An Analysis of International War Crimes (hypothetical)
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STATEMENT OF JURISDICTION
The Hague court has jurisdiction to review the case against three Katonia nationals and six Ridgeland nationals under Rome Statute, art. 5(b), 11. The Hague court jurisdiction was based under the Rome Statute, Universal Jurisdiction in International law and the Vienna Convention of the Law of Treaties, May. 22,1969, art. 53.
QUESTIONS PRESENTED
Whether the victims of Vineland have a role in initiating an investigation or prosecution against the nationals from Katonia and Ridgeland?
Whether the ICC is authorized to award reparations to the victims of Vineland due to the harm caused by the nationals of Katonia and Ridgeland?
STATEMENTS OF FACTS
This is a case involving a continuous fighting in a place called Vineland, between central government and three ethnic groups from the southern and northern regions. The parties to the conflict signed a peace agreement in order to form a democratic, coalition government whose powered would be shared by all the groups in the country. In January 2002, the Security Counsel authorized UNVINE to deploy 500 military personnel and 600 civilian personnel to Vineland to verify cessation of hostilities, to set up a security zone for civilians and refugees, and to make preparations for the forthcoming elections in the various regions. The Secretary General invited member states to contribute forces, cooperating with equipment for UNVINE and civilian personnel in order to carry out the mandate. The member states of Katonia and Ridgeland committed and deployed soldiers and paratroopers to the UNVINE mission in Vineland.
In June 2002, an insurgent group from the northern region named ANVA broke away from the coalition government due to dissatisfaction over the number of seats in the new government and due to its oil revenue shares from oil deposits in the northern region.
The UN was working on a renewal of its peacekeeping in Bosnialand and Katonia representative warned the Security Council that it would not participate in this or other UN peacekeeping missions unless the Council granted it soldiers immunity from prosecution by the ICC.
The statute of the ICC entered into force between the States Parties to the Statute on July 1, 2002 and empowered the Court to prosecute and punish persons who committed genocide, war crimes or crimes against humanity in the territory of the States Parties where the competent national courts were either unwilling or unavailable to exercise their jurisdiction. Many States became Parties to the statute, including the state of Vineland, and they have accepted jurisdiction of the Court in accordance with the Statute and in particular the principle of complimentarity.
On the 10th of July of 2002, insurgents attacked UNVINE, killing 10 Katonia soldiers and 15 Ridgeland paratroopers. Katonia and Ridgeland decided to send additional paratroopers to assist their troops, and launched in retaliation, a ten-day aerial bombing of the general area of the attacks. Katonia and Ridgeland’s paratroopers cordoned off the surrounding areas and conducted house-to-house raids, detaining approximately 50 men and 20 boys. These detainees were taken to a detention compound where they were observed, in order to determine if they were insurgents among them. Four men were tortured in an isolated area, without civilian witnesses. One of them died, however, the cause of the death was determined to be a heart attack. Several training camps from ANVA were destroyed and many insurgents killed. Thousands of acres of farmland were ruined, as well as large quantities of crops and livestock were destroyed. After Katonia and Ridgeland left the area, many families complained that the paratroopers while conducting the house-to-house searches had stolen personal property.
On July 12, 2002, the Security Counsel adopted resolution 1234(2002), which gives a twelve-month exemption from prosecution by the ICC to Vineland peacekeepers taking part in the UN peacekeeping operations. Part of the resolution reads as follows:
“Requests consistent with the provisions of article 16 of the Rome Statute that the ICC, if a case arises involving current or former officials or personnel from a contributing State not a party to the Rome Statute over acts or omissions relating to a United Nations established or authorized operation, shall for a twelve month period starting July 1, 2002, not commence or proceed with investigation or prosecution of any such case, unless the Security Council decide otherwise.”
“Expresses the intention to renew the request in paragraph 1 under the same conditions each 1 July for further