Colombia, the ICC — and a Twist!
by Kevin Jon Heller on 11 Aug 2010 | Comments
I’ve argued for the past couple of years that the ICC should open a formal investigation into the situation in Colombia, because it is a non-African situation that satisfies most, if not all, of my criteria for situational gravity: (1) crimes committed with government involvement; (2) systematic criminality; (3) socially alarming crimes such as enforced disappearance and torture. Here is a snippet from a June 2009 report by the American NGOs Coalition for the International Criminal Court (AMICC):
In response to FARC attacks, landholders and drug dealers organized in 1997 their own force to free Colombia from left-wing guerrillas: the Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia (United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia, AUC). It is comprised of several right-wing paramilitary groups, wealthy landowners, drug cartels and segments of the Colombian army. Just like the force they try to combat, they allegedly use terror tactics such as massacres, selective killings and threats, mainly against human rights defenders and trade union and other social movements’ leaders, journalists and members of Government. Over the past 10 years the paramilitaries, with support of the Colombian army and government, have killed some 15,000 trade unionists, peasants and indigenous leaders, human rights workers, land reform activists, leftwing politicians and their sympathizers.
Apparently Judge Garzon, now consulting with the ICC, agrees with me. He recently suggested that, in light of Colombia’s failure to bring the perpetrators of such crimes to justice, the ICC is likely to step in:
Colombia’s inability to bring cases to court was the object of the Spaniard’s criticism. “There is a lack of the political and judicial coordination and resolve necessary to begin trials,” he said. Victims had suffered too much without seeing results, he added.
The judge said that if Colombian authorities are unable to start proceedings “the ICC will have to say something - there will be claims and the court will have to say something.”
Garzon was referring to the Colombian Justice and Peace law, which allows demobilized paramilitaries to receive a reduced sentence if they make a full confession of their crimes. More immediate actions are necessary, he claimed, even if it means resorting to “partial indictments” - a mechanism which allows the suspects to be tried on crimes that come to light as their confession proceeds, rather than waiting for a full admission to be made.
The law came into force in 2005. However, despite the participation of 4,600 demobilized paramilitaries and guerrillas, only two people have been sentenced.
I tend to agree with Garzon’s assessment of the Justice and Peace Law, as do many scholars who know far more about Colombia than I. (See, for example, this excellent article by Jennifer Easterday at Berkeley.) To be fair, though, others believe that the ICC does not need to intervene in Colombia, because its threats to do so have encouraged the Colombian judiciary to increase its efforts to combat impunity, an effect known as “positive complementarity.” Here is the AMICC’s assessment:
The Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, by pressuring Colombia through statements and visits, seems to have boosted Colombia’s historically ineffective justice system. The Colombian Supreme Court is making an unprecedented effort and has had success in bringing to justice those responsible for the worse atrocities against human rights. Although the UN and human rights NGOs continue to report crimes against humanity, for the first time in decades the Colombian judiciary appears to be an effective institution. Thus, under the complementarity principle, the ICC is unlikely to intervene because Colombia, at least for the time being, appears willing and able to hold accountable those who bear the ultimate responsibility for crimes under the Court’s jurisdiction.
Such stark disagreement between Colombia experts may explain the OTP’s reluctance to open a formal investigation. In the end, though, the issue may turn out to be moot — because Colombia itself is now suggesting that the ICC should investigate crimes committed by FARC rebels allegedly based in Venezuela:
Colombia’s Prosecutor General Guillermo Mendoza Diago said Thursday that the Andean nation is considering whether to take evidence of numerous FARC and ELN camps in Venenzuela to the International Criminal Court (ICC), given that the guerrillas commit crimes against humanity and then seek refuge over the border.
“If we manage to establish that and we have information that the people who attack seek refuge in Venezuela and the authorities don’t do anything, but instead support them, then we would be able confirm that we could take the case to the International Criminal Court,” Mendoza said.
According to Mendoza, high-ranking Venezuelan officials, including Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, could hypothetically be called to testify before the court.
“If the International Criminal Court prosecutor - after we were to have presented the corresponding complaint, well founded in evidence were to be able to establish that Venezuelan authorities were co-participants in these acts, they could all be called to respond,” Mendoza said.
The prosecutor general said that the Colombian government had handed him a file documenting at least 60 attacks against Colombians, committed by FARC guerrillas, who had then fled to Venezuela.
Mendoza is correct that the ICC could investigate FARC crimes committed in Colombia — but he needs to remember that states can only refer situations to the Court, not individual cases or groups of cases. So if Colombia wants to refer FARC’s crimes, it will have to accept the possibility that it will end up under the OTP’s microscope, as well.
I, for one, would very much like that to happen.
source: Opinio Juris
