-07-16 -- HRW: Baghdad, July 16, 2003 -- The Judicial Commission
established by Iraq's Governing Council is a positive step,
but international jurists need to play a prominent role in
any courts to ensure their effectiveness and impartiality,
Human Rights Watch said today.
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| President George W. Bush addresses the United Nations General Assembly in New York City on the issues concerning Iraq Thursday, September 12, 2002. White House photo by Paul Morse. |
The court system is expected to try former members of the
Iraqi government and others accused of crimes against
humanity and genocide.
The Iraqi judiciary, weakened and compromised by decades of
Ba'ath party rule, lacks the capacity, experience, and
independence to provide fair trials for the abuses of the
past, Human Rights Watch said. Few judges in Iraq, including
those who fled into exile, have participated in trials of
the complexity that they would face when prosecuting
leadership figures for acts of genocide, crimes against
humanity, or war crimes.
Local courts will be needed to try many cases related to
past human rights crimes, Human Rights Watch said, but the
complexity of the trials of the most senior officials will
require a strong international role.
"Justice for the crimes of the past is indeed a top
priority," said Hania Mufti, Human Rights Watch's
representative in Iraq. "It is important and not too late to
bring the international community on board to help in the
process of justice and accountability in Iraq."
On Tuesday, the recently established Iraqi Governing Council
announced the establishment of a judicial commission that
will set up a special court system to investigate and
prosecute former members of the government of Saddam Hussein
and others who were involved in genocide, crimes against
humanity, and war crimes.
The urgency with which the Governing Council has addressed
the issue of justice contrasts sharply with the negligible
attention shown by the U.S.-led coalition forces to justice
in Iraq, Human Rights Watch said. The U.S.-led occupation
administration in Baghdad still has not announced a strategy
for justice in Iraq, even though major combat operations
ended more than two months ago.
Coalition forces have also provided almost no assistance
with the exhumation of the mass graves scattered all over
Iraq, losing crucial evidence of crimes against humanity and
genocide.
Bringing about accountability for the crimes of the past two
decades in Iraq will be a massive undertaking for the Iraqi
people, Human Rights Watch said. Among the crimes to be
investigated and prosecuted are the genocidal Anfal campaign
against the Iraqi Kurds, which resulted in the deaths of
some 100,000 civilians and the destruction of more than
4,000 villages; the use of chemical weapons against Iranian
troops and Kurdish civilians; the "disappearance" and
executions of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis; the large-
scale killings that followed the failed 1991 uprisings in
the north and south of Iraq; the destruction and repression
of the Marsh Arabs; and the forced expulsion of ethnic
minorities in Northern Iraq during the "Arabization"
campaign.
International assistance in the form of investigators,
prosecutors, and judges will be required to support the
efforts of the Iraqi people to bring about justice for the
crimes of the past, to assure the impartiality and
credibility of the process, and to guarantee that
international fair trial standards are adhered to.
Accountability for the past in Iraq could best be advanced
by the creation of an international or an Iraqi-
international commission of experts to assist with gathering
and preservation of evidence and recommendations of the most
appropriate court proceedings. Human Rights Watch has
recommended the creation of either an international tribunal
or an international-national tribunal for Iraq,
incorporating existing, uncompromised elements of the Iraqi
judiciary with international colleagues.
To read more on human rights issues in Iraq, please see:
http://www.hrw.org/mideast/iraq.php
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The preceding report was provided to BBSNews by the Human Rights Watch International (HRW).
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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