30/06/2004

Political will needed to round up war crimes suspects, says UN

Prosecutors at the UN war crimes tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda have warned that today warned that many indicted suspects remain at large, and threatens the scheduled the completion of trials by the Security Council-imposed target date of 2008.

During an open meeting of the Council, representatives of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) said the failure of some Member States to pay their contributions had "jeopardized their ability to meet their workload on schedule".

The two tribunals, set up by the UN to try people suspected of committing war crimes during the 1990s, have been told by the Council to do all they can to meet the completion strategy mapped out in previous Council resolutions.

That strategy calls for the tribunals to finish their investigations by the end of this year, complete all trials at the first instance by 2008 and wind up all their work by the end of 2010.

ICTY's President, Judge Theodor Meron, told the Council today that the court was operating at full capacity and has amended some rules of evidence and procedure in a bid to meet its schedule.

The Council has previously suggested to both tribunals that they review their caseloads to decide which cases they should proceed with and which cases they should transfer to the domestic justice systems of appropriate countries.

But Judge Meron said he had doubts that the domestic courts of Croatia or Serbia and Montenegro could conduct "credible war crimes trials", citing concerns about the impartiality of some Croatian judges as one reason.

ICTY Chief Prosecutor Carla Del Ponte criticized the failure of authorities in Serbia and Montenegro and in the Republika Srpska of Bosnia and Herzegovina to arrest the 20 indicted figures who remain at large.

These fugitives include former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, former Bosnian Serb general Ratko Mladic and former Croatian general Ante Gotovina.

Ms Del Ponte said Croatian authorities had become more cooperative with the ICTY, and she expected them to locate General Gotovina soon and transfer him to the court's custody in The Hague.

But she said Serbia and Montenegro "has become a safe haven for fugitives", with at least 15 accused - including General Mladic - believed to be at large there. Belgrade has not cooperated with the Tribunal since December.

Rwandan war crimes prosecutor Hassan Jallow said 15 suspects remain at large, with many located in the eastern part of the neighbouring Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

During the debate that followed, Council delegates stressed the importance of encouraging neighbouring States to cooperate with the two tribunals to hand over suspects and take on some of the caseload in their domestic courts.

(gmcg)

Related UK National News Stories
Click here for the latest headlines.

16 February 2010
Immigration Tribunals 'Streamlined'
UK immigration appeals have been streamlined as part of a new two-tier tribunals service structure. The former Asylum and Immigration Tribunal (AIT) is the latest to benefit from the process of bringing all the main tribunals into a unified tribunals system.
13 September 2004
CBI and TUC lock horns over 'vexatious' employment tribunals
More than two-thirds of businesses believe that the number of "weak or vexatious" employment tribunals brought against employers has increased in recent years, according to a CBI survey.
08 September 2003
Acas report downward trend continues in employment tribunals
Independent arbitration body, Acas, has revealed that that the number of applications reaching employment tribunals has decreased for the third consecutive year.
23 June 2010
European Council 'Delivers', Says PM
The Prime Minister has told fellow MPs in the House on Commons of the latest developments at the European Council. Earlier this week, Mr Cameron spoke of the issues the Council dealt with recently, including securing economic recovery; Europe's growth strategy; the approach to the G20; and progress on Iran.
23 February 2004
Britain is filthier despite council bill hike, says Keep Britain Tidy
While the average council tax bill has soared by 60% in seven years, Britain's streets are becoming filthier, according to a report published today. The Keep Britain Tidy study has found that poorer councils who clean up at the wrong time have left 97% of streets strewn with rubbish and two-thirds of Britons are now living in grubby neighbourhoods.