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Judging genocide
Jun 14th 2001 | ARUSHA AND THE HAGUE
>From The Economist print edition


Getting justice for the worst war crimes may be impossible. But two United
Nations courts are trying, and a court in Belgium has just joined in

Get article background

"WE DON'T have a place to put our robes on. There's no place to hang up our
coats, or to lay down our briefcases! We have been mistreated by this
tribunal!" The speaker is a New York defence lawyer; the scene is the
courtroom at Arusha in Tanzania. The trials taking place here, before a
United Nations tribunal, are for the murder of hundreds of thousands of
people in neighbouring Rwanda in 1994. Much more time and energy, in this
dusty town at the foot of Mount Kilimanjaro, seems to be consumed with
complaints about how badly the court works.

On June 8th the International Crisis Group (ICG), a think-tank based in
Brussels, added its voice to the chorus. The Rwanda tribunal, after seven
years of life and with an annual budget of $90m, was hopelessly behind
schedule, "bogged down by incompetence and bureaucratic infighting". Five of
its nine judges had spent more than 18 months without hearing a substantial
case. The only case of consequence heard since July 1999, that of Ignace
Bagilishema, a former mayor in western Rwanda, ended on June 7th with his
acquittal. Mr Bagilishema, who had been accused of being instrumental in the
deaths of 45,000 Tutsis, was let off because of insufficient evidence.
Perhaps the verdict was correct; but with confidence in the court so low,
many are doubtful that justice has been done.

External difficulties are certainly distracting. Arusha is ill-equipped to
host 800 UN staff, from over 80 countries, and swarms of defence lawyers.
Power cuts are so frequent that the tribunal relies on its own generator. At
first, Arusha's small banks could not cope with the large dollar salaries of
UN staff. Although it has a conference centre, and is well-off compared with
the rest of Tanzania, the town has few hotels, hospitals or shops. Setting
up a tribunal there was a matter of improvisation or making do. The court's
website, for example, was knocked together at a dollar-an-hour Internet caf�
in a local shop.

In 1997, an internal UN report exposed "the most troubling deficiencies" in
the finance section of the tribunal. Although these have been rectified,
other problems remain. In May, seven prosecution lawyers were told by the
chief prosecutor that they had been sacked for "professional incompetence"
and for being "absorbed in their own narrow self-interest".

Yet in 1998 the court at Arusha managed to convict the Rwandan prime
minister, Jean Kambanda, the first head of government to be convicted of
genocide and crimes against humanity. This, says Kingsley Moghalu, a
tribunal spokesman, set a precedent for the indictments of Chile's General
Augusto Pinochet and Yugoslavia's ex-president, Slobodan Milosevic, by other
legal bodies. And suspects are still being arrested. At the end of April
Kenyan police arrested a former Anglican bishop, Samuel Musabyimana, who is
accused of genocide and of paying militiamen to kill Tutsis.

Mr Moghalu also points out that the Arusha tribunal has broken new ground in
international law. It has established that rape can legally be considered an
aspect of genocide. The first trial of a woman charged with genocide
(another minister from the old Rwandan government) is due to begin soon. The
court is trying to develop a concept of restitutive justice by assisting
victims of crimes, usually witnesses and their families.

Yet there is no denying that Arusha is slow; painfully so. Seven years ago,
at least 800,000 Tutsis and a relatively few Hutus were killed by
machete-wielding countrymen in less than two months; it may have been the
fastest-ever slaughter on such a scale. Just 63 people have been charged in
connection with those crimes. Of those, 45 have been caught; nine are on
trial, and 27 more are waiting to be tried. Only eight people have been
convicted, and these have not yet heard their sentences.



The speedier Belgians
With everything moving so slowly, the chances of convicting large numbers of
people at Arusha are slim. The ICG study concludes that "there is a serious
risk that those already in custody will be released because they have been
held for too long without trial." Meanwhile, the new Rwandan government
across the border views the proceedings with impatience. It keeps some
130,000 genocide suspects in its own prisons, and in 1998 executed for that
crime 22 people, all of them convicted in a sub-standard court.

On June 8th, however-the very day of the scathing ICG report-two Roman
Catholic nuns were found guilty in a different court, thousands of miles
away, of complicity in the Rwandan genocide. Their trial had lasted a mere
two months. Sister Maria and Sister Gertrude had handed over to their
killers up to 7,000 Tutsis who were sheltering in their convent; later, they
provided petrol so that militiamen could set fire to a barn in which about
500 Tutsis had taken refuge. They were sentenced to prison terms of 12 and
15 years by a jury sitting not in Africa, but in Belgium. It was the first
time that a jury of citizens from one country had judged defendants for war
crimes committed in another.

It may not, however, be the last. Belgium is a signatory to a law, passed
seven years ago, that allows its courts to hear cases of alleged atrocities
even if these occurred abroad. Its interest in the Rwandan case is that
Belgium was the former colonial power in Rwanda, and that the nuns had fled
there after the genocide. The verdict has heartened many; if more countries
do as Belgium has done, perpetrators of war crimes will know they cannot
hide from the long arm of justice.

Should the practice be expanded? Perhaps so, if Arusha is the alternative.
But the other UN war-crimes tribunal, sitting in The Hague in the
Netherlands, gives a different impression. It was created in 1993, a year
before Arusha, and, like that tribunal, was seen at first as an effort by
western countries to soothe their own consciences about the Balkans and
elsewhere, because they had not intervened to stop the atrocities. But it
has grown from similarly shaky beginnings to become respected.

The crimes examined there, though committed on a smaller scale than those in
Rwanda, are just as brutal-genocide, crimes against humanity, contravention
of the rules of war. Although the tribunal has not yet convicted anyone as
highly placed as a prime minister, 100 people have been publicly indicted.
(The chief prosecutor talks of doubling that number, and more may already
have been indicted in secret, meaning that their names have not been
revealed.) Thirty-eight people are awaiting trial and proceedings have
started against 41, although just four people are actually serving
sentences. So far, over $470m has been spent on this court from its
allocated UN budget alone.

The Hague tribunal clearly has advantages over its sister tribunal in
Tanzania. It has a slightly larger budget from the UN and a few more staff
(1,100 at The Hague, 800 at Arusha). But the European court gets roughly as
much money again in one-off bilateral payments or gifts in kind, such as
Britain's gift, a few years ago, of a newly-furnished courtroom. And the
Dutch government provides back-up, such as security, that the Tanzanian
government cannot provide in Arusha.

There are also more resources available to the prosecution at The Hague.
Arrests are made mostly by NATO troops in the Balkans. For Arusha, suspects
are picked up when police, mostly in French-speaking west African countries,
happen to spot them. Arusha depends mostly on witnesses for evidence, many
of them illiterate farmers who could not record their impressions at the
time. The Hague enjoys intelligence intercepts from western armies,
satellite photographs and other high-tech methods of collecting more durable
evidence.

Take, for example, the trial of Radislav Krstic, a one-legged Serb general
who is accused of killing 8,000 Bosnian Muslims in Srebrenica in July 1995.
The case against him rests partly on photographs of vehicles, buildings and
soldiers in and around Srebrenica which were taken from NATO planes and
satellites. The prosecution has presented over 900 exhibits, including those
photographs and evidence gathered by spies, as well as over 100 witnesses.
Arusha has nothing like this.

The best lawyers and judges are also more willing to work in Dutch comfort
than to go to down-at-heel Tanzania. Carla Del Ponte, a former Swiss
attorney-general with a reputation for hunting down members of the Russian
mafia, is the chief prosecutor for both tribunals. She spends three weeks in
every two months in Arusha, and finds it exhausting. "With Rwanda," she
admits, "it is difficult to find people who will stay down there."



Fishing for the biggest
Neither tribunal, however valiant its efforts, could provide full justice
for these horrific crimes. As with the Nazis who were tried at Nuremberg, it
is clear that many thousands more people were responsible for all sorts of
crimes than can actually be put on trial.

In Rwanda, the killers were mostly ordinary peasants who joined "the work",
a communal activity for Hutus, who were all expected to take part in the
killing. Decent Hutus who refused were often killed themselves. In the
Balkans, neighbours turned on each other with a vengeance. Since no more
than a tiny fraction of the guilty can be tried, is justice possible at all?

Ms Del Ponte's answer is simple: grab the people who are most responsible.
In Arusha, trials are due this year of a pastor, several politicians and
military officers. The Hague tribunal is also hunting down more senior
people. Biljana Plavsic, once president of the Serb part of Bosnia,
surrendered to the court in January, and will stand trial for genocide and
other crimes. Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic, two leading Serbs, have
been indicted on similar charges.

The trial of one man would crown the efforts of The Hague. Pasted to the
wall of Ms Del Ponte's office is a wild-west "Wanted" poster, offering $5m
for the arrest and delivery of Mr Milosevic, the main architect of the
Balkan wars. Mr Milosevic was publicly indicted during the Kosovo war in
1999, and Ms Del Ponte makes no secret of her eagerness to bring him to
trial. "I am waiting for Milosevic. I will go in court then, yes!" she
cries, banging the table with her fist.

She may have to wait. Mr Milosevic was arrested in Belgrade in April;
Yugoslavia's new president, Vojislav Kostunica, would prefer to have him
tried for war crimes at home first, although a new law would allow
co-operation with the court in The Hague. Staff at the war-crimes tribunal
are confident that outside pressure will eventually bear fruit. The news,
released on June 3rd, that the Belgrade authorities were examining bodies
from several mass graves in Serbia has increased speculation that Serbs are
being prepared for Mr Milosevic's journey to The Hague. "There is no
question [about] the transfer of Milosevic," says one official. "It is just
a question of when they will do it."



The justice of the victors?
Even if a tribunal is able to put the worst offenders on trial, some
question whether justice results. On one reckoning, there is no punishment
severe enough to fit crimes like genocide. UN courts cannot sentence anyone
to death, and UN-approved prisons are usually tolerable places. Not much of
a deterrent, therefore, for those committing crimes in the heat of a war.
This is a particular problem in Arusha, where prisoners live in greater
comfort than surviving victims of the genocide. The Arusha tribunal is now
trying to find African prisons (in Mali, Swaziland and elsewhere) which meet
international standards but are still seen as punishment.

A greater problem is that war-crimes tribunals are perceived as nothing more
than revenge on the victor's part. Serbs complain that The Hague tribunal is
a western plot, directed mainly at them. Those on trial in Arusha feel the
same.

In general, victors in war escape facing justice. The Nuremberg trials after
the second world war did not consider whether British or American bombing
raids against civilians were war crimes. Russia's soldiers are most unlikely
to face a war-crimes court over the murder and torture of Chechens. The
Hague tribunal did investigate NATO's bombing raids on Yugoslavia, but
concluded, rightly or wrongly, that there was no reason to prosecute.

Critics can therefore argue that war-crimes courts are doubly selective: not
only are very few people tried, but very few wars are considered for
judicial investigation. When justice is so selective and seems driven by
political interests, is it justice at all?

This question is being answered, in part, by the proliferation of different
tribunals where war crimes can be tried. More UN war-crimes tribunals are in
prospect, as is a permanent International Criminal Court. And there remains
the example of Belgium: wherever war criminals seek sanctuary, that country
can put them on trial. The limitations of Belgium, however, are seen in the
case of Mr Milosevic. Where the fish are very big, the tribunal judging them
needs international stature.

Recent violence in Burundi, Congo and East Timor has led to demands for
dedicated UN tribunals. Atrocities committed by the Khmers Rouges in
Cambodia in the 1970s may one day also be examined by a court, perhaps with
an international element, although legislation to establish one has stalled
in the Cambodian parliament. Members of the military junta in Myanmar are
said to worry that they may one day end up in court. Some even argue that
Henry Kissinger should be tried for human-rights abuses in Chile, Cambodia
and elsewhere during the cold war (so far, he has been called as a witness
only).

The most likely third UN tribunal will be one for Sierra Leone, in west
Africa. Over ten years, rebels have committed horrific cruelties against
civilians in the country. Tens of thousands of people are thought to have
been killed-though the slaughter is not technically considered a genocide,
since it has not been an effort to kill a whole ethnic group.

Whereas the tribunals for Rwanda and Yugoslavia were set up by the UN's
Security Council and are entirely international, the new one will be based
on an agreement between the UN and Sierra Leone's government made last
October. If money and support can be found ($22m is needed for the first
year), Sierra Leone's tribunal will mix local and foreign judges and an
international prosecutor. If the war allows, the tribunal will sit in
Freetown, the shattered capital. Cash may be the main problem. The Rwandan
and Yugoslav tribunals are mostly financed through mandatory fees levied on
all UN members, but the Sierra Leonean court will depend on donors.

Sceptics may ask what the use of a third court would be. The brutal fighters
in Sierra Leone's war will not be deterred by the threat of prison. The
court may interfere with peace efforts, and may drain away resources that
would be better spent on ordinary people. But those involved in both the
existing tribunals argue that courts provide something extremely valuable:
an historical record that atrocities did take place and that victims
suffered. Getting that fact established, they say, may help countries like
Sierra Leone begin reconciliation and rebuilding.

The other big development, the creation of a permanent International
Criminal Court, may answer the allegation that international justice is
always the victors' sort. In July 1998, a UN meeting in Rome adopted a
statute for the permanent court. So far, 139 countries have signed up to it.
Once 60 countries have ratified the necessary legislation (Croatia became
the 32nd country to do so, on May 21st), the court will come into existence,
possibly within two years.

The world criminal court is likely to be based on the two existing UN
tribunals, and will build from precedents and practices established there.
It will try only crimes committed after its creation. The stumbling block
remains the reluctant United States. President Bill Clinton signed up to the
Rome statute just before leaving office, but many suspect that American
involvement in the court is destructive. The United States demands, for
example, a guarantee that American soldiers will never be put on trial,
which even its closest allies reject as incompatible with the rule of law.

But, if the new permanent court is to build on the stumbling successes of
the two UN tribunals in Arusha and The Hague, it will need as much support
as possible from rich countries. If America continues to oppose it, Europe,
Canada, Australia and other backers will have to throw their full weight
behind it. The two existing tribunals have shown how much political will,
money, expertise and sweat is needed to make such courts work.


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