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Mostrando postagens com marcador ICC. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador ICC. Mostrar todas as postagens

sexta-feira, 24 de março de 2023

Wanted, dead or alive: Mr. Putin; Address: Kremlin (that's the easy part) - Washington Post

 The big idea

The Washington Post, March 24. 2023

Actually, 'wanted’ world leaders often face justice, new study finds
Russian President Vladimir Putin has been accused of committing war crimes in Ukraine.
It’s been a historic week for world leaders accused of atrocities:
On March 17, judges for the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague issued an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin on war crimes charges.
And on March 20, the world marked 20 years since the U.S.-led war in Iraq to topple dictator Saddam Hussein, who was deposed, arrested, tried and ultimately executed in 2006.
The ICC news about Putin drew understandable skepticism.
After all, he’s the leader of a nuclear-armed country that is a veto-wielding permanent member of the U.N. Security Council. The ICC doesn’t do trials in absentia, so he’d have to be handed over. And, as Bloomberg reported, “of the two dozen people against whom the ICC has pursued war crimes cases, about a third remain at large.”
JUSTICE OFTEN SERVED?
But now comes a new study from Tom Warrick, who served as deputy assistant secretary for counterterrorism policy at the Department of Homeland Security and is now a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council think tank. It publishes this week, but The Daily 202 got an early look. You should be able to read the whole thing here.
Warrick’s conclusion? It’ll surprise skeptics (including, in all honesty, The Daily 202), but in recent times, high-profile targets of war-crimes prosecution mostly do not evade justice and certainly don’t die peacefully in their sleep. With some exceptions, of course.
“Heads of state and major political or military leaders wanted by international courts have faced justice far more often than not,” he found. “If modern history is a guide, the ICC arrest warrant has dramatically changed Putin’s fate.”
The Daily 202 readers are surely familiar with the Nuremberg trials of Nazi military and political leaders. But the modern era of war-crimes accountability began in 1992 with the U.N. Security Council’s establishment of mechanisms for punishing atrocities in the former Yugoslavia.
That was followed by a wave of other actions, some of them country-specific, like an international tribunal for Rwanda or domestic courts in places like Cambodia or Iraq, as well of course as the creation of the ICC. (The China, India, Russia and the United States, notably, don’t recognize ICC jurisdiction.)
Warrick looked at 18 heads of state or leaders or major military forces sought by international justice for genocide, crimes against humanity and serious war crimes. (They’re all men.)
Of the 18, he wrote:
15 (83 percent) have faced justice of some kind before a tribunal.
Two were acquitted “for lack of evidence under less-than-ideal circumstances” but still appeared before ICC judges.
Two others were killed before they could face trial (meaning 94 percent have either faced a tribunal or were killed before that could happen).
Just one of the 18 is still at large.
And here’s the mic-drop: “Of the seven who have died, 0 percent died in their beds at home as free men.”
THE ADMINISTRATION’S HAND
President Biden’s administration this week looked to leverage the ICC warrant for Putin, with Secretary of State Antony Blinken saying Wednesday European countries should detain him and hand him over to the ICC if he visits their countries.
“Anyone who is a party to the court and has obligations should fulfill their obligations,” Blinken said, my colleagues John Hudson and Missy Ryan reported.
The ICC warrant “is not just a symbolic action, it has consequences that are going to change the trajectory of Putin’s life, said Warrick, who has decades of experience as an international lawyer, including years of work in the State Department on war-crimes issues.
It could restrict his travel options, it could restrict what world leaders choose to meet with him or associate with him — though obviously his recent summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping shows some of the limits to the limits, so to speak. And many ICC signatories have declined to sign on to condemnations of Russia’s war in Ukraine.
The warrant could also “fundamentally alter the way other Russians deal with him,” Warrick said.
How?
In Russia, “there will eventually come to power a group of people who want to break with the crimes of the current leadership [and the international price to pay] and so putting someone like Putin on an airplane to The Hague becomes an option that solves several problems,” he said in an interview with The Daily 202.
Warrick pointed to Putin’s widely reported revulsion at images of ousted Libyan strongman Muammar al-Qaddafi being killed in a ditch, seeing his brutal and bloody end as a lesson in what happens to leaders who play by the West’s rules.
“If there’s not a measure of accountability for mass murder, there will be vengeance,” he told The Daily 202. Qaddafi’s fate was evidence of that. So was Italian dictator Benito Mussolini’s. Or that of Nicolae Ceaușescu, the Romanian dictator.
“The world has changed since 1992,” said Warrick, “and it’s time everyone catch up.”

segunda-feira, 22 de fevereiro de 2021

Lei da era Bush contra o TPI permanece válida - Nota da ONU, sanções contra juizes do TPI

 Vincent Bevins chamou-me a atenção para Nota informativa da ONU, de dezembro de 2020, sobre sanções unilaterais americanas a juizes ou investigadores do Tribunal Penal Internacional, que por sua vez remete a ato da era Bush, de 2002, tal como informado in fine. Uma das piores peças de legislação feitas pela arrogância unilateral do Império hegemônico:

x“ One of the most outrageous actions taken by the Trump administration - and so far, kept in place by Biden: sanctions imposed on the International Criminal Court (that's right) for investigating US conduct in Afghanistan and Israeli conduct in Palestine.” (@Vinncent)

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US Sanctions on the International Criminal Court

Questions and Answers

Permanent premises of the International Criminal Court in The Hague, the Netherlands. © 2018 Marina Riera/Human Rights Watch

On September 2, 2020, the United States government imposed sanctions on the International Criminal Court (ICC) prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, and another senior prosecution official, Phakiso Mochochoko. In addition, US Secretary of State Michael Pompeo announced that the United States had restricted the issuance of visas for certain unnamed individuals “involved in the ICC’s efforts to investigate US personnel.”

The sanctions on Bensouda and Mochochoko implemented a sweeping executive order issued on June 11, 2020 by President Donald Trump. This order declared a national emergency and authorized asset freezes and family entry bans against ICC officials who were identified as being involved in certain activities. Earlier, the Trump administration had repeatedly threatened action to thwart ICC investigations in Afghanistan and Palestine. In a precursor step, in 2019, the Trump administration revoked the prosecutor’s US visa.

The following questions and answers discuss the Trump administration’s unprecedented authorization of a sanctions program aimed at undermining the work of the ICC.

What does it mean that the US has imposed sanctions against two ICC officials?
Could others be designated for sanctions?
Who has the authority to designate sanctions targets?
What is the reach of the sanctions and how are sanctions enforced?
How could these sanctions affect the work of the ICC?
Under what authority is the US president able to impose sanctions?
Has the US used its sanctions authority in this way before?
Are these sanctions being challenged before US or other courts? What about challenges to similar sanctions?
The European Union has expressed concern about the extraterritorial reach of some US sanctions programs and has taken countermeasures when it comes to certain other sanctions programs. What countermeasures could the EU take?
How have ICC member countries responded to the US sanctions?

 

What does it mean that the US has imposed sanctions against two ICC officials?

On September 2, under Executive Order 13928, the “Executive Order on Blocking Property Of Certain Persons Associated With The International Criminal Court,” US officials added Fatou Bensouda, the ICC prosecutor, and Phakiso Mochochoko, the head of a division within the prosecutor’s office, to the Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons List (the SDN List). This list is maintained by the US Department of Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).

Their designation had two immediate effects. First, any property held by Bensouda and Mochochoko (or the property of any entity of which they own 50 percent or more) in the United States became “blocked.” Although any property they might have in the US has not been seized, they would not be able to exercise any rights over it, including use or sale. In addition, US persons or entities located anywhere in the world would not be able to transact with or provide services to either Bensouda or Mochochoko, unless they received a license to do so from the US government. US “persons” are defined under the executive order as “any United States citizen, permanent resident alien, entity organized under the laws of the United States or any jurisdiction within the United States (including foreign branches), or any person in the United States.”

Second, all property that might belong to Bensouda or Mochochoko that comes within a US jurisdiction would be “blocked.” Because the vast majority of international trade is conducted via the US dollar this has potentially broad implications. US dollar-denominated transactions—even if they are between two non-US parties—usually require a bank under US jurisdiction to handle the transactions. Thus, any transaction that passes through them, even momentarily, would also be blocked.

The importance of the US dollar and the fear of losing access to risk-averse US banks means that most major financial institutions around the globe regularly refuse to conduct transactions with or for individuals on the SDN List. This is so even in transactions in which there is no connection to US dollars, US persons, or US jurisdiction. This broadens the reach of the sanctions far beyond blocking assets like bank accounts or property physically located in the US and can affect the ability of designated people to conduct any economic transactions at all on a global basis. In addition, the fear of potentially running afoul of this executive order’s vague and undefined prohibition on the provision of material assistance or support to sanctioned people creates additional risk.

In addition, Bensouda and Mochochoko, who were sanctioned as individuals, and their immediate family members are presumed to be subject to US visa restrictions under the terms of the executive order.

Could others be designated for sanctions?

The executive order does not name “persons”—that is individuals or entities—but the US government has discretion on listing additional persons pursuant to the order. The threshold needed to sanction additional individuals or organizations is fairly low.

The designating authority need only have a “reasonable basis to believe” that the target falls under one of the designation prongs. Furthermore, there is no guidance regarding how concrete, direct, or even effective an activity must be in order to be deemed an “effort” to “investigate, arrest, detain, or prosecute.”

The executive order specifies that only “foreign persons” can be listed. Therefore, a US citizen or US-incorporated company could not be added to the SDN List. However, the impact of the sanctions program on dual-US citizens—whether they would qualify as “foreign persons”—is unclear. The foreign-incorporated subsidiaries and affiliates of US-based companies and organizations would qualify as “foreign persons.”

To be designated for sanctions, a “foreign” individual or organization must also fall under one of the following “designation prongs” of the executive order:

(A) have directly engaged in any effort by the ICC to investigate, arrest, detain, or prosecute any US personnel without the consent of the US;

(B) have directly engaged in any effort by the ICC to investigate, arrest, detain, or prosecute any personnel of a country that is an ally of the US without the consent of that country’s government;

(C) have materially assisted, sponsored, or provided financial, material, or technological support for, or goods or services to or in support of, any activity described in (A) or (B) or any person whose property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to this order (that is, presently, only Bensouda or Mochochoko); or

(D) be owned or controlled by, or to have acted or purported to act for or on behalf of, directly or indirectly, any person whose property and interests in property are blocked under this order.

Who has the authority to designate sanctions targets?

The order authorizes the US secretary of state to designate sanctions targets, in consultation with the US treasury secretary and the US attorney general. In practice, the Department of Treasury, and particularly OFAC, plays a critical role in determining who is designated as it maintains the SDN List, defends listings, and has the most experience developing materials to determine whether an individual or entity should be designated for sanctions. OFAC also plays a leading role in enforcing the prohibitions that flow from designations.

What is the reach of the sanctions and how are sanctions enforced?

The effect of the sanctions is by no means limited to those designated under the order. They have a broader reach. Significant civil or criminal penalties may be enforced against people or entities anywhere in the world that “violate, attempt to violate, conspire to violate, or cause a violation of” the executive order by interacting with a designated person in a way that violates the prohibitions contained in the order’s sections 1(a), 3, and 5.

These prohibitions are broad and include:

  • transferring, paying, exporting, withdrawing, or otherwise dealing with the property and interests in property of a designated person located in the US or in the possession or control of any US person;
  • making any contribution or provision of funds, goods, or services by, to, or for the benefit of any designated person;
  • receiving any contribution or provision of funds, goods, or services from any designated person;
  • any transaction that evades or avoids, has the purpose of evading or avoiding, causes a violation of, or attempts to violate any of the prohibitions contained in the executive order; or
  • any conspiracy formed to violate any of the prohibitions set forth in the executive order.

The severity of penalties is intended to deter others from interacting with designated people. Interacting with a designated person carries a civil penalty of the greater of up to US$307,922 or twice the value of the transaction that violated the order. Prohibited interactions with a designated person also subject an individual or entity to a criminal fine of up to $1,000,000, and for individuals, up to 20 years in prison.

While US persons cannot be designated under the executive order, they can be subject to these penalties for violating the order, becoming potential targets for enforcement. Therefore, US individuals and institutions (whether in the US or outside the US) are prohibited from any transactions with Bensouda and Mochochoko and must freeze any property belonging to either. The same restrictions apply to any foreign person or entity located in the US.

How could these sanctions affect the work of the ICC?

While the ICC itself has not been sanctioned, the executive order and the sanctions on Bensouda and Mochochoko could have serious consequences for the work of the ICC. The effects of the sanctions are by no means limited to the individuals targeted but may have wide-reaching consequences. In particular, current service providers to the ICC—from banks to vending machine companies—may reassess whether continuing to work with the institution is prudent given the risk of inadvertently violating US sanctions.

Although only Bensouda and Mochochoko have been sanctioned, to minimize risk, financial institutions often go out of their way to comply with US regulations and may preemptively refuse to deal with transactions involving the ICC even if Bensouda and Mochochoko are not involved. In addition, the executive order is aimed at, and has created apprehension and uncertainty for, nongovernmental organizations, consultants, and lawyers who work with the ICC in investigative and adjudicative capacities.

Under what authority is the US president able to impose sanctions?

The executive order was issued under authority granted to the president by the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). The US Congress enacted the law in 1977 to enable the president to declare national emergencies with limited congressional oversight. The law allows the president to declare an emergency to “deal with any unusual and extraordinary threat, which has its source in whole or substantial part outside the United States, to the national security, foreign policy, or economy of the United States.”

To meet this requirement, Executive Order 13928 states:

that any attempt by the ICC to investigate, arrest, detain, or prosecute any United States personnel without the consent of the United States, or of personnel of countries that are United States allies and who are not parties to the Rome Statute or have not otherwise consented to ICC jurisdiction, constitutes an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States.

Once a national emergency has been declared, the president has broad powers to regulate economic transactions in relation to the emergency.

Has the US used its sanctions authority in this way before?

The US has frequently imposed sanctions against a range of regimes and actors involved in human rights violations, corruption, or other actions the US wants to condemn. Some have targeted rights abusers and officials responsible for significant harm to their populations, even if not uniformly. For example, in October 2020, the US sanctioned officials in Belarus for their role in fraud in the August 2020 presidential elections and subsequent crackdown on protesters. In 2018, the US sanctioned 17 Saudi government agents in connection with their alleged involvement in the killing of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi, including a former top advisor to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The US has also sanctioned companies and individualsinvolved with providing financial and logistical support to the Islamic State (ISIS).

Though sanctions are at times counter-productive and politically motivated, they can be an important and effective tool to punish human rights abusers, particularly in situations where there has been little or no accountability. Sanctions are not a substitute for prosecutions, but they can send a powerful message to abusers that their abuse will not be tolerated, and may have a material impact on the abusers, prompting them to change their conduct. Even if targets do not hold US assets, the US dollar’s position as the world’s preeminent reserve currency and medium of exchange means that US sanctions can have a crippling effect on designated targets.

The US government has never previously deployed sanctions against officials at an international organization or court. Here, the US has decided to utilize the coercive powers of sanctions against the ICC, a court of last resort mandated to fight impunity for serious international crimes under the Rome Statute, an international treaty of which most core US allies are members.

Are these sanctions being challenged before US courts? What about challenges to similar sanctions?

On October 1, 2020, the Open Society Justice Initiative, a public interest law center, together with four law professors, filed a complaint before US federal courtalleging that the executive order and the subsequent designations of Bensouda and Mochochoko violated the plaintiffs’ rights under the US constitution.

The plaintiffs allege, among other issues, that their First Amendment right to freedom of speech has been violated as the threat of civil or criminal penalties associated with enforcement of or designation for sanctions under the order. In their submission they contend that this has caused them to “discontinue, abandon, or reconsider” a range of activities in support of the ICC’s work. The case remains pending.

In addition, in 1988, the IEEPA was amended—known as the Berman Amendment—to protect the exchange of information and informational materials in various formats, including publications, photographs, tapes, and more. This provision generally exempts the exchange of such information from the president’s regulatory authority. The plaintiffs in the lawsuit also allege that the order purports to prohibit the exchange of protected information, and therefore is not permitted under IEEPA.

First Amendment challenges to executive orders under IEEPA have had some success in recent months. Most recently, federal judges have granted preliminary injunctions preventing the implementation of two executive orders imposing restrictions on the Chinese mobile applications TikTok and WeChat on the basis that the president may have overstepped his authority under the Berman Amendment’s protections, thus violating users’ First Amendment rights.

However, in general, US courts have demonstrated a high degree of deference to the US government on national security matters. Furthermore, given the relatively low burden of proof on the government for designation and enforcement, challenges have rarely been successful.

The US Congress retains the ability to terminate national emergencies by resolution. However, without presidential support this would require the resolution to pass with a “veto-proof majority” (that is, a two-thirds majority by both the House of Representatives and the Senate). The US Congress has never terminated a state of emergency declared under IEEPA.

The European Union has expressed concern about the extraterritorial reach of some US sanctions programs and has taken countermeasures when it comes to certain other sanctions programs. What countermeasures could the EU take?

The EU has enacted a “Blocking Statute” to counter the extraterritorial reach of unilateral sanctions imposed by other countries that it considers to be unlawful. The Blocking Statute broadly restricts EU-based individuals and entities from complying with sanctions that the EU considers abusive in their extraterritorial reach and provides for the recovery in court of damages caused by the extraterritorial application of the specified foreign sanctions.

The Blocking Statute’s primary purpose is to protect EU individuals and entities engaging in international trade in a manner compliant with EU law, but in breach of what it considers to be unlawful or abusive sanctions imposed by countries outside the EU. At a political level, it also reflects the EU’s disapproval of sanctions with extraterritorial reach imposed by other countries that the EU considers to be abusive or unreasonable.

The EU’s Blocking Statute has only prohibited individuals and entities in the EU from complying with the US sanctions on Iran, Cuba, and Libya. Historically, the Blocking Statute has not been vigorously enforced though it appears that that may be changing with respect to both Iran and Cuba.

Given the EU’s strong support for the ICC, the EU should consider adding the executive order to the list of unilateral US sanctions that receive Blocking Statute protection.

How have ICC member countries responded to the US sanctions?

In response to the executive order in June, 67 ICC member countries, including key US allies, issued a joint cross-regional statement expressing “unwavering support for the court as an independent and impartial judicial institution.” This was accompanied by statements from the European Union, the president of the ICC’s Assembly of States Parties (ASP), some national governments, and nongovernmental organizations in the US and globally. Following the September designations of the two ICC officials, the EU, the ASP president, some national governments, and nongovernmental groups again spoke out. In November, 71 ICC member countries jointly reaffirmed their support for the ICC as a court of last resort in a statement delivered before the UN General Assembly, implicitly rejecting US actions aimed at undermining the court by noting that “sanctions are a tool to be used against those responsible for the most serious crimes, not against those seeking justice. Any attempt to undermine the independence of the Court should not be tolerated.”

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U.S.: 'Hague Invasion Act' Becomes Law

White House

(New York) - A new law supposedly protecting U.S. servicemembers from the International Criminal Court shows that the Bush administration will stop at nothing in its campaign against the court.
 
U.S. President George Bush today signed into law the American Servicemembers Protection Act of 2002, which is intended to intimidate countries that ratify the treaty for the International Criminal Court (ICC). The new law authorizes the use of military force to liberate any American or citizen of a U.S.-allied country being held by the court, which is located in The Hague. This provision, dubbed the "Hague invasion clause," has caused a strong reaction from U.S. allies around the world, particularly in the Netherlands.  
 
In addition, the law provides for the withdrawal of U.S. military assistance from countries ratifying the ICC treaty, and restricts U.S. participation in United Nations peacekeeping unless the United States obtains immunity from prosecution. At the same time, these provisions can be waived by the president on "national interest" grounds.  
 
"The states that have ratified this treaty are trying to strengthen the rule of law," said Richard Dicker, director of the International Justice Program at Human Rights Watch. "The Bush administration is trying to punish them for that."  
 
Dicker pointed out that many of the ICC's biggest supporters are fragile democracies and countries emerging from human rights crises, such as Sierra Leone, Argentina and Fiji.  
 
The law is part of a multi-pronged U.S. effort against the International Criminal Court. On May 6, in an unprecedented move, the Bush administration announced it was "renouncing" U.S. signature on the treaty. In June, the administration vetoed continuation of the U.N. peacekeeping force in Bosnia in an effort to obtain permanent immunity for U.N. peacekeepers. In July, U.S. officials launched a campaign around the world to obtain bilateral agreements that would grant immunity for Americans from the court's authority. Yesterday, Washington announced that it obtained such an agreement from Romania.  
 
However, another provision of the bill allows the United States to assist international efforts to bring to justice those accused of genocide, war crimes or crimes against humanity - including efforts by the ICC.  
 
"The administration never misses an opportunity to gratuitously antagonize its allies on the ICC," said Dicker. "But it's also true that the new law has more loopholes than a block of Swiss cheese."  
 
Dicker said the law gives the administration discretion to override ASPA's noxious effects on a case-by-case basis. Washington may try to use this to strong-arm additional concessions from the states that support the court, but Dicker urged states supporting the ICC "not to fall into the U.S. trap: the law does not require any punitive measures."  
 
Human Rights Watch believes the International Criminal Court has the potential to be the most important human rights institution created in 50 years, and urged regional groups of states, such as the European Union, to condemn the new law and resist Washington's attempts to obtain bilateral exemption arrangements.  
 
The law formed part of the 2002 Supplemental Appropriations Act for Further Recovery from and Response to Terrorist Attacks on the United States.