International Criminal Tribunal
for the former Yugoslavia
Logo of the Tribunal
52°05′40″N 4°17′03″E / 52.0944°N 4.2843°E / 52.0944; 4.2843
Established25 May 1993
Dissolved31 December 2017
LocationThe Hague, Netherlands
Coordinates52°05′40″N 4°17′03″E / 52.0944°N 4.2843°E / 52.0944; 4.2843
Authorized byUnited Nations Security Council Resolution 827
Judge term lengthFour years
Number of positions
Websitewww.icty.org

The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY)[lower-alpha 1] was a body of the United Nations that was established to prosecute the war crimes that had been committed during the Yugoslav Wars and to try their perpetrators. The tribunal was an ad hoc court located in The Hague, Netherlands.

It was established by Resolution 827 of the United Nations Security Council, which was passed on 25 May 1993. It had jurisdiction over four clusters of crimes committed on the territory of the former Yugoslavia since 1991: grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions, violations of the laws or customs of war, genocide, and crimes against humanity. The maximum sentence that it could impose was life imprisonment. Various countries signed agreements with the United Nations to carry out custodial sentences.

A total of 161 persons were indicted; the final indictments were issued in December 2004, the last of which were confirmed and unsealed in the spring of 2005.[1] The final fugitive, Goran Hadžić, was arrested on 20 July 2011.[2] The final judgment was issued on 29 November 2017[3] and the institution formally ceased to exist on 31 December 2017.[4]

Residual functions of the ICTY, including the oversight of sentences and consideration of any appeal proceedings initiated since 1 July 2013, are under the jurisdiction of a successor body, the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals (IRMCT).[5]

History

Creation

Report S/25704 of the UN Secretary-General, including the proposed Statute of the International Tribunal, approved by UN Security Council Resolution 827

United Nations Security Council Resolution 808 of 22 February 1993 decided that an "international tribunal shall be established for the prosecution of persons responsible for serious violations of international humanitarian law committed in the territory of the former Yugoslavia since 1991", and called on the Secretary-General to "submit for consideration by the Council ... a report on all aspects of this matter, including specific proposals and where appropriate options ... taking into account suggestions put forward in this regard by Member States".[6]

The Court was originally proposed by German Foreign Minister Klaus Kinkel.[7]

Resolution 827 of 25 May 1993 approved the S/25704 report of the Secretary-General and adopted the Statute of the International Tribunal annexed to it, formally creating the ICTY. It was to have jurisdiction over four clusters of crimes committed on the territory of the former SFR Yugoslavia since 1991:

  1. Grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions
  2. Violations of the laws or customs of war
  3. Genocide
  4. Crime against humanity.

The maximum sentence the ICTY could impose for these crimes was life imprisonment.

Implementation

In 1993 the internal infrastructure of the ICTY was built. 17 states had signed an agreement with the ICTY to carry out custodial sentences.[8]

1993–1994: In the first year of its existence, the Tribunal laid the foundations for its existence as a judicial organ. It established the legal framework for its operations by adopting the rules of procedure and evidence, as well as its rules of detention and directive for the assignment of defence counsel. Together, these rules established a legal aid system for the Tribunal. As the ICTY was a part of the United Nations and was the first international court for criminal justice, the development of a juridical infrastructure was considered quite a challenge. However, after the first year, the first ICTY judges had drafted and adopted all the rules for court proceedings.[9]

1994–1995: The ICTY established its offices within the Aegon Insurance Building in The Hague (which was, at the time, still partially in use by Aegon)[10] and detention facilities in Scheveningen in The Hague (the Netherlands). The ICTY hired many staff members and by July 1994, the Office of the Prosecutor had sufficient staff to begin field investigations. By November 1994, the first indictments were presented to the Court and confirmed, and in 1995, the staff numbered over 200 persons from all over the world.

Operation

The Tribunal building in The Hague

In 1994 the first indictment was issued against the Bosnian-Serb concentration camp commander Dragan Nikolić. This was followed on 13 February 1995 by two indictments comprising 21 individuals which were issued against a group of 21 Bosnian-Serbs charged with committing atrocities against Muslim and Croat civilian prisoners. While the war in the former Yugoslavia was still raging, the ICTY prosecutors showed that an international court was viable. However, no accused was arrested.[11]

The court confirmed eight indictments against 46 individuals and issued arrest warrants. Bosnian Serb indictee Duško Tadić became the subject of the Tribunal's first trial. Tadić was arrested by German police in Munich in 1994 for his alleged actions in the Prijedor region in Bosnia-Herzegovina (especially his actions in the Omarska, Trnopolje and Keraterm detention camps). He made his first appearance before the ICTY Trial Chamber on 26 April 1995, and pleaded not guilty to all of the charges in the indictment.[12]

1995–1996: Between June 1995 and June 1996, 10 public indictments had been confirmed against a total of 33 individuals. Six of the newly indicted persons were transferred in the Tribunal's detention unit. In addition to Duško Tadic, by June 1996 the tribunal had Tihomir Blaškić, Dražen Erdemović, Zejnil Delalić,[13] Zdravko Mucić,[14] Esad Landžo and Hazim Delić in custody. Erdemović became the first person to enter a guilty plea before the tribunal's court. Between 1995 and 1996, the ICTY dealt with miscellaneous cases involving several detainees, which never reached the trial stage.

Indictees and accomplishments

The Tribunal indicted 161 individuals between 1997 and 2004 and completed proceedings with them as follows:[15][16]

  • 111 had trials completed by the ICTY:
    • 21 were acquitted by the ICTY:
      • 18 acquittals have stood;
      • 1 was originally acquitted by the ICTY, but convicted on appeal by the IRMCT of one count (and sentenced to time served)
      • 2 were originally acquitted by the ICTY, but following a successful appeal by the prosecution the acquittals were overturned and a retrial is being conducted by the IRMCT; and
    • 90 were convicted and sentenced by the ICTY:
      • 87 were transferred to 14 different states where they served their prison sentences, had sentences that amounted to time spent in detention during trial, or died after conviction:
        • 20 remain imprisoned;
        • 58 completed their sentences;
        • 9 died while completing their sentences or after conviction awaiting transfer
      • 2 were convicted and sentenced, and remain in IRMCT detention awaiting transfer; and
      • 1 was convicted and sentenced, but has filed an appeal to the IRMCT that is being considered
  • 13 had their cases transferred to courts in:
    • Bosnia and Herzegovina (10);
    • Croatia (2); and
    • Serbia (1)
  • 37 had their cases terminated prior to trial completion, because
    • the indictments were withdrawn (20); or
    • the indictees died before or after transfer to the Tribunal (17).

The indictees ranged from common soldiers to generals and police commanders all the way to prime ministers. Slobodan Milošević was the first sitting head of state indicted for war crimes.[17] Other "high level" indictees included Milan Babić, former President of the Republika Srpska Krajina; Ramush Haradinaj, former Prime Minister of Kosovo; Radovan Karadžić, former President of the Republika Srpska; Ratko Mladić, former Commander of the Bosnian Serb Army; and Ante Gotovina (acquitted), former General of the Croatian Army.

The very first hearing at the ICTY was a referral request in the Tadić case on 8 November 1994. Croat Serb General and former President of the Republic of Serbian Krajina Goran Hadžić was the last fugitive wanted by the Tribunal to be arrested on 20 July 2011.[2]

An additional 23 individuals have been the subject of contempt proceedings.[18]

In 2004, the ICTY published a list of five accomplishments "in justice and law":[19][20]

  1. "Spearheading the shift from impunity to accountability", pointing out that, until very recently, it was the only court judging crimes committed as part of the Yugoslav conflict, since prosecutors in the former Yugoslavia were, as a rule, reluctant to prosecute such crimes;
  2. "Establishing the facts", highlighting the extensive evidence-gathering and lengthy findings of fact that Tribunal judgments produced;
  3. "Bringing justice to thousands of victims and giving them a voice", pointing out the large number of witnesses that had been brought before the Tribunal;
  4. "The accomplishments in international law", describing the fleshing out of several international criminal law concepts which had not been ruled on since the Nuremberg Trials;
  5. "Strengthening the Rule of Law", referring to the Tribunal's role in promoting the use of international standards in war crimes prosecutions by former Yugoslav republics.

Closure

The United Nations Security Council passed resolutions 1503 in August 2003 and 1534 in March 2004, which both called for the completion of all cases at both the ICTY and its sister tribunal, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) by 2010.

In December 2010, the Security Council adopted Resolution 1966, which established the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals (IRMCT), a body intended to gradually assume residual functions from both the ICTY and the ICTR as they wound down their mandate. Resolution 1966 called upon the Tribunal to finish its work by 31 December 2014 to prepare for its closure and the transfer of its responsibilities.[5]

In a Completion Strategy Report issued in May 2011, the ICTY indicated that it aimed to complete all trials by the end of 2012 and complete all appeals by 2015, with the exception of Radovan Karadžić whose trial was expected to end in 2014 and Ratko Mladić and Goran Hadžić, who were still at large at that time and were not arrested until later that year.[21]

The IRMCT's ICTY branch began functioning on 1 July 2013. Per the Transitional Arrangements adopted by the UN Security Council, the ICTY was to conduct and complete all outstanding first-instance trials, including those of Karadžić, Mladić and Hadžić. The ICTY would also conduct and complete all appeal proceedings for which the notice of appeal against the judgement or sentence was filed before 1 July 2013. The IRMCT will handle any appeals for which notice is filed after that date.

The final ICTY trial to be completed in the first instance was that of Ratko Mladić, who was convicted on 22 November 2017.[22] The final case to be considered by the ICTY was an appeal proceeding encompassing six individuals, whose sentences were upheld on 29 November 2017.[23]

Organization

While operating, the Tribunal employed around 900 staff.[24] Its organisational components were Chambers, Registry and the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP).

Lateral view of the building

Prosecutors

The Prosecutor was responsible for investigating crimes, gathering evidence and prosecutions and was head of the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP).[25] The Prosecutor was appointed by the UN Security Council upon nomination by the UN Secretary-General.[26]

The last prosecutor was Serge Brammertz. Previous Prosecutors have been Ramón Escovar Salom of Venezuela (1993–1994), however, he never took up that office, Richard Goldstone of South Africa (1994–1996), Louise Arbour of Canada (1996–1999), and Carla Del Ponte of Switzerland (1999–2007). Richard Goldstone, Louise Arbour and Carla Del Ponte also simultaneously served as the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda until 2003. Graham Blewitt of Australia served as the Deputy Prosecutor from 1994 until 2004. David Tolbert, the President of the International Center for Transitional Justice, was also appointed Deputy Prosecutor of the ICTY in 2004.[27]

Chambers

Chambers encompassed the judges and their aides. The Tribunal operated three Trial Chambers and one Appeals Chamber. The President of the Tribunal was also the presiding Judge of the Appeals Chamber.

Judges

At the time of the court's dissolution, there were seven permanent judges and one ad hoc judge who served on the Tribunal.[28][29] A total of 86 judges have been appointed to the Tribunal from 52 United Nations member states. Of those judges, 51 were permanent judges, 36 were ad litem judges, and one was an ad hoc judge. Note that one judge served as both a permanent and ad litem judge, and another served as both a permanent and ad hoc judge.

UN member and observer states could each submit up to two nominees of different nationalities to the UN Secretary-General.[30] The UN Secretary-General submitted this list to the UN Security Council which selected from 28 to 42 nominees and submitted these nominees to the UN General Assembly.[30] The UN General Assembly then elected 14 judges from that list.[30] Judges served for four years and were eligible for re-election. The UN Secretary-General appointed replacements in case of vacancy for the remainder of the term of office concerned.[30]

On 21 October 2015, Judge Carmel Agius of Malta was elected President of the ICTY and Liu Daqun of China was elected Vice-President; they assumed their positions on 17 November 2015.[31] His predecessors were Antonio Cassese of Italy (1993–1997), Gabrielle Kirk McDonald of the United States (1997–1999), Claude Jorda of France (1999–2002), Theodor Meron of the United States (2002–2005), Fausto Pocar of Italy (2005–2008), Patrick Robinson of Jamaica (2008–2011), and Theodor Meron (2011–2015).[28][32]

Name[28][32][29] State[28][32][29] Position(s)[28][32][29] Term began[28][32][29] Term ended[28][32][29]
Georges Abi-Saab  Egypt Permanent 17 November 1993 1 October 1995
Koffi Afande  Togo Permanent 12 December 2013 30 June 2016
Antonio Cassese  Italy Permanent / President 17 November 1993 17 February 2000
Jules Deschênes  Canada Permanent 17 November 1993 1 May 1997
Adolphus Karibi-Whyte  Nigeria Permanent / Vice-President 17 November 1993 16 November 1998
Germain Le Foyer De Costil  France Permanent 17 November 1993 1 January 1994
Li Haopei  China Permanent 17 November 1993 6 November 1997
Gabrielle McDonald  United States Permanent / President 17 November 1993 17 November 1999
Elizabeth Odio Benito  Costa Rica Permanent / Vice-President 17 November 1993 16 November 1998
Rustam Sidhwa  Pakistan Permanent 17 November 1993 15 July 1996
Ninian Stephen  Australia Permanent 17 November 1993 16 November 1997
Lal Chand Vohrah  Malaysia Permanent 17 November 1993 16 November 2001
Claude Jorda  France Permanent / President 19 January 1994 11 March 2003
Fouad Riad  Egypt Permanent 4 October 1995 16 November 2001
Saad Saood Jan  Pakistan Permanent 4 September 1996 16 November 1998
Mohamed Shahabuddeen  Guyana Permanent / Vice-President 16 June 1997 10 May 2009
Richard May  United Kingdom Permanent 17 November 1997 17 March 2004
Florence Mumba  Zambia Permanent / Vice-President 17 November 1997 16 November 2005
Rafael Nieto Navia  Colombia Permanent 17 November 1997 16 November 2001
Ad litem 3 December 2001 5 December 2003
Almiro Rodrigues  Portugal Permanent 17 November 1997 16 November 2001
Wang Tieya  China Permanent 17 November 1997 31 March 2000
Patrick Robinson  Jamaica Permanent / President 16 October 1998 8 April 2015
Mohamed Bennouna  Morocco Permanent 16 November 1998 28 February 2001
David Hunt  Australia Permanent 16 November 1998 14 November 2003
Patricia Wald  United States Permanent 17 November 1999 16 November 2001
Liu Daqun  China Permanent / Vice-President 3 April 2000 31 December 2017
Carmel Agius  Malta Permanent / President; Vice-President 14 March 2001 31 December 2017
Mohamed Fassi-Fihri  Morocco Ad litem 14 March 2001 16 November 2001
10 April 2002 1 November 2002
Theodor Meron  United States Permanent / President 14 March 2001 31 December 2017
Fausto Pocar  Italy Permanent / President 14 March 2001 31 December 2017
Mehmet Güney  Turkey Permanent 11 July 2001 30 April 2015
Maureen Harding Clark  Ireland Ad litem 6 September 2001 11 March 2003
Fatoumata Diarra  Mali Ad litem 6 September 2001 11 March 2003
Ivana Janu  Czech Republic Ad litem 6 September 2001 11 September 2004
Amarjeet Singh  Singapore Ad litem 6 September 2001 5 April 2002
Chikako Taya  Japan Ad litem 6 September 2001 1 September 2004
Sharon Williams  Canada Ad litem 6 September 2001 17 October 2003
Asoka de Zoysa Gunawardana  Sri Lanka Permanent 4 October 2001 5 July 2003
Amin El Mahdi  Egypt Permanent 17 November 2001 16 November 2005
O-Gon Kwon  Korea, South Permanent / Vice-President 17 November 2001 31 March 2016
Alphons Orie  Netherlands Permanent 17 November 2001 31 December 2017
Wolfgang Schomburg  Germany Permanent 17 November 2001 17 November 2008
Per-Johan Lindholm  Finland Ad litem 10 April 2002 17 October 2003
Volodymyr Vasylenko  Ukraine Ad litem 10 April 2002 25 January 2005
Carmen Argibay  Argentina Ad litem 5 November 2002 18 January 2005
Joaquín Martín Canivell  Spain Ad litem 2 May 2003 27 September 2006
Inés Weinberg de Roca  Argentina Permanent 17 June 2003 15 August 2005
Jean-Claude Antonetti  France Permanent 1 October 2003 31 March 2016
Vonimbolana Rasoazanany  Madagascar Ad litem 17 November 2003 16 March 2006
Albertus Swart  Netherlands Ad litem 1 December 2003 16 March 2006
Kevin Parker  Australia Permanent / Vice-President 8 December 2003 28 February 2011
Krister Thelin  Sweden Ad litem 15 December 2003 10 July 2008
Chris Van Den Wyngaert  Belgium Permanent 15 December 2003 31 August 2009
Iain Bonomy  United Kingdom Permanent 7 June 2004 31 August 2009
Hans Brydensholt  Denmark Ad litem 21 September 2004 30 June 2006
Albin Eser  Germany Ad litem 21 September 2004 30 June 2006
Claude Hanoteau  France Ad litem 25 January 2005 27 September 2006
György Szénási  Hungary Ad litem 25 January 2005 30 May 2005
Andrésia Vaz  Senegal Permanent 15 August 2005 31 May 2013
Bakone Moloto  South Africa Permanent 17 November 2005 31 December 2017
Frank Höpfel  Austria Ad litem 2 December 2005 3 April 2008
Janet Nosworthy  Jamaica Ad litem 2 December 2005 26 February 2009
Árpád Prandler  Hungary Ad litem 7 April 2006 7 June 2013
Stefan Trechsel   Switzerland Ad litem 7 April 2006 7 June 2013
Antoine Mindua  Congo, Democratic Republic of the Ad litem 25 April 2006 30 July 2016
Ali Nawaz Chowhan  Pakistan Ad litem 26 June 2006 26 February 2009
Tsvetana Kamenova  Bulgaria Ad litem 26 June 2006 26 February 2009
Kimberly Prost  Canada Ad litem 3 July 2006 31 March 2010
Ole Støle  Norway Ad litem 13 July 2006 10 June 2010
Frederik Harhoff  Denmark Ad litem 9 January 2007 28 August 2013
Flavia Lattanzi  Italy Ad litem 2 July 2007 31 March 2016
Pedro David  Argentina Ad litem 27 February 2008 13 September 2011
Elizabeth Gwaunza  Zimbabwe Ad litem 3 March 2008 8 June 2013
Michèle Picard  France Ad litem 3 March 2008 8 June 2013
Uldis Kinis  Latvia Ad litem 10 March 2008 18 April 2011
Christoph Flügge  Germany Permanent 18 November 2008 31 December 2017
Melville Baird  Trinidad and Tobago Ad litem 15 December 2008 31 March 2016
Burton Hall  Bahamas, The Permanent 7 August 2009 30 July 2016
Ad hoc 3 October 2016 31 December 2017
Howard Morrison  United Kingdom Permanent 31 August 2009 31 March 2016
Guy Delvoie  Belgium Permanent 1 September 2009 30 July 2016
Prisca Matimba Nyambe  Zambia Ad litem 1 December 2009 18 December 2012
Arlette Ramaroson  Madagascar Permanent 19 October 2011 21 December 2015
Khalida Khan  Pakistan Permanent 6 March 2012 21 December 2015
Bakhtiyar Tuzmukhamedov  Russia Permanent 1 June 2012 21 December 2015
William Sekule  Tanzania Permanent 18 March 2013 30 April 2015
Mandiaye Niang  Senegal Permanent 30 October 2013 31 March 2016

Registry

The Registry was responsible for handling the administration of the Tribunal; activities included keeping court records, translating court documents, transporting and accommodating those who appear to testify, operating the Public Information Section, and such general duties as payroll administration, personnel management and procurement. It was also responsible for the Detention Unit for indictees being held during their trial and the Legal Aid program for indictees who cannot pay for their own defence. It was headed by the Registrar, a position occupied over the years by Theo van Boven of the Netherlands (February 1994 to December 1994), Dorothée de Sampayo Garrido-Nijgh of the Netherlands (1995–2000), Hans Holthuis of the Netherlands (2001–2009), and John Hocking of Australia (May 2009 to December 2017).

Detention facilities

A typical 10 m2[33] single cell at the ICTY detention facilities

Those defendants on trial and those who were denied a provisional release were detained at the United Nations Detention Unit on the premises of the Penitentiary Institution Haaglanden, location Scheveningen in Belgisch Park, a suburb of The Hague, located some 3 km by road from the courthouse. The indicted were housed in private cells which had a toilet, shower, radio, satellite TV, personal computer (without internet access) and other luxuries. They were allowed to phone family and friends daily and could have conjugal visits. There was also a library, a gym and various rooms used for religious observances. The inmates were allowed to cook for themselves. All of the inmates mixed freely and were not segregated on the basis of nationality. As the cells were more akin to a university residence instead of a jail, some had derisively referred to the ICT as the "Hague Hilton".[34] The reason for this luxury relative to other prisons is that the first president of the court wanted to emphasise that the indictees were innocent until proven guilty.[35]

Controversies

Criticisms of the court include:

  • Carla Del Ponte, the chief prosecutor of the tribunal, said in 2021 that the US did not want the ICTY to scrutinise war crimes committed by the Kosovo Liberation Army. According to her, Madeleine Albright, the United States secretary of state at the time, told her to slow down the investigation of Ramush Haradinaj.[36]
  • Michael Mandel, William Blum and others accused the court of having a pro-NATO bias due to its refusal to prosecute NATO officials and politicians for war crimes.[37]
  • On 6 December 2006, the Tribunal at The Hague approved the use of force-feeding of Serbian politician Vojislav Šešelj. They decided it was not "torture, inhuman or degrading treatment if there is a medical necessity to do so... and if the manner in which the detainee is force-fed is not inhuman or degrading".[38]
  • Reducing the indictment charges after the arrest of Ratko Mladić, Croatian officials publicly condemned chief prosecutor Serge Brammertz for his announcement that the former Bosnian Serb General, will be tried solely for crimes allegedly committed in Bosnia, not in Croatia.[39][40]
  • Critics[41] have questioned whether the Tribunal exacerbates tensions rather than promotes reconciliation,[42][43] as is claimed by Tribunal supporters. Polls show a generally negative reaction to the Tribunal among both Serbs and Croats.[43] A majority of Serbs and Croats have expressed doubts regarding the ICTY's integrity and question the tenability of its legal procedures.[43]
  • 68% of indictees have been Serbs (or Montenegrins),[43] to the extent that a sizeable portion of the Bosnian Serb and Croatian Serb political and military leaderships have been indicted. Many have seen this as reflecting bias,[44] while the Tribunal's defenders have seen this as indicative of the actual proportion of crimes committed. However, Marko Hoare claimed that, aside from Milošević, only Momčilo Perišić (Chief of the General Staff of the Yugoslav Army), who was acquitted, has been indicted from the Serbian military or political top when it comes to wars in Croatia and Bosnia.[43]
  • According to Hoare, a former employee at the ICTY, an investigative team worked on indictments of senior members of the "joint criminal enterprise", including not only Milošević but also Veljko Kadijević, Blagoje Adžić, Borisav Jović, Branko Kostić, Momir Bulatović and others. However, Hoare claims that, due to Carla del Ponte's intervention, these drafts were rejected, and the indictment limited to Milošević alone.[45]
  • There have been allegations of censorship: in July 2011, the Appeals Chamber of ICTY confirmed the judgment of the Trial Chamber which found journalist and former Tribunal's OTP spokesperson Florence Hartmann guilty of contempt of court and fined her €7,000. She disclosed documents of FR Yugoslavia's Supreme Defense Council meetings and criticized the Tribunal for granting confidentiality of some information in them to protect Serbia's 'vital national interests' during Bosnia's lawsuit against the country for genocide in front of the International Court of Justice. Hartmann argued that Serbia was freed of the charge of genocide because ICTY redacted certain information in the Council meetings. Since these documents have in the meantime been made public by the ICTY itself, a group of organizations and individuals, who supported her, said that the Tribunal in this appellate proceedings "imposed a form of censorship aimed to protect the international judges from any form of criticism".[46] (France refused to extradite Hartmann to serve the prison sentence issued against her by the ICTY after she refused to pay the €7,000 fine.)
  • Klaus-Peter Willsch compared the Ante Gotovina verdict, in which the late Croatian president Franjo Tuđman was posthumously found to have been participating in a Joint Criminal Enterprise, with the 897 Cadaver Synod trial in Rome, when Pope Stephen VI had the corpse of Pope Formosus exhumed, put on trial and posthumously convicted.[47]
  • Some sentences have been considered too mild, even within the Tribunal,[48] complained at small sentences of convicted war criminals in comparison with their crimes. In 2010, Veselin Šljivančanin's sentence for his involvement in the Vukovar massacre was cut from 17 to 10 years, which caused outrage in Croatia. Upon hearing that news, Vesna Bosanac, who had been in charge of the Vukovar hospital during the fall of the city, said that the "ICTY is dead" for her: "For crimes that he [Šljivančanin], had committed in Vukovar, notably at Ovčara, he should have been jailed for life. I'm outraged.... The Hague(-based) tribunal has showed again that it is not a just tribunal."[49] Danijel Rehak, the head of Croatian Association of Prisoners in Serbian Concentration Camps, said, "The shock of families whose beloved ones were killed at Ovčara is unimaginable. The court made a crucial mistake by accepting a statement of a JNA officer to whom Šljivančanin was a commander. I cannot understand that".[49] Pavle Strugar's 8-year sentence for shelling of Dubrovnik, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, also caused outrage in Croatia.[50] Judge Kevin Parker (of Australia) was named in a Croatian journal (Nacional) as a main cause of the system's failure for having dismissed the testimonies of numerous witnesses.[50]
  • Some of the defendants, such as Slobodan Milošević, claimed that the Court has no legal authority because it was established by the UN Security Council instead of the UN General Assembly and so had not been created on a broad international basis. The Tribunal was established on the basis of Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter; the relevant portion of which reads "the Security Council can take measures to maintain or restore international peace and security".[51] The legal criticism has been succinctly stated in a memorandum issued by Austrian Professor Hans Köchler, which was submitted to the President of the Security Council in 1999. British Conservative Party MEP Daniel Hannan has called for the court to be abolished, claiming it is anti-democratic and a violation of national sovereignty.[52]
  • The interactive thematic debate on the role of international criminal justice in reconciliation was convened on 10 April 2013 by the President of the General Assembly during the resumed part of the GA's 67th Session.[53] The debate was scheduled after the convictions of Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markač for inciting war crimes against Serbs in Croatia were overturned by an ICTY Appeals Panel in November 2012.[54] The ICTY president Theodor Meron announced that all three Hague war crimes courts turned down the invitation of UNGA president to participate in the debate about their work.[55] The President of the General Assembly described Meron's refusal to participate in this debate as scandalous.[56] He emphasized that he does not shy away from criticizing the ICTY, which has "convicted nobody for inciting crimes committed against Serbs in Croatia."[57] Tomislav Nikolić, the president of Serbia criticized the ICTY, claiming it did not contribute but hindered reconciliation in the former Yugoslavia. He added that although there is no significant ethnic disproportion among the number of casualties in the Yugoslav wars, the ICTY sentenced Serbs and ethnic Serbs to a combined total of 1150 years in prison while claiming that members of other ethnic groups have been sentenced to a total of 55 years for crimes against Serbs.[58] Vitaly Churkin, the ambassador of Russia to the UN, criticized the work of the ICTY, especially the overturned convictions of Gotovina and Ramush Haradinaj.[59]
  • Regarding the final case on 29 November 2017 proceeding encompassing six Bosnian-Croat individuals, one of whom, Slobodan Praljak, in protest in court drank poison and subsequently died,[60][61] the Prime Minister of Croatia Andrej Plenković claimed the verdict was "unjust" and Praljak's suicide "speaks of deep moral injustice to the six Croats, from Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Croat people". He criticized the verdict because it did not recognize the assistance and support provided by Croatia to Bosnia and Herzegovina and the collaboration of both armies at a time when the neighbouring state was faced with the "Greater-Serbian aggression" and when its territorial integrity was compromised, as well it alludes to the link between the then leadership of the Republic of Croatia, while in the previous verdict to Bosnian-Serb Ratko Mladić does not recognize the connection with Serbia's state officials at that time.[62][63]
  • Dutch filmmaker Jos de Putter made a trilogy, The Milosevic Case – Glosses at Trial, for Tegenlicht investigative slot at the VPRO. The main hypothesis of the film is that ICTY prosecution has been struggling and failing to prove any link between Milosevic and the media version of the truth of the bloody break-up of Yugoslavia. The legitimacy of the prosecution methodology in securing the witness accounts and evidence, in general, has been examined by the filmmaker.

See also

Notes

  1. Officially the "International Tribunal for the Prosecution of Persons Responsible for Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law Committed in the Territory of the Former Yugoslavia since 1991"

References

  1. "History | International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia". www.icty.org. Retrieved 21 December 2022.
  2. 1 2 Serbia's last war crimes fugitive arrested, Al Jazeera.net, 20 July 2011.
  3. "The ICTY renders its final judgement in the Prlić et al. appeal case". International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia. 29 November 2017. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  4. "ICTY President Agius delivers final address to UN General Assembly". International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  5. 1 2 "UNSC Resolution 1966" (PDF). Retrieved 21 December 2022.
  6. United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (3 May 1993). "Report of the Secretary-General Pursuant to Paragraph 2 of Security Council Resolution 808 (1993) [Contains text of the Statute of the International Tribunal for the Prosecution of Persons Responsible for Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law Committed in the Territory of the Former Yugoslavia since 1991]". Refworld. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  7. Hazan, Pierre. 2004. Justice in a Time of War: The True Story Behind the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia. College Station: Texas A & M University Press
  8. "Enforcement of Sentences". Retrieved 31 July 2015.
  9. Rachel S. Taylor. "Tribunal Law Made Simple: What is the ICTY, How Was It Established, and What Types of Cases Can it Hear?". Global Policy Forum. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  10. Vohrah, L.C. (2004). "Some Insights into the Early Years". Journal of International Criminal Justice. 2 (2): 388. doi:10.1093/jicj2.2.388.
  11. Pronk, E. The ICTY and the people from the former Yugoslavia – a reserved relationship.
  12. "First Defendant Faces Tribunal on War Crimes / Bosnian Serb pleads not guilty". SFGate. Retrieved 26 February 2018.
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  14. "Zdravko Mucić" (PDF).
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  57. Gladstone, Rick (16 April 2013). "Serb Defends U.N. Meeting Boycotted by the U.S." The New York Times. New York. Retrieved 29 April 2015. has "convicted nobody for inciting crimes committed against Serbs in Croatia."
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Further reading

  • Ackerman, J.E. and O'Sullivan, E.: Practice and procedure of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia: with selected materials for the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, The Hague, KLI, 2000.
  • Aldrich, G.H.: Jurisdiction of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, American Journal of International Law, 1996, pp. 64–68h
  • Bachmann, Klaus; Sparrow-Botero, Thomas and Lambertz, Peter: When justice meets politics. Independence and autonomy of ad hoc international criminal tribunals. Peter Lang International 2013.
  • Bassiouni, M.C.: The Law of the International Criminal Tribunal of the Former Yugoslavia, New York, Transnational Publications, 1996.
  • Boelaert-Suominen, S.: The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) anno 1999: its place in the international legal system, mandate and most notable jurisprudence, Polish Yearbook of International Law, 2001, pp. 95–155.
  • Boelaert-Suominen, S.: The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and the Kosovo Conflict, International Review of the Red Cross, 2000, pp. 217–251.
  • Campbell, Kirsten (December 2007). "The gender of transitional justice: Law, sexual violence and the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia". International Journal of Transitional Justice. Oxford Journals. 1 (3): 411–432. doi:10.1093/ijtj/ijm033.
  • Cassese, Antonio: The ICTY: A Living and Vital Reality", Journal of International Criminal Justice Vol.2, 2004, No.2, pp. 585–597
  • Cisse, C.: The International Tribunals for the Former Yugoslavia and Rwanda: some elements of comparison, Transnational Law and Contemporary Problems, 1997, pp. 103–118.
  • Clark, R.S. and SANN, M.: A critical study of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, European Journal of International Law, 1997, pp. 198–200.
  • Goldstone, R.J.: Assessing the work of the United Nations war crimes tribunals, Stanford Journal of International Law, 1997, pp. 1–8.
  • HadžiMuhamedović, S.: Syncretic debris: from shared Bosnian saints to the ICTY courtroom, Ethnoscripts 20(1), 2019, pp. 79–109.
  • Ivković, S.K.: Justice by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, Stanford Journal of International Law, 2001, pp. 255–346.
  • Jones, J.W.R.D.: The practice of the international criminal tribunals for the Former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, New York, Transnational, 2000.
  • Kaszubinski, M.: The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, in: Bassiouni, M.C. (ed.), Post-conflict justice, New York, Transnational, 2002, pp. 459–585.
  • Kerr, R.: International judicial intervention: the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, International Relations, 2000, pp. 17–26.
  • Kerr, R.: The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia: an exercise in law, politics and diplomacy, Oxford, OUP, 2004.
  • King, F. and La Rosa, A.: Current Developments. International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, B.T.I.R., 1997, pp. 533–555.
  • Klip, A. and Sluiter, G.: Annotated leading cases of international criminal tribunals; (Vol. III) The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia 2000–2001, Schoten, Intersentia, 2003.
  • Köchler, Hans: Global Justice or Global Revenge? International Criminal Justice at the Crossroads, Vienna/New York, Springer, 2003, pp. 166–184.
  • Kolb, R.: The jurisprudence of the Yugoslav and Rwandan Criminal Tribunals on their jurisdiction and on international crimes, British Yearbook of International Law, 2001, pp. 259–315.
  • Lamb, S.: The powers of arrest of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, British Yearbook of International Law, 2000, pp. 165–244.
  • Laughland, J.: Travesty: The Trial of Slobodan Milošević and the Corruption of International Justice, London, Pluto Press, 2007.
  • Lescure, K.: International justice for former Yugoslavia: the working of the International Criminal Tribunal of the Hague, The Hague, KLI, 1996.
  • Mak, T.: The Case Against an International War Crimes Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, (1995) International Peacekeeping, 2:4, 536–563.
  • McAllister, Jacqueline R. 2020. "Deterring Wartime Atrocities: Hard Lessons from the Yugoslav Tribunal." International Security 44(3). Available at: Deterring Wartime Atrocities: Hard Lessons from the Yugoslav Tribunal.[1]
  • McDonald, G.K.: Reflections on the contributions of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, Hastings International and Comparative Law Review, 2001, pp. 155–172.
  • Mettraux, G.: Crimes against humanity in the jurisprudence of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and for Rwanda, Harvard International Law Journal, 2002, pp. 237–316.
  • Morris, V. and Scharf, M.P.: An insider's guide to the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, African Yearbook of International Law, 1995, pp. 441–446.
  • Murphy, S.D.: Progress and jurisprudence of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, American Journal of International Law, 1999, pp. 57–96.
  • Panovsky, D.: Some war crimes are not better than others: the failure of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia to prosecute war crimes in Macedonia, Northwestern University Law Review, 2004, pp. 623–655.
  • Pilouras, S.: International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and Milosevic's trial, New York Law School Journal of Human Rights, 2002, pp. 515–525.
  • Pronk, E.: "The ICTY and the people from the former Yugoslavia. A reserved relationship." (thesis)
  • Roberts, K.: The law of persecution before the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, Leiden Journal of International Law, 2002, pp. 623–663.
  • Robinson, P.L.: Ensuring fair and expeditious trials at the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, European Journal of International Law, 2000, pp. 569–589.
  • Shenk, M.D.: International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and for Rwanda, The International Lawyer, 1999, pp. 549–554.
  • Shraga, D. and Zackalin, R.: The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, European Journal of International Law, 1994, pp. 360–380.
  • Sjocrona, J.M.: The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia: some introductory remarks from a defence point of view, Leiden Journal of International Law, 1995, pp. 463–474.
  • Tolbert, David: The ICTY: Unforeseen Successes and Foreseeable Shortcomings, The Fletcher Forum of World Affairs, Vol.26, No.2, Summer/Fall 2002, pp. 7–20
  • Tolbert, David: Reflections on the ICTY Registry, Journal of International Criminal Justice, Vol.2, No.2, 2004, pp. 480–485
  • Vierucci, L.: The First Steps of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, European Journal of International Law, 1995, pp. 134–143.
  • Warbrick, C. and McGoldrick, D.: Co-operation with the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, International and Comparative Law Quarterly, 1996, pp. 947–953.
  • Wilson, Richard Ashby: 'Judging History: the Historical Record of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia.' Human Rights Quarterly. 2005. August. Vol. 27, No. 3, pp. 908–942.
  1. McAllister, Jacqueline R. (January 2020). "Deterring Wartime Atrocities: Hard Lessons from the Yugoslav Tribunal". International Security. 44 (3): 84–128. doi:10.1162/isec_a_00370. S2CID 209892079.
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