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PERSONAL, NON-COMMERCIAL USE ONLY
Asian
Network For The ICC
April , 2002
International
Criminal Court Established At
Landmark UN Treaty Event
Ten Countries Ratified the ICC Treaty, Bringing Total
Past 60 Required
(United Nations,
11 April 2002) - The NGO Coalition for the International Criminal
Court AND the Asian Network for the ICC (ANICC)lauded the overwhelming
support for the world's first permanent International Criminal Court (ICC), established at an historic UN treaty event
today. The simultaneous deposit of ten ratifications of the Rome Statute brought
the number of countries formally supporting the Court from 56 to 66, thereby pushing the treaty over the 60 ratifications
required to enter the treaty into force. As of 1 July 2002, the ICC will have
permanent jurisdiction over the most serious breaches of international humanitarian
and human rights law -- crimes against humanity, war crimes and genocide. The
ten countries to deposit their instruments of ratification in the ceremony
officiated by U.N. Under-Secretary-General for Legal Affairs Hans Correll were: Bosnia-Herzegovina,
Bulgaria, Cambodia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ireland, Jordan, Mongolia,
Niger, Romania and Slovakia.
William
Pace, Convenor of the NGO Coalition for the International
Criminal Court,
an umbrella organization of more than 1,000 civil society organizations
and independent legal experts from all regions of the world,
heralded the achievement of the 60th ratification a victory
in the international justice movement saying, "The establishment
of the ICC has been declared the most significant advance in
international law since the founding of the United Nations.
This Court is capable of ending an era of impunity and is a symbol of the triumph of
law over violence and brutality." He went on to say, "This
is a victory not only for the legal experts and the advocates
who have been committed to this process
for so many years, this is a victory for all those who have been victimized
by the commission of these unspeakable atrocities."
While the crimes
in the ICC Statute have for decades been defined under international
law, the lack of an enforcement mechanism led to the inability
to prevent the past century from becoming known as the
bloodiest in human history. Most of the perpetrators of these
crimes were never brought to justice.
The ICC will function
not only as a mechanism for ensuring just recourse under the
law, it will also serve as a powerful deterrent to the future
Pinochets, Pol Pots and Milosevics of the world. The Court is looked to by its proponents as a means of encouraging national judicial
systems to address these crimes, as the Court will intervene only in cases
in which a domestic legal system is either unwilling or unable to handle the case.
Pace explained
that the 60 ratifications required for the treaty to enter
into force were achieved decades earlier than almost anyone
predicted when the treaty was adopted in July 1998 in Rome. "Today's
momentous achievement can only be understood as a victory of
the new diplomacy model of developing international law," he said. "It
reflects one of the best examples of what can be achieved through
cooperation between
governments, international organizations and NGOs."
While the treaty
will enter into force and establish the jurisdiction of the
Court on 1 July 2002, it is not likely that the Court will
begin to hear cases for at least twelve months afterward. During
that time key developments in the creation of the Court will be addressed in the final
Preparatory Commission of the ICC in July and the first Assembly of States
Parties in September of this year. These meetings will finalize processes for the nomination and election of judges and a prosecutor
and formalize other critical administrative and procedural issues. The ICC
will be located in the Hague, the Netherlands.
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