http://globalnation.inquirer.net/news/breakingnews/view/20100615-275714/Crime-of-aggression-defined
 
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http://www.vesti-online.com/Vesti/Svet/60901/Usaglasena-definicija-zlocina-agresije
Usaglašena definicija "zločina agresije"
Komentara 1 
veličina teksta:+-
Države potpisnice statuta Međunarodnog krivičnog tribunala saglasile su se oko 
definicije "zločina agresije", koji je već dugo sporno pitanje spora u 
međunarodnom pravu.
Posle gotovo decenije rasprava, dogovoreno je da se dopuni Rimski statut, kojim 
je taj tribunal ustanovljen, odredbom o tome šta predstavlja "zločin agresije".

Odredbom se zločin agresije definiše kao "planiranje, priprema, pocetak i 
izvršenje - od strane osobe u poziciji da efikasno vrši kontrolu ili da 
usmerava političke ili vojne akcije države - akta agresije koji, po svom 
karakteru, težini i obimu, predstavlja otvoreno kršenje Povelje UN.

Kako je navedeno na sajtu UN, u rezoluciji usvojenoj na kraju konferencije u 
prestonici Ugande Kampali, blokade luka i obale, kao i invazija ili napada 
trupa jedne države na teritoriju druge, smatraju se, po statutu, aktom agresije.

Postignuta je saglasnost da Međunarodni krivični tribunal ima nadležnost nad 
zločinima agresije, ali samo nad onima počinjenim godinu dana pošto 30 prvih 
država bude ratifikovalo taj amandman.

Do toga ne može doći pre 2017. godine, kada će se države članice Rimskog 
statuta ponovo sastati da bi razmotrile amandman.

Usvojeno je, takođe, da tužioci Međunarodnog krivičnog tribunala, ako budu 
želeli da sprovedu istragu o mogućim slučajevima, to iznesu pred Savet 
bezbednosti UN.

Tek pošto Savet bezbednosti odluči da je počinjen akt agresije, tužilac može da 
nastavi istragu.

Generalni sekretar UN Ban Ki-mun pozdravio je"istorijski sporazum" o definiciji 
agresije.

"Taj kompromisni tekst predstavlja značajan korak napred u borbi protiv 
nekažnjivosti I ka dobu odgovornosti", navodi se u saopštenju Ban Ki-muna. 
Crime of aggression defined

INQUIRER.net
First Posted 11:29:00 06/15/2010 


MANILA, Philippines—After nearly one decade of discussion, member states of the 
International Criminal Court (ICC) have agreed on what constitutes the crime of 
aggression, a long-running source of contention in international law.
Nations agreed to amend the Rome Statute, which set up the Court, to define the 
crime of aggression as “the planning, preparation, initiation, or execution, by 
a person in a position effectively to exercise control over or to direct the 
political or military action of a state, of an act of aggression which, by its 
character, gravity and scale, constitutes a manifest violation of the Charter 
of the United Nations.”
Under the resolution adopted at the end of the two-week-long ICC review 
conference in Kampala, Uganda, on Friday, blockades of ports or coasts of a 
state by armed forces of another state, as well as an invasion or attack by 
troops of one state on the territory of another, are considered as acts of 
aggression under the statute.
Nations agreed that the ICC can exercise jurisdiction over crimes of 
aggression, but only over those committed one year after 30 states parties have 
ratified the newly-made amendment.
This is will not happen until at least 2017, when states meet against to review 
the amendment, according to the new resolution adopted in the Ugandan capital.
It also noted that if the ICC Prosecutor wishes to move forward with an 
investigation of possible cases, he or she will take the case to the Security 
Council. Once that body has determined that an act of aggression has taken 
place, the Prosecutor will move forward with a probe.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, in a statement issued by his spokesperson, 
welcomed what he described as “the historic agreement” on the definition of 
aggression.
“The compromise text is a significant step forward in the fight against 
impunity and towards an age of accountability,” the statement noted.
The Rome Statute, adopted in 1998, included the crime of aggression—along with 
genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes—as the four categories of 
crimes over which it has jurisdiction. But it said the ICC could not exercise 
its rights in that area until a definition had been agreed upon.
So far 111 countries have become parties to the Statute, while 37 others have 
signed but not yet ratified it. But some of the world’s largest and most 
powerful countries, including China, India, Russia, and the United States, have 
not joined.
At the start of the Kampala conference, Mr. Ban underlined that a new “age of 
accountability” is replacing the “old era of impunity.”
The ICC, he said, is now “permanent, increasingly powerful, casting a long 
shadow. There is no going back.”
In this new age, those committing the worst of human crimes—be they 
rank-and-file soldiers or top political leaders—“will be held responsible,” Mr. 
Ban emphasized.
Former Serbian president Slobodan Miloševic and former Liberian leader Charles 
Taylor are among those who have already been called to justice. “Not long ago,” 
he said, “this would have been unimaginable.”
But for the ICC to have the reach it needs, it must have universal support. 
“Only then will perpetrators have no place to hide,” the secretary general 
said.From UN News




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