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Is the International Criminal Court politically corrupt, or merely supine, over Iraq?

category international | anti-war / imperialism | opinion/analysis author Sunday January 22, 2006 14:17author by Peter Ravenscroft - Noneauthor email psraven at bigpond dot net dot auauthor address PO Box 108, Samford, 4520, Queensland, Australiaauthor phone 617 3289 4470 Report this post to the editors

Was the ICC born a fossil, or did it petrify under the stern gaze of Snoopy? An open letter to all the less-than-energetic people who work at the ICC.

"To whoever receives this
Public Information Office
International Criminal Court
The Hague.

I would be most obliged if you could see to it that this reaches all its addresees.

Thank you for your assistance.

Peter Ravenscroft


The President, Judges, Public Prosecutor and all staff of the ICC,
The Hague.


Ladies and Gentlemen,

This is an open letter that will be published as widely as possible on the Internet.

Shortly after the invasion of Iraq by the military of the United States of America, Britain, Australia and others, I asked as formally as I knew how, that your court, in the interests of saving lives there, investigate the actions of Mrs Elizabeth Windsor, the Queen of both Britain and Australia, of Mr Tony Blair, the Prime Minister of Great Britain and of Mr John Howard, the Prime Minister of Australia, and their officers, civil and military, who were involved in that invasion. I asked both by email and by letter.

Apart from acknowledgment from your Public Information Office, and another many months later from one of your officials saying you were waiting for a Public Prosecutor to be appointed to your court before I would be informed further, I have heard nothing.

Your court has apparently been supine while tens of thousands of people have died or been injured or rendered destitute. At one point, on your website the information was posted that you had all decided to do nothing about Iraq and instead would prosecute war criminals in Africa. As that conflict has claimed far more lives than the one in Iraq, it was clearly urgent that you do something about the wars in Africa. I am from Africa originally, well aware of the grave trouble there, and hence grateful that war criminals there are being given an uneasy time.

But that does not give you the faintest excuse for your inaction over Iraq. Your website announced that nothing was being done about Iraq because the United States of America had not signed the Rome Statute. That is absolutely no excuse for your court's dereliction of duty. Both Britain and Australia did sign the Rome Statute, and on that basis, if the invasion of Iraq by the US and those two countries was illegal, you are required to proceed. If that invasion was illegal, serial murder has been committed, inter alia. You have no right to ignore that and still call yourself an impartial court of justice, or expect the world's people to regard you as one.

The Secretary General of the United Nations some time back stated, presumably on sound legal advice, that that invasion was illegal. Why do you still do nothing? You appear to have failed us. If that is not so, please explain.

If the Secretary General was wrong, and you have sound contrary legal advice, I think you are obliged to disclose it to the people of the world. If you do not have such advice, you are definitely in breach of your duty and of the world's expectations f you have still done nothing about Iraq. If you have done anything meaningful, will you please inform the world public what it is? It is impossible, in the present circumstance, for the ordinary folk of the world to avoid the conclusion that you are either afraid of the covert forces of the major powers, or in one or other of their copious pockets. You all draw very comfortable salaries, paid in the end by the ordinary people of a world that is not rich. We expect that well-clad and well-fed people in expensive skyscrapers, who are living well on public money, will earn their keep.

By your inaction as a group, you have degraded the concept of international justice. If there is any, it should be applied equally to one and all, no matter what fancy regalia miscreants may wear. You have not been asked to pursue the main instigator of the invasion of Iraq, as Mr George Bush of Texas is by statute, beyond your reach. You have merely been asked to investigate the heads of state of countries that have signed the Rome Statute and participated in this murderous invasion. If our heads of state have committed war crimes, we have the right to expect that those individuals will be investigated and be brought to trial.

Your terms of operation require that the local authorities first decline to prosecute, before you will act. In the case of Australia, where I am a citizen, I have written to the Governor-General and asked him to do so. One of his officials wrote back refusing to consider the issue. I wrote similarly to the Chief Justice of the High Court of Australia, with the same result. I can send you their letters if it will help get your court moving. I also wrote to the Commissioner of the Australian Federal Police, but received no written reply. However, in the course of trying to assist a lady from Singapore who was visiting and through no fault of her own became destitute, an entirely separate matter, an senior officer of the Federal Police phoned me after cancelling the assistance under way from their officers in Sydney. His grounds that I had previously written to them re the matter here discussed. Over a minor spelling error in the lady's name, they refused to continue. Fortunately the NSW Police stepped in and were most helpful, but I did then ask the Canberra federal policeman for a written reply to my earlier request. None has been forthcoming. I think that all adds up to a refusal to investigate the matter of the possibility of war crimes having been committed by our two heads of state, the local authorities.

The rules changed when Australia and Britain signed the Rome Statute. I have asked for the umpire's decision, but the umpire appears to have gone deaf.


So, will you please now do something real, or at least tender a coherent explanation for your group inaction or at very least, for your failure to communicate if you have in fact done anything real?

Along with many others on this planet, I have the honour to be in no way yours.

Good Day.

Peter Ravenscroft.

Closeburn, Queensland, Australia. 7 January, 2006"


To illustrate the background situation, this appeared on the Internet, courtesy of Google's cache and a search under "ICC, Iraq":

'Since his appointment as prosecutor in April last year Ocampo has received around 500 requests from 66 countries, but has asked for a full inquiry in only one case relating to the Democratic Republic of Congo."

It was at: http://66.102.7.104/search?q=cache:ew10swYBH68J:www.ipsnews.net/interna.asp%3Fidnews%3D22018+ICC+Iraq&hl=en

author by Mikepublication date Sun Jan 22, 2006 14:41author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Courts do no like appearing to be idiots. It is all well and good when some pseudocourt tries in absentia people it has no power over. Such symbolic courts aren't making a claim that they are for real. But the ICC does claim to be a real court with the power not only to utter sentences but to have SOME chance these will not be treated with contempt.

For the ICC to order the appearance before it of defendents where there is ZERO chance that their respective countries would turn them over to it would be for the ICC to relegate itself to becoming a symbolic court instead of a real one. You seem to think it makes some kind of difference whether that country has signed on to the Rome accords. It does not. All that would result is in each case one more country leaving the set signed on to the accord.

Sad reality --- you get to try "war criminals" ONLY if their countries have been crushed in battle or such extensive political changes have taken place in thier countries as to make the acused considered INTERNALLY as enemies (and turning them over to the court simply more expedient than trying them internally where they might still have significant support)

author by iopublication date Sun Jan 22, 2006 20:07author address author phone Report this post to the editors

which is a pity coz its nice to see someone use the word supine, I read it, & thought "supine and corrupt" nice mix of adjectives. Then scanned the text looking for "prostrate" or "prone". But they're not there. I wonder is it easier to be "corrupt" if "supine" or "prone".
I suppose its all a question of what can you do with your face in the pillow or your eyes staring upwards. mind boggles. surely it does. leave it alone now.

(*) if you want to publish as widely as possible (cross post) you need to start here and leave it a few days before you start crossposting to other sites. http://www.indymedia.ie/editorial.php

author by Peter Ravenscroftpublication date Mon Jan 23, 2006 06:09author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Mike,

Thank you, and that's genuine, for the lecture. I think you have very effectively answered the question in the first part of my original title line. Yours, I suggst though, is the argument by which Al Capone was untouchable for so long.

I detect a certain weariness in your capitalization of "try" Yeah, mate, me too.

In whose eyes would the ICC look idiotic, should some country refuse to hand over a wanted leader? Not, I suggest those of people who have had their kids killed by such sacred cows.

Most depictions of justice show her as wearing a blindfold, which precisely says that rank and power should not matter. War is serial murder, and we need a global culture shift to get that to be seen by as many as possible. Generals wear replendant uniforms and crave public attention so that they can diffrentiate themselves in their own heads from common footpads. They nnow need to be told. We have real problems to deal with, like all the trees and the fish going down, and running out of water. The time for serial murder festivals and niceties about the relative standing of killers and courts is, I suggest, long over.

My own contact with war has, I must admit, been slight, and for that I am very grateful. Just a few minor coups and revolutions observed. But my father was a shellshock case from El Alamein and I grew up with the aftermath. My wife, the same. So, I do not like war and I am not overly bothered about the social or political standing of the ICC with the uniformed, bewigged or other supporting or tolerating classes

Your view of the ICC seems to be that we should accept it acting mnerely as a sort of hyena on the edges of strife, picking off the weaker targets. I will not buy that, sorry.

The rules are changing.

You are also partly wrong. The Rome Statute envisages national resistance and non-cooperation, that is why the sequence is, local authorities are required to prosecute first then, if they refuse, and there seems to be a case to answer, the ICC will investigate.

Not, "then the ICC will skulk off into the bushes, in case the local power structure declines to hand over the alleged miscreant ".

In trivial old Australia, we have our own set of political realities. The mere fact of possibly being summoned to appear for war crimes has a politically deterent effect on such people as our beloved PM. Little Johnny has been very careful to issue rules of engagement to his pilots, that differ from those of the Yanks. As he is beside himself with joy ever time he can get to review some more uniforms, that is probably the result of pressure rather than choice. If he was more comfortable about this war, he might commit more troopers yet. Strong local opposition deterred Hawke in the previous Iraq slaughterfest., and probably that if why the F-111's , though about to go, were withdrawn that time.

I hope that helps you in turn.

Peter.

 
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