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Gender Justice and the ICC Gender Justice and the ICC

Gender Justice and the ICC - PowerPoint Presentation

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Gender Justice and the ICC - PPT Presentation

Prof Siobhán Mullally Faculty of Law University College Cork smullallyuccie Presentation to the Summer School on the International Criminal Court 2012 Irish Centre for Human Rights NUI Galway ID: 356776

rape sexual gender violence sexual rape violence gender crimes gbv icc charges prosecutor evidence article torture legal women cases victims icty consent

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Slide1

Gender Justice and the ICC

Prof.

Siobhán

Mullally

, Faculty of Law, University College Cork,

s.mullally@ucc.ie

Presentation

to the Summer

School on the International Criminal Court 2012

Irish Centre for Human Rights, NUI GalwaySlide2

Gender and the ICC: Political ActivismCharlesworth

: recognition of crimes of sexual violence – ‘the result of considerable work and lobbying by women’s organisations’.

Goldstone: ‘Certainly if any campaign worked, this one worked in my case..’ (ICTY and ICTR)Slide3

Gender and the ICC: Why?

"It is now more dangerous to be a woman than to be a soldier in modern conflict"

- Maj. Gen. Patrick

Cammaert

, 2008, former UN Peacekeeping Operation Commander in DRC

UN Women: 250,000-500,000 women raped in Rwanda (1994)

20,000-50,000 women raped in

BiH

in early 1990 -s

Sierra Leone 94 per cent of displaced households surveyed had experienced sexual assaults, including rape, torture and sexual slavery (Physicians for Human Rights, 2002)

Approx 250,000 Cambodian women were forced into marriage between 1975 and 1979. (UNIFEM)

DRC? ‘worst place on earth to be a woman’ (M

Wallstrom

)

Rape as a ‘weapon of war’ -- connotes the systematic use of rape and sexual violence in warSlide4

Building on the Ad-Hoc Tribunals: Leading Cases

(

Akayesu

: 2 Sept 1998 – ICTR)

Defines rape as a physical invasion of a sexual nature, committed on a person under circumstances which are coercive. (

para

. 597)

Celibici

ICTY (16 November 1998)

Accordingly, whenever rape and other forms of sexual violence meet the aforementioned criteria, then they shall constitute torture, in the same manner as any other acts that meet this criteria.

Akayesu

,

paras

505-509, 516 (rape as genocidal)

(measures designed to prevent births) Slide5

Ad-Hoc Tribunals: JurisprudenceFurundzija

ICTY (12 December 1998)

a momentum towards addressing, through legal process, the use of rape in the course of detention and interrogation as a means of torture and, therefore, as a violation of international law.

Kunarac

(ICTY)

the absence of genuine and freely given consent or voluntary participation may be

evidenced by the presence of the various factors

Kristic

(ICTY)

..given the patriarchal character of the Bosnian Muslim society in Srebrenica, the destruction of such a sizeable number of men would "inevitably result in the physical disappearance of the Bosnian Muslim population at Srebrenica."Slide6

What role for the ICC ?

Seeking Truth

Promoting Accountability

Ending Impunity for GBV including sexual violence

Dignity – victims and witnesses

Historical record

Healing – through process of truth telling – (seeking recognition)

Expressive function of the criminal law – important in context of impunity for GBVSlide7

ICC: Definitions of CrimesArticle 7 (Crimes against Humanity)

(g) Rape, sexual slavery, enforced prostitution, forced pregnancy, enforced sterilization, or any other form of sexual violence of comparable gravity;

(h) Persecution…gender

3. For the purpose of this Statute, it is understood that the term "gender" refers to the two sexes, male and female, within the context of society. The term "gender" does not indicate any meaning different from the above.Slide8

ICC: Gender CrimesArticle 8 (War Crimes)

(xxi) Committing outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment;

(xxii) Committing rape, sexual slavery, enforced prostitution, forced pregnancy, as defined in article 7, paragraph 2 (f), enforced sterilization, or any other form of sexual violence also constituting a grave breach of the Geneva Conventions;Slide9

ICC: Rules of Procedure and Evidence

EVIDENCE IN SEXUAL VIOLENCE CASES

The court cannot impose a requirement of corroboration of a victim’s testimony.

· Evidence of a victim’s prior or subsequent sexual conduct is prohibited.

·

Defense

of consent is limited – consent cannot be inferred.

·

In camera proceedings required to determine whether consent or sexual conduct

evidence should be allowed. (Rules of Procedure and Evidence, Rules 63, 70-72)

SPECIAL MEASURES

· Special measures may be ordered to facilitate testimony of a traumatized victim or

witness, child, an elderly person or a victim of sexual violence.

· The Court shall be vigilant in controlling the manner of questioning a witness or victim

so as to avoid harassment or intimidation, paying particularly attention to attacks on victims of crimes of sexual violence. (Rules of Procedure and Evidence, Rule 88)

·Slide10

ICC – Gender representation ..legal expertise on specific issues, including, but not limited to, sexual and gender violence and violence against children.

Women on the Court. The statute requires that the

need for a "fair representation of female and male judges" be taken into account in the selection process. The same provision applies to the selection of staff in the Office of the Prosecutor and in the Registry. (Article 36(8)(a)(iii); Article 44(2) )

Legal Advisors on Sexual and Gender Violence.

The Prosecutor is required to appoint advisers with legal expertise on specific issues, including sexual and gender violence. This is an important mechanism for ensuring both that gender crimes are properly investigated and prosecuted and victims properly respected and protected. (Article 42(9) ) (C.A. MacKinnon 2008)Slide11

ICC Victims and WitnessesArticle 43.(6) (Victims and Witnesses Unit)

The Unit shall include staff with expertise in trauma, including trauma related to crimes of sexual violence. Slide12

ICC- CasesLubanga

– exclusion of GBV crimes

14 other cases, 9 include GBV charges

GBV charges – in all 3 core international crimes (genocide in

Bashir

case)

Rape: (Katanga, Bemba,

Bashir

, Al

Rahman

,

Kony

,

Muthaura

,

Mbarushimana

and

Gbago

)

Inhuman treatment (

Mbarushimana

)

Rape as torture (

Mbarushimana

)

Sexual slavery (Katanga,

Kony

)

Outrages upon personal dignity (Al

Rahman

)Slide13

Prosecutor v Lubanga

Charges – ‘shockingly narrow’? –(recruitment and use of child soldiers)

WIFGJ – Letter to Prosecutor

‘grave concern’, GBV a ‘defining characteristic’ of conflict in the DRC – Persuasive evidence linking UPC to GBV crimes

Investigation criticised as limited in scope; ‘poorly directed’; lacking a ‘commitment to gather the relevant information and evidence’ on GBV

Consequences – difficult to charge GBV in other cases involving UPC members ; limiting effect on victim participation, (need for links to crimes charged)

Expressive function of criminal lawSlide14

Prosecutor v Lubanga

Confirmation of charges – PTC (general supervisory power’ -Amicus Curiae brief not allowed from WIFGJ – should have related to DRC situation

Legal Representatives of Victims

- request that Trial Chamber modify the legal characterisation of the facts (Regulation 55) - (Importance of victim participation in GBV cases)

Accountability gap on GBV – as learned from Ad-Hoc tribunals (charges not always included in initial indictment –

Akayesu

(intervention of

J.Pillay

)

Appeals Chamber – alteration to legal characterisation could not exceed facts described in charges (could not include crimes of sexual slavery

eg

)Slide15

Prosecutor v Lubanga

UNICEF Paris Principles – (2007)

Principles and Guidelines on Children Associated with Armed Forces or Armed Groups

‘the use of girls as ‘wives’ or other forced sexual relations, actual forced marriage and the use of girls for domestic labour or other logistical support in armed conflict constitute acts of recruitment or use.’

Dissenting Judgment:

Odio

Benito

‘using children to participate actively in the hostilities’ should have been defined, and sexual violence dimension included

Judgment – Article 74 of Statute precluded taking account of evidence of sexual violence presented (not linked to charges brought)

Understanding of the Crime of child soldiering- -outdated, excludes gendered experiences, dominant male paradigm

Selective justice – efficiency ? Slide16

Prosecutor v Bemba (CAR)A range of GBV related charges

Rape as war crime; crime against humanity; torture (through rape) as a war crime and crime against humanity; outrages upon personal dignity

Cumulative charging strategy (Prosecutor)

Importance – expressive function of law (particularly in international criminal justice context)

PTC – declined to confirm charges of torture and outrages upon personal dignity (subsumed within rape charges) -

not materially distinct; burden upon the accused of multiple charges; delaysSlide17

Prosecutor v Bemba (CAR)WIFGJ – Amicus brief – harms not subsumed by rape charge

10 year old girl, publicly raped – (consent not possible, so force not necessary to address as part of the rape charge – torture through rape)

Witnessing of rape of family members – recognised in

Furundzija

case ICTY -

Askin

: distinctness of sexualised torture and sexual violence – ‘an important but subtle aspect of the case) Slide18

Challenges : Questions Buss: ‘Curious visibility of wartime rape’

Need to complicate the ‘rape script’

Sexual violence in armed conflict is not a singular uniform phenomenon ..different forms, multiple social, economic, and political contexts’. Gender intersects with other axes of oppression

Rape – other gendered harms? (less visible)

Consent? – if presumed – what consequences for women’s agency (Halley - Engle)Slide19

Gender and ICC: Challenges

Buss: - Capturing truth? (ICTR)

A partial truth only

Convictions for rape and sexual violence low – why?

Hyper visibility of rape – un-visibility

Excluded (Hutu women; Tutsi and Hutu men subjected to sexual violence)

Rape as weapon of war – overlooks ‘violence and its wider links to gender and power’ (rather than women’s experiences of violence only)

Reparations – Remedies?

Collective or individual

Socio-economic needs / rights

Health care

Reproductive harms? Slide20

From Res 1325 – Res 1820

(2008) R1820 is a classic example of the dangerousness of feminist engagement with international law—on the one hand, gender is taken up as a totalizing dichotomy that operates so that women and girls are always in the most disadvantaged position, which invites and justifies protective responses, while on the other hand it presents the opportunity to actively dismantle gendered mythologies about sexual violence. (D .Otto )

Subsequently: Res 1889 (2009)

(returns to broader questions of political participation, and looks to socio-economic rights, sexual and reproductive health in post-conflict situations.

Expanding

the agenda ..