AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
PRESS RELEASE


AI Index: AFR 59/008/2004 (Public) News Service No: 289 16 November 2004

Uganda: Government cannot prevent the International Criminal Court from
investigating crimes

Amnesty International is concerned about reported statements by government
officials suggesting that crimes against humanity and war crimes committed
in Northern Uganda would be addressed in traditional reconciliation
procedures, rather than in fair trials before independent and impartial
courts in accordance with international law and standards.

"Uganda cannot 'withdraw' its referral, in January 2004, to the Prosecutor
of the International Criminal Court (ICC) of the situation in the northern
part of the country," the organization declared today.

Yesterday, 15 November 2004, the New Vision newspaper, which is believed to
be close to the government, reported that President Museveni stated that
leaders of the Lord�s Resistance Army (LRA), which has been engaged in an
internal armed conflict with the government for more than two decades, could
cease fighting and "engage in internal reconciliation mechanisms put in
place by the Acholi community such as mataput or blood settlement". He added
that if this were to occur, "[t]he state could withdraw its case [in the
ICC]". Similar statements have been made by Information Minister and
government spokesperson, Nsaba Buturo, on the same day.

Uganda referred the situation in the northern part of the county to the ICC
Prosecutor in December 2003. The referral was made public on 29 January 2004
pursuant to Article 14 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal
Court (Rome Statute), which permits state parties to that treaty to "refer
to the Prosecutor a situation in which one or more crimes within the
jurisdiction of the Court appear to have been committed". On 29 July 2004,
the ICC Prosecutor announced that he had opened an investigation into crimes
against humanity and war crimes committed in that region since 1 July 2002.

The reported statement by President Museveni that he intended that members
of the LRA, which include some of those most responsible for crimes against
humanity and war crimes, participate in traditional reconciliation
procedures instead of facing investigation and possible prosecution in
Ugandan courts further confirms that Uganda is neither able nor willing
genuinely to investigate and prosecute such crimes, whether committed by LRA
members or by members of government forces.

"The ICC Prosecutor should today make clear publicly that he intends to
continue to investigate vigorously the crimes against humanity and war
crimes committed by all sides in northern Uganda. Yielding to pressure from
the state that referred the situation to stop the investigation would
neither be in the interests of justice nor in the long-term interests of
peace and reconciliation," urged Erwin Van Der Borght, Deputy Director of
the Africa Programme at Amnesty International.


Background There is not a scrap of evidence in the drafting history or in commentaries by leading international law experts on the Rome Statute suggesting that once a state party has referred a situation that it can "withdraw" the referral. As soon as the situation has been referred, the ICC has jurisdiction and the state cannot "withdraw" its referral. Under Article 86 of the Rome Statute it then has the absolute duty to "cooperate fully with the Court in its investigation and prosecution of crimes within the jurisdiction of the Court".

For nearly two decades, with complete impunity, members of the LRA have
committed arbitrary killings, maimings, abductions, forced recruitment and
use of children as soldiers and, in particular, using them as sex slaves.
Members of government forces have been responsible for forcing children
returning from the LRA, voluntarily or as a consequence of military action,
to join government armed forces to the fight against the LRA, as well as the
massive forcible displacement of civilians and other crimes against humanity
and war crimes. Most of these crimes committed are covered by a national
amnesty law that prevents prosecutions in Ugandan courts.

Traditional reconciliation measures do not involve judicial determinations
of innocence or guilt, effectively ensure that the full truth about crimes
will be known or provide victims or their families with full reparations. In
the face of the continuing failure of Uganda to investigate and prosecute
these crimes, the ICC may exercise its jurisdiction under Article 17 of the
Rome Statute over all crimes against humanity and war crimes committed in
the northern part of the country, regardless whether they were committed by
members of the LRA or of government forces.

The reported statement of President Museveni recalls his previous effort in
July 2004 to prevent any investigation by the ICC Prosecutor of crimes
against humanity and war crimes reportedly being committed by members of
Ugandan armed forces in the Ituri region of the Democratic Republic of the
Congo (DRC). On that occasion, he wrote to the United Nations
Secretary-General suggesting that the DRC should "suspend the activities of
the international criminal court until the peace process in Ituri and DRC in
general is irreversible."


Public Document **************************************** For more information please call Amnesty International's press office in London, UK, on +44 20 7413 5566 Amnesty International, 1 Easton St., London WC1X 0DW. web: http://www.amnesty.org

For latest human rights news view http://news.amnesty.org

Ochan Otim
NB: I hope you will find time to read and sign a petition to stop the Northern Uganda carnage at: http://www.petitiononline.com/savacoli/petition.html



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