spiegel.de
<https://www.spiegel.de/international/world/former-chief-prosecutor-carla-de
l-ponte-i-keep-telling-myself-that-justice-will-prevail-a-21b02282-89d5-4e7b
-b32c-ab16bc1b778b#ref=rss>  


Former Chief Prosecutor Carla Del Ponte: "I Keep Telling Myself that Justice
Will Prevail"


Mathieu von Rohr, Maximilian Popp, DER SPIEGEL

9-12 minutes

  _____  

DER SPIEGEL: Ms. Del Ponte, in your book, the world of 2021 sounds a lot
like a jungle, in which the strongest prevail. Why is that?

Del Ponte: The world is still dependent on the will of the strongest
countries. It was only possible to establish an international criminal
justice system because the U.S. and Russia supported it. Unfortunately, this
political will has evaporated.

DER SPIEGEL: You managed to drag some of the worst war criminals of the 20th
century into court. What impression did these men make on you?

Del Ponte: Nothing special really. They're just normal people,
unfortunately. I would like to have seen them as monsters, but they aren't.
One thing they do share is a belief that the end justifies the means.

DER SPIEGEL: Former Serbian President Slobodan Milošević is one of the men
you prosecuted. When you met him, did anything about him surprise you?

Del Ponte: The only thing that surprised me was the way he questioned
witnesses during the trial. Many of them still saw the president in him and
were cowed. He even got some of them to withdraw their testimony.

DER SPIEGEL: He intimidated witnesses?

Del Ponte: Our judges were, of course, extremely accommodating with him.
"Mr. Milošević, how are you? Did you sleep well? Do you feel well enough to
answer some questions?" When I was in the courtroom, I had the thousands of
victims in my mind. Milošević defended himself, which gave him the
opportunity to hold his political speeches in court. After two years, we had
almost reached the end of the trial. I swore to myself: Starting on Monday,
I will say what has to be said. And then the news arrived that Milošević had
died in his cell.

DER SPIEGEL: Once the trials ended, did you feel like you understood these
people a bit better?

Del Ponte: We understand what led them to spread ethnic hatred. But these
culprits never expressed remorse or introspection. They never understood
that what they did was wrong, even though they were arrested and convicted.
They postured as heroes. That's why I was consistently in favor of long
sentences, so that they would have time to recognize their culpability.

DER SPIEGEL: Was it particularly meaningful for you, as a woman, to
prosecute these men?

Del Ponte: Not in The Hague. But it was different when I was a public
prosecutor in Ticino. I remember that we once arrested a mafioso and it was
up to me to question him at the police station. When a police officer pulled
a revolver out of the drawer, the mafioso winked at me and said:
"Dottoressa, if I had known about the weapon, you and I would already be on
our way to Naples as a couple."

DER SPIEGEL: You write in your book that you were criticized for focusing
more of your attention on the Serbian offenders.

Del Ponte: Of course, because the Serbs committed more crimes than the
Croatians or the Kosovars.

DER SPIEGEL: Is that true?

Del Ponte: it is true that the international community, NATO, had proof of
the crimes committed by the Serbs, and they provided that to us, which made
things move faster. But it is also true that the U.S. didn't want us to
scrutinize war crimes in Kosovo, for political reasons. We had a lot of
trouble investigating the KLA, the Kosovar militia, because the U.S. slowed
us down.

DER SPIEGEL: Did U.S. politicians tell you explicitly not to investigate the
Kosovars?

Del Ponte: No, because then I could have complained in public. But Madeleine
Albright, who was secretary of state at the time, told me over the phone:
Carla, slowly, slowly. Be careful with (former KLA leader Ramush) Haradinaj,
otherwise there will be unrest in Kosovo.

DER SPIEGEL: You were self-confident enough to pay little heed to what world
leaders expected of you.

Del Ponte: Of course. And they also knew that when they told me to do
something, I would do the opposite. And the statutes make it absolutely
clear: The chief prosecutor is independent.

DER SPIEGEL: You were consistently exposed to political pressure. In
Yugoslavia, you complained that you weren't allowed to investigate NATO. In
Rwanda, you weren't able to investigate the Tutsis.

Del Ponte: International justice can only work if it is backed by political
will. If that political will is lacking, there isn't much you can do.

DER SPIEGEL: How is that expressed?

Del Ponte: You never know exactly what the motivations are for hindering an
investigation, but they were there. An example: NATO was present in
Yugoslavia and could easily have arrested (Bosnian Serb leaders Radovan)
Karadžić and (Ratko) Mladić, but they didn't. And yet the Yugoslavia
Tribunal was ultimately successful anyway.

DER SPIEGEL: A lot of people thought at the time that an international
criminal justice system was emerging.

Del Ponte: Yes, that's what we thought - fantastic. The Yugoslavia Tribunal
was a success, Rwanda was as well, even though some suspects were still at
large. And then came the permanent criminal court, and we thought: We have
finally made it. There is an international jurisdiction, and it will have a
preventative effect. But within just a few years, it started going downhill.

DER SPIEGEL: Do you have an explanation for what happened?

Del Ponte: It mostly has to do with Russia and the U.S. It was primarily
thanks to these two countries that the international justice system emerged
in the first place. But as soon as these two countries lost interest in it,
particularly the U.S., it was a signal.

DER SPIEGEL: Is international justice always the justice of the powerful?

Del Ponte: At the moment, that is unfortunately the case. Founding the
International Criminal Court was a huge step. But that alone isn't enough.
You also need people who represent it with self-confidence.

DER SPIEGEL: A lot depends on who occupies the position of chief prosecutor?

Del Ponte: Of course. UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, who knew me from
Davos, realized that I never let up, that I keep digging. For that reason,
those in power ultimately had to listen to me. That was the case with
(former German Chancellor) Gerhard Schröder. It took awhile before I was
able to get a meeting with him, but then he became one of my most important
allies in the arrest of Milošević.

DER SPIEGEL: You were the target of several attacks and received numerous
threats. Were you afraid?

Del Ponte: Over time, I grew used to the danger and to life under police
protection.

DER SPIEGEL: As a public prosecutor in Switzerland, you worked closely
together with Giovanni Falcone, the legendary Italian mafia prosecutor who
was murdered in Sicily in 1992.

Del Ponte: Two years before that attack, I was with him in Palermo to
question a mafioso. Afterwards, Falcone invited me to go to the beach, but I
wanted to take a look around the city instead. That saved our lives, because
the mafia had planted a bomb at the place we had intended to visit.

DER SPIEGEL: In your life as a prosecutor, what was your principle
motivation?

Del Ponte: My focus was attaining justice for the victims. Victims' families
can only find closure when some form of justice is reestablished.

DER SPIEGEL: The lesson that many despots seem to have learned is that they
must only rule with a hard enough fist in order to remain in power.

Del Ponte: Which makes it all the more important that the chief prosecutor
in The Hague brings Syrian dictator Bashar Assad into court, for example. If
there was an international arrest warrant for Assad, he could no longer
leave his country. That was the case with Milošević. And there was, of
course, a UN investigative commission for Syria. If I was still chief
prosecutor in The Hague, I would immediately request access to the evidence
this commission collected against Assad. As chief prosecutor, you have to be
active. Otherwise, nothing happens.

DER SPIEGEL: You were part of that commission. One controversial issue that
you had to address was who had used chemical weapons in Syria.

Del Ponte: The commission didn't want it to become public that the rebels
had also used chemical weapons. But the proof was clear.

DER SPIEGEL: You took it public on your own. Was that a mistake?

Del Ponte: No. It was necessary. The commission was a sham. The goal was to
simulate action, but not to actually hold those who had committed crimes
accountable - whether it be Assad or the rebels.

DER SPIEGEL: Could the war in Syria have been prevented?

Del Ponte: Perhaps it couldn't have been prevented, but it could have been
contained. For that, though, the U.S. and the EU would have had get involved
diplomatically much earlier. When the situation in Ukraine escalated,
European diplomats traveled to Kiev immediately. Ultimately, a major
conflagration was warded off there. But nobody was sufficiently interested
in Syria.

DER SPIEGEL: Is the UN even still necessary?

Del Ponte: Absolutely. It just finally needs to be given the power that it
is granted in its charter. The Security Council is paralyzed. Just look at
the example of Israel and Palestine. The members of the Security Council
come together, and they talk, but they don't do anything. That is typical.

DER SPIEGEL: You and the UN are essentially polar opposites. The UN wants to
talk, but you want to act.

Del Ponte: That's why I never liked being there. My office was empty. There
wasn't even a single piece of paper on the desk. The problem is that every
country has the right to send officials to the UN. Fully 4,000 people work
at UN headquarters in New York. But there often isn't enough for them to do.

DER SPIEGEL: Assad is still the president of Syria. Other war criminals have
also gotten off scot free. Does that make you angry or resigned?

Del Ponte: Neither nor. I keep telling myself that at some point, justice
will prevail.

DER SPIEGEL: Where does your hope come from?

Del Ponte: My hope comes from the experience that I have gathered throughout
my life. My staff and I built up a lot. That is still there. And somebody
will arrive to take up the reins.

 

-- 
http:www.antic.org
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/00f401d7628e%245222cf10%24f6686d30%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to