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From: "John Jay" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


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From: Branka Josilo-Perry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Marbles <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: ICTY - "Illegal Tribunal ! - Illegal Indictment !"
Date: Wed, Apr 25, 2001, 12:03 pm



The URL for this article is
http://emperors-clothes.com/docs/prog2.htm

Illegal Tribunal - Illegal Indictment
Statement of the International Progress Organization on the
Hague War Crimes Tribunal's indictment of Serbian Leaders
Dr. Hans Koechler, President [posted 23 April 2001]


[The following statement was written just after the 'War
Crimes Tribunal' brought 'indictments' against Slobodan
Miloshevich (Milosevic) and other Serbian government leaders
in 1999. The text was sent to us recently by a contributor
from Germany. It was published by the International Progress
Organization, an NGO (non-governmental organization) which
has worked in various associations with the United Nations
for almost 30 years. It makes excellent points, especially
about the sheer illegality of the "War Crimes Tribunal". We
post it for your information - Jared Israel.]


The International Progress Organization hereby presents the
following legal observations on today's "indictment" by the
"International Criminal Tribunal":

1. The "indictment" issued by the "Chief Prosecutor" of the
so-called "International Criminal Tribunal for the Former
Yugoslavia" is legally invalid because this "Tribunal" has
no jurisdiction whatsoever in the present or any other case.

2. The "Tribunal" derives its raison d'�tre exclusively from
Security Council resolution 827, adopted at the Council's
3217th meeting on 25 May 1993. In this resolution,
establishing the so-called "International Criminal
Tribunal," the Security Council states that it acts "under
Chapter VII of the Charter of the United Nations."

3. When adopting the above resolution, the Security Council
acted ultra vires. According to the provisions of the U.N.
Charter, the Council has no competence whatsoever in
judicial matters. The provisions of Chapter VII determine
the Council's competence in matters of international
security but not in matters of criminal justice or other
judicial matters. The sole authority in international
judicial matters rests with the International Court of
Justice.

4. The "determination," in the preamble of Security Council
resolution 827, paragraph four, that the "widespread and
flagrant violations of international humanitarian law" on
the territory of the former Yugoslavia "constitute a threat
to international peace and security" does not provide a
sound legal basis for the Security Council acting as a
surrogate judicial authority or establishing an
international court with jurisdiction in this or any other
case.

5. It is regrettable that the institution of the Security
Council, while being unable to stop the undeclared war waged
by NATO countries against Yugoslavia in violation of
international law, and while being prevented, because of the
veto power of countries conducting the present war, from
restoring international peace and security in Yugoslavia, is
now being used to take a so-called "judicial" action against
the legitimate Head of State and other high officials of the
country under attack.

6. Under the present circumstances, the move by the "Chief
Prosecutor" of the so-called "Tribunal," Ms. Louise Arbour,
can only be considered of political nature. This
interpretation is confirmed by today's statement of the
President of the United States who declared that the
"indictment" by the "Tribunal" can be seen as an endorsement
of NATO's campaign.

7. The purely political nature of the "indictment" and the
lack of any legal validity of this decision can further be
seen from the fact that the "President" of the so-called
"Tribunal," Ms. Gabrielle Kirk McDonald (United States of
America), the "Chief Prosecutor," Ms. Louise Arbour
(Canada), and the investigating "judge" in the present case,
Mr. David Anthony Hunt (Australia), are citizens either of
NATO member countries directly responsible for the
undeclared war against Yugoslavia or of a country fully
endorsing the NATO war. If the "Tribunal" would have taken
general legal standards of impartiality seriously, it would
have been obliged to determine that there is a conflict of
interest for "judges" from countries waging an undeclared
war against Yugoslavia to sit on such a panel initiating
"judicial" action against the Head of State of the country
under attack.

8. The political nature of the "indictment" was further made
obvious by the "Chief Prosecutor's" press statement earlier
today in which she expressed her view that the "indicted"
Head of State cannot be considered a partner of any
negotiations about a peaceful settlement of the conflict.
Such a statement makes a mockery of whatever legal standards
the so-called "Tribunal" claims to adhere to. By her
statement, the "Chief Prosecutor" has tried to act as a
surrogate politician and to influence political events in
the interest of those NATO countries presently waging war
against Yugoslavia.

9. When, in violation of the United Nations Charter, a
self-appointed group of states claiming to act on behalf of
international peace and human rights, wages an all-out war
against a sovereign member state of the United Nations and
deliberately destroys the civilian infrastructure of that
country with impunity, the present move by functionaries of
the so-called "Tribunal" to declare the legitimate leaders
of the country under attack as criminals, can only be seen
as an act to hamper the international community's efforts to
settle the conflict in Yugoslavia by peaceful means. This
move undermines all efforts to settle the conflict within
the framework of the United Nations and only prolongs the
suffering of the people of Yugoslavia including the Kosovar
Albanians.

10. It would be fitting that the so-called "Tribunal"- if it
wants, at least, to prove its credibility in terms of basic
moral standards, in spite of its legal incompetence as
explained above - should also turn its attention to the
practices applied by the NATO coalition in its undeclared
war against the people of Yugoslavia (including the province
of Kosovo).

The provisions of Article 3 of the so-called "Tribunal"
identify, among others, the following practices as
"violations of the laws or customs of war":


(a) "employment of poisonous weapons or other weapons
calculated to cause unnecessary suffering;" (c) "attack, or
bombardment, by whatever means, of undefended towns,
villages, dwellings, or buildings;" etc.


NATO's use of depleted uranium missiles and of cluster
bombs, NATO's attacks on villages, civilian buses etc. fall
clearly within the definition of "violations of the laws or
customs of war" as given in the Statute of that very
"Tribunal" not to speak of the numerous grave breaches of
the Geneva Conventions of 1949 committed by the NATO
alliance, for which the "Tribunal" also claims to be
competent according to Article 2 of its Statute. As long as
the "Tribunal" does not take action against those NATO
politicians and military officers responsible for these
grave breaches of international humanitarian law, the
"Tribunal" can only be considered as one more futile
exercise in the political use of judicial procedures within
the framework of a "policy of double standards" which seems
to be the essence of power politics in NATO's "New World
Order."

11. A dangerous precedent is being created by this new use
of judicial procedures for the purposes of power politics.
The separation of powers, one of the basic requirements of
the rule of law, is being completely neglected when a purely
political organ of the United Nations, the Security Council,
arrogates to itself judicial powers by establishing an
"International Criminal Tribunal," and when the
functionaries of this "Tribunal" act as surrogate
politicians effectively hindering a political settlement of
an international armed conflict. The sole responsibility for
whichever judicial matters in international affairs rests
with the International Court of Justice. It is this
institution alone that decides on the legal questions
related to aggression by one state or a coalition of states
against another state, and that decides on issues of
international humanitarian law.

12. Because of the regrettable paralysis of the Security
Council, the member states of the United Nations as
represented in the General Assembly should take immediate
action on the basis of the "Uniting for Peace Resolution"
(res. 377 A [V] of the General Assembly) in order to prevent
a further dangerous deterioration of the situation in
Yugoslavia. When otherwise invalid legal procedures are
being used to prevent a just political settlement and when
the ongoing large-scale bombing of Yugoslavia causes an
ecological disaster rendering large areas uninhabitable,
urgent action is required by the international community. If
this new form of self-righteous power politics is not being
checked, similar action may be taken in the time to come
against other sovereign countries and their leadership. In
this case, the "rule of force" will replace whatever remains
of the "rule of law" in international relations.
International anarchy will be the inevitable result. All
political leaders and people of good will should unite
against this most serious threat to the international order
since the end of the Cold War.

Dr. Hans Koechler, President

Reprinted from the IPO Website at
http://i-p-o.org/yu-tribunal.htm




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