-News for Wed. 10 April & Thur. 11
April 2002
World's First Permanent War Crimes Tribunal
Established
VOA
News 11
Apr 2002 14:57 UTC

The world's first
permanent war crimes tribunal has become a reality.
At a ceremony
Thursday at U.N. headquarters in New York, 10 nations presented their
ratifications, bringing the total number to 66 - 10 more than needed to bring a
1998 Rome treaty into force on July 1.
While many countries
and organizations consider the International Criminal Court a human rights
milestone, several nations have failed to ratify the treaty, including the
United States, China and Russia.
Although the United
States signed the treaty under former President Clinton, it was never ratified
by Congress. The Bush administration strongly opposes the concept of a
permanent international court, because of fears U.S. soldiers could be unfairly
prosecuted.
The court, known as
the ICC, will be based in The Hague and will try only those cases of war
crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity that countries cannot or will not
handle themselves. Its mandate will not be retroactive, and it will have
jurisdiction only over crimes committed after July 1 this
year.
The impetus to
establish the court came after the Bosnian war and the 1994 genocide in Rwanda.
The U.N. Security Council has set up temporary tribunals to try individuals for
atrocities committed in those cases, and this is the first permanent
international court.
Some information
for this report provided by Reuters.
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