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Notion(s) Filing Case
Appeal Judgement - 11.04.2018 ŠEŠELJ Vojislav
(MICT -16-99-A)

159.  The Appeals Chamber recalls that persecution as a crime against humanity under Article 5(h) of the ICTY Statute is an act or omission which: (i) discriminates in fact and which denies or infringes upon a fundamental right laid down in international customary or treaty law (actus reus); and (ii) was carried out deliberately with the intention to discriminate on one of the listed grounds, specifically race, religion, or politics (mens rea).[1] In assessing whether speech may constitute an underlying act of persecution, the ICTR Appeals Chamber in the Nahimana et al. case held that “speech inciting to violence against a population on the basis of ethnicity, or any other discriminatory ground, violates the right to security of the members of the targeted group and therefore constitutes ‘actual discrimination’”.[2] It further held that the context in which the underlying act of persecution takes place is particularly important for the purpose of assessing its gravity.[3]

[…]

163.  […] The Appeals Chamber also considers that Šešelj’s speech denigrated the Croatians of Hrtkovci on the basis of their ethnicity, in violation of their right to respect for dignity as human beings. In the Appeals Chamber’s view, Šešelj’s speech rises to a level of gravity amounting to the actus reus of persecution as a crime against humanity. […].

[1] See, e.g., Nahimana et al. Appeal Judgement, para. 985; Kvočka Appeal Judgement, para. 320; Blaškić Appeal Judgement, para. 131.

[2] Nahimana et al. Appeal Judgement, para. 986, referring to Article 3 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

[3] Nahimana et al. Appeal Judgement, paras. 987, 988.

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ICTY Statute Article 5(h)
Notion(s) Filing Case
Appeal Judgement - 27.01.2014 ĐORĐEVIĆ Vlastimir
(IT-05-87/1-A)

850. The Appeals Chamber notes that the definition and elements of sexual assault have been discussed, in various degrees of detail, by several trial chambers.[1] Trial chambers have held that sexual assault is broader than rape and encompasses “all serious abuses of a sexual nature inflicted upon the physical and moral integrity of a person by means of coercion, threat of force or intimidation in a way that is humiliating and degrading for the victim’s dignity”.[2] The Appeals Chamber notes that the Milutinović et al. Trial Chamber, after a thorough analysis, identified the elements of sexual assault as follows:

(a) The physical perpetrator commits an act of a sexual nature on another; this includes requiring that other person to perform such an act.
(b) That act infringes the victim’s physical integrity or amounts to an outrage to the victim’s personal dignity.
(c) The victim does not consent to the act.
(d) The physical perpetrator intentionally commits the act.
(e) The physical perpetrator is aware that the act occurred without the consent of the victim.[3]

851. This definition was adopted by the Trial Chamber in the present case.[4] While the Appeals Chamber is satisfied that this definition correctly reflects the elements of sexual assault (other than rape), it finds that some further elaboration is useful.

852. It is evident that sexual assault requires that an act of a sexual nature take place. The Appeals Chamber notes that the act must also constitute an infringement of the victim’s physical or moral integrity.[5] Often the parts of the body commonly associated with sexuality are targeted or involved. Physical contact is, however, not required for an act to be qualified as sexual in nature.[6] Forcing a person to perform or witness certain acts may be sufficient, so long as the acts humiliate and/or degrade the victim in a sexual manner.[7] Furthermore, the Appeals Chamber agrees with the Milutinović et al. Trial Chamber that “it would be inappropriate to place emphasis on the sexual gratification of the perpetrator […]. In the context of an armed conflict, the sexual humiliation and degradation of the victim is a more pertinent factor than the gratification of the perpetrator” as it is precisely the sexual humiliation and degradation which “provides specificity to the offence”.[8] With regard to the issue of consent, the Appeals Chamber considers that any form of coercion, including acts or threats of (physical or psychological) violence, abuse of power, any other forms of duress and generally oppressive surrounding circumstances, may constitute proof of lack of consent and usually is an indication thereof.[9] In addition, a status of detention, particularly during armed conflict, will normally vitiate consent.[10]

[1]  See Milutinović et al. Trial Judgement, vol. 1, paras 195-201; Brđanin Trial Judgement, para. 1012; Stakić Trial Judgement, para. 757; Furundžija Trial Judgement, para. 186.

[2]  Brđanin Trial Judgement, para. 1012; Stakić Trial Judgement, para. 757; Furundžija Trial Judgement, para. 186 (in these cases, the definition of sexual assault was not challenged on appeal). See Kvočka et al. Trial Judgement, para. 180, referring to Akayesu Trial Judgement, para. 688 (the definition of sexual assault was again not challenged on appeal). See Akayesu Trial Judgement, in which the Trial Chamber held that “sexual violence, which includes rape, [is] any act of a sexual nature which is committed on a person under circumstances which are coercive. [It] is not limited to physical invasion of the human body and may include acts which do not involve penetration or even physical contact” (Akayesu Trial Judgement, para. 688. This definition was also not challenged on appeal).

[3]  Milutinović et al. Trial Judgement, vol. 1, para. 201.

[4]  Trial Judgement, para. 1768.

[5]  See Stakić Trial Judgement, para. 757; Furundžija Trial Judgement, para. 186.

[6]  See Milutinović et al. Trial Judgement, vol. 1, para. 199; Akayesu Trial Judgement, para. 688.

[7] See Milutinović et al. Trial Judgement, vol. 1, para. 199; Brđanin Trial Judgement, para. 1012; Stakić Trial Judgement, para. 757; Furundžija Trial Judgement, para. 186.

[8]  Milutinović et al. Trial Judgement, vol. 1, para. 199.

[9]  See Milutinović et al. Trial Judgement, vol. 1, para. 200.

[10]  See Kvočka et al. Appeal Judgement, para. 396; Kunarac et al. Appeal Judgement, paras 132-133; Milutinović et al. Trial Judgement, vol. 1, para. 200.

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Appeal Judgement - 14.12.2011 BAGOSORA et al. (Military I)
(ICTR-98-41-A)

729. […] The Appeals Chamber underscores that the desecration of Prime Minister Uwilingiyimana’s corpse constituted a profound assault on human dignity meriting unreserved condemnation under international law.[1] Such crimes strike at the core of national and human identity. However, the Appeals Chamber finds, Judge Pocar dissenting, that Bagosora was not charged on this basis, and thus cannot be held legally responsible for this act.

[1] In this regard, the Appeals Chamber notes that, in 1994, many domestic criminal codes, including the Rwandan criminal code, explicitly criminalised acts degrading the dignity of the corpse or interfering with a corpse. Any review of customary international law regarding this issue would need to take into account the large number of jurisdictions that criminalise degrading the dignity of or interfering with corpses. See, e.g., Botswana, Penal Code (1964) Ch. 08:01, s. 138; Canada, Criminal Code, R.S., 1985, c.C-34, s. 182(b); Costa Rica, Codigo Penal (1971), art. 207; Ethiopia, Penal Code, (1957), art. 287(b); Germany, Strafgesetzbuch (StGB), 1998, s. 168 (this section was added in 1987); India, Penal Code (1860), s. 297; Kenya, Penal Code (1970) Ch. 63, s. 137; Japan, Penal Code (Act No. 45 of 1907), art. 190; Lithuania, Criminal Code as amended (1961), art. 335; New Zealand, Crimes Act 1961 No. 43, art. 150(b); Nigeria, Criminal Code Act (1990), (Ch. 77), s. 242; United States of America (Oregon State), (1971), ORS.166.087; Pakistan, Criminal Code (1860), s. 297; Rwanda, Décret-loi N°21/77 du 18 août 1977 instituant le Code pénal, art. 352; Switzerland, Code pénal suisse du 21 décembre 1937, art. 262; Uganda, Penal Code Act 1950 (Ch. 120), s. 120; Vietnam, Penal Code (1985), s. 246. Humanitarian law also prohibits the maltreatment of corpses. See, e.g., The Laws of War on Land, Institute of International Law, Oxford, 9 September 1880, art. 19; Manual of the Laws of Naval War, Institute of International Law, Oxford, 9 August 1913, art. 85; Convention for the Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded and Sick in Armies in the Field. Geneva, 6 July 1906, art. 3; Convention for the Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded and Sick in Armies in the Field. Geneva, 27 July 1929, art. 3; Convention (X) of the Adaptation to Maritime Warfare of the Principles of the Geneva Convention, The Hague, 18 October 1907, art. 16; Geneva Convention (IV) Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, 12 August 1949, 75 UNTS 287, art. 16; Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, and Relating to the Protection of Victims of International Armed Conflicts (Protocol I), Geneva, 12 December 1977, art. 34(1); Yves Sandoz, Christoph Swinarski and Bruno Zimmermann, eds., Commentary on the Additional Protocols of 8 June 1977 to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, (Dordrecht: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 1987), para. 1307. The prohibition and criminalisation of maltreating corpses also extends to domestic military law. See, e.g., regarding prohibition: Jean-Marie Henckaerts and Louise Doswald-Beck, eds., International Committee for the Red Cross, Customary International Humanitarian Law, Vol. II (Practice) (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009) (“ICRC Study on Customary International Humanitarian Law”), pp. 2663-2667, referring to: Australia, Defence Force Manual (1994), s. 998; Bosnia and Herzegovina, Instructions to the Muslim Fighter (1993), sec. c; Netherlands, Military Manual (1993), p. VI-2, s. 1817(1); Philippines, Military Instructions (1989), ss. 2, 4; Spain, Royal Ordinance for the Armed Forces (1978), art. 140; Switzerland, Basic Military Manual (1987), arts. 194(2), 200(f); United Kingdom, Military Manual (1958), s. 380; United Kingdom, Law of Armed Conflict Manual (1981), Annex A, p. 47, s. 15. See, e.g., regarding criminalization: ICRC Study on Customary International Humanitarian Law, pp. 2665-2667, referring to Australia, War Crimes Act (1945), s. 3 (xxxv); Ecuador, Naval Manual (1989), p. 6-5, s. 6.2.5; Italy, Wartime Military Penal Code (1941), art. 197; Netherlands, Military Criminal Code as amended (1964), art. 143; New Zealand, Military Manual (1992), s. 1704(5); Nigeria, Manual on the Laws of War (undated), s. 6; Switzerland, Basic Military Manual (1987), arts. 194(2), 200(f); Switzerland, Military Criminal Code as amended (1927), art. 140(2); United Kingdom, Military Manual (1958), s. 626(b); United States, Field Manual (1956), s. 504(c); United States, Instructor’s Guide (1985), pp. 13, 14; Bangladesh, International Crimes (Tribunal) Act (1973), s. 3(2)(e); Ireland, Geneva Conventions Act as amended (1962), s. 4(1) and (4). Furthermore, in several trials following the Second World War, accused were convicted on charges of mutilating dead bodies. See, e.g., Kihuchi and Mahuchi case, United States Military Commission at Yokohama, Japan, 20 April 1946; Trial of Max Schmid, United States General Military Government Court at Dachau, Germany, 19 May 1947, United Nations War Crimes Commission Law Reports, vol. XIII, pp. 151, 152; Takehiko case, Australian Military Court at Wewak, 30 November 1945. See also Yochio and Other case, United States Military Commission at the Mariana Islands, 2-15 August 1946; Tisato case, Australian Military Court at Rabaul, 2 April 1946; Law Reports of Trials of War Criminals, prepared by the United Nations War Crimes Commission, 1949, Volume XV, p. 134.

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ICTR Statute Article 3(i) ICTY Statute Article 5(i)
Notion(s) Filing Case
Appeal Judgement - 19.07.2010 HARADINAJ et al.
(IT-04-84-A)

93. […] [T]he Appeals Chamber recalls the Čelebići Trial Judgement, which held that:

The basis of the inclusion of cruel treatment within Article 3 of the Statute is its prohibition by common article 3(1) of the Geneva Conventions, which proscribes, “violence to life and person, in particular murder of all kinds, mutilation, cruel treatment and torture”. In addition to its prohibition in common article 3, cruel treatment or cruelty is proscribed by article 87 of the Third Geneva Convention, which deals with penalties for prisoners of war, and article 4 of Additional Protocol II, which provides that the following behaviour is prohibited:

violence to life, health and physical and or mental well being of persons, in particular murder as well as cruel treatment such as torture, mutilation or any form of corporal punishment.

As with the offence of inhuman treatment, no international instrument defines this offence, although it is specifically prohibited by article 5 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, article 7 of the ICCPR, article 5, paragraph 2, of the Inter-American Convention of Human Rights and article 5 of the African Charter of Human and Peoples’ Rights. In each of these instruments, it is mentioned in the same category of offence as inhuman treatment.[1]

94. As is the case with the international law instruments mentioned above, the jurisprudence of the Tribunal does not provide a comprehensive definition of the offence of cruel treatment, but the Appeals Chamber has defined the elements of cruel treatment as a violation of the laws or customs of war as follows:

a. an intentional act or omission […] which causes serious mental or physical suffering or injury or constitutes a serious attack on human dignity,

b. committed against a person taking no active part in the hostilities.[2]

[1] Čelebići Trial Judgement, paras 548-549.

[2] Blaškić Appeal Judgement, para. 595 (citing Čelebići Appeal Judgement, paras 424, 426 (internal citations omitted)).

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ICTY Statute Article 3
Notion(s) Filing Case
Appeal Judgement - 05.05.2009 MRKŠIĆ & ŠLJIVANČANIN
(IT-95-13/1-A)

49. At the outset, the Appeals Chamber recalls that to enter a conviction for aiding and abetting murder by omission, at a minimum, all the basic elements of aiding and abetting must be fulfilled.[1] In this regard, the Appeals Chamber in Orić recalled that “omission proper may lead to individual criminal responsibility under Article 7(1) of the Statute where there is a legal duty to act”.[2] The actus reus of aiding and abetting by omission will thus be fulfilled when it is established that the failure to discharge a legal duty assisted, encouraged or lent moral support to the perpetration of the crime and had a substantial effect on the realisation of that crime.[3] The Appeals Chamber recalls that aiding and abetting by omission implicitly requires that the accused had the ability to act, such that there were means available to the accused to fulfil his duty.[4] Meanwhile, the required mens rea for aiding and abetting by omission is that “[t]he aider and abettor must know that his omission assists in the commission of the crime of the principal perpetrator and must be aware of the essential elements of the crime which was ultimately committed by the principal”.[5] As the Appeals Chamber held in the  Simić case,

it is not necessary that the aider and abettor knows either the precise crime that was intended or the one that was, in the event, committed. If he is aware that one of a number of crimes will probably be committed, and one of those crimes is in fact committed, he has intended to facilitate the commission of that crime, and is guilty as an aider and abetter.[6]

[…].

146. As Šljivančanin argues,[7] the Appeals Chamber has never set out the elements for a conviction for omission in detail.[8] In the Orić case, the Appeals Chamber considered the Trial Chamber’s findings in order to determine whether Atif Krdžić, Naser Orić’s subordinate, had been found responsible for aiding and abetting by omission.[9] It concluded that no such finding had been entered as the issue of whether Naser Orić’s subordinate had incurred criminal responsibility had not been resolved by the Trial Chamber.[10] In this context, with regard to the mode of liability of aiding and abetting by omission, the Appeals Chamber held that:

at a minimum, the offender’s conduct would have to meet the basic elements of aiding and abetting. Thus, his omission must be directed to assist, encourage or lend moral support to the perpetration of a crime and have a substantial effect upon the perpetration of the crime (actus reus). The aider and abettor must know that his omission assists in the commission of the crime of the principal perpetrator and must be aware of the essential elements of the crime which was ultimately committed by the principal (mens rea).[11]

Accordingly, the Appeals Chamber in Orić acknowledged that the basic elements of aiding and abetting apply notwithstanding whether this form of liability is charged as “omission”. The mens rea and actus reus requirements for aiding and abetting by omission are the same as for aiding and abetting by a positive act.[12] The critical issue to be determined is whether, on the particular facts of a given case, it is established that the failure to discharge a legal duty assisted, encouraged or lent moral support to the perpetration of the crime, and had a substantial effect on it. In particular, the question as to whether an omission constitutes “substantial assistance” to the perpetration of a crime requires a fact based enquiry.[13]

[1] Orić Appeal Judgement, para. 43.

[2] Orić Appeal Judgement, para. 43, citing Brđanin Appeal Judgement, para. 274; Galić Appeal Judgement, para. 175; Ntagerura et al. Appeal Judgement, paras 334, 370; Blaškić Appeal Judgement, para. 663.

[3] Orić Appeal Judgement, para. 43, citing Nahimana et al. Appeal Judgement, para. 482; Simić Appeal Judgement, para. 85.

[4] Cf. Ntagerura et al. Appeal Judgement, para. 335.

[5] Orić Appeal Judgement, para. 43 (footnotes omitted).

[6] Simić Appeal Judgement, para. 86, citing Blaškić Appeal Judgement, para. 50. See also Ndindabahizi Appeal Judgement, para. 122.

[7] Šljivančanin Appeal Brief, para. 192.

[8] Orić Appeal Judgement, para. 43, citing Simić Appeal Judgement, para. 85, fn. 259; Blaškić Appeal Judgement, para. 47. The Appeals Chamber notes that paragraph 554 of the Trial Judgement in the case at hand states that, in the Blaškić Appeal Judgement, the Appeals Chamber found that although not expressly stated, Tihomir Blaškić was apparently convicted for having aided and abetted by omission the inhuman treatment of detainees occasioned by their use as human shields. The Trial Chamber in the present case reached this conclusion by reasoning that given that the indictment against Tihomir Blaškić charged him with all the forms of responsibility under Article 7(1) of the Statute, and that all of these, save for aiding and abetting, were specifically rejected or clearly not considered, the Appeals Chamber must have entered a conviction for aiding and abetting as it was the only remaining mode of liability. This understanding of the Blaškić Appeal Judgement is incorrect. The Appeals Chamber would like to emphasize for the sake of clarity that the Blaškić Appeals Chamber did not convict Tihomir Blaškić for aiding and abetting by omission the inhuman treatment of detainees. The Blaškić Appeals Chamber affirmed Tihomir Blaškić’s conviction under Count 19 of the indictment pursuant to Article 7(1) of the Statute for the inhuman treatment of detainees occasioned by their use as human shields (a grave breach as recognised by Article 2(b) of the Statute). In reaching this decision the Blaškić Appeals Chamber: recalled that the indictment against him pleaded that by his acts and omissions, he had committed a grave breach as recognized by Articles 2(b), 7(1) and 7(3) (inhuman treatment) of the Statute of the International Tribunal; set out the legal definition of inhuman treatment under Article 2 of the Statute; found that the Trial Chamber’s finding that he knew of the use of the detainees as human shields was one that a reasonable trier of fact could have made; and found that his failure to prevent the continued use of the detainees as human shields, leaving the protected persons exposed to danger of which he was aware, constituted an intentional omission on his part. The Blaškić Appeals Chamber found that the elements constituting the crime of inhuman treatment had been met as there was an omission to care for protected persons which was deliberate and not accidental, which caused serious mental harm, and constituted a serious attack on human dignity. In the absence of proof that Tihomir Blaskić positively ordered the use of human shields, the Appeals Chamber concluded that his criminal responsibility was properly expressed as an omission pursuant to Article 7(1) as charged in the indictment and found him guilty under Article 7(1) of the Statute for the inhuman treatment of detainees occasioned by their use as human shields. Indeed, as the Trial Chamber in the present case noted, the Blaškić Appeals Chamber left open the possibility that in the circumstances of a given case, an omission may constitute the actus reus of aiding and abetting. This statement has to be read in context with the facts of that case. In his appeal, Tihomir Blaškić had argued that the Trial Chamber erroneously applied a strict liability standard to find him guilty as an aider and abettor. After concluding that the Trial Chamber had correctly set out the mens rea and actus reus requirements, the Blaškić Appeals Chamber found that the Trial Chamber was correct in part and erred in part in setting out the legal requirements of aiding and abetting. It was in the context of analyzing the Trial Chamber’s articulation of the actus reus of aiding and abetting (which the Trial Chamber considered might be perpetrated through an omission, provided this failure to act had a decisive effect on the commission of the crime and that it was coupled with the requisite mens rea) that the Blaškić Appeals Chamber stated that in the circumstances of a given case, an omission may constitute the actus reus of aiding and abetting. Furthermore, the Blaškić Appeals Chamber noted that the Trial Chamber did not hold Tihomir Blaškić responsible for aiding and abetting the crimes at issue; considered that this form of participation had been insufficiently litigated on appeal; concluded that this form of participation was not fairly encompassed by the indictment; and declined to consider this form of participation any further. See Blaškić Appeal Judgement, paras 43-52, 660, 665, 666, 668, 670, Disposition, p. 258.

[9] See Orić Appeal Judgement, paras 43-46.

[10] See Orić Appeal Judgement, para. 47.

[11] Orić Appeal Judgement, para. 43, citing Nahimana et al. Appeal Judgement, para. 482; Simić Appeal Judgement, paras 85, 86; Seromba Appeal Judgement, para. 56; Blagojević and Jokić Appeal Judgement, para. 127; Aleksovski Appeal Judgement, para. 162.

[12] Orić Appeal Judgement, para. 43; Blaškić Appeal Judgement, para. 47 (“The Appeals Chamber leaves open the possibility that in the circumstances of a given case, an omission may constitute the actus reus of aiding and abetting”).

[13] See Blagojević and Jokić Appeal Judgement, para. 134 (“The Appeals Chamber observes that the question of whether a given act constitutes substantial assistance to a crime requires a fact-based inquiry”). See also Muvunyi Appeal Judgement, para. 80.

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ICTR Statute Article 6(1) ICTY Statute Article 7(1)
Notion(s) Filing Case
Appeal Judgement - 28.11.2007 NAHIMANA et al. (Media case)
(ICTR-99-52-A)

986. The Appeals Chamber considers that hate speech targeting a population on the basis of ethnicity, or any other discriminatory ground, violates the right to respect for the dignity[1] of the members of the targeted group as human beings,[2] and therefore constitutes “actual discrimination”. In addition, the Appeals Chamber is of the view that speech inciting to violence against a population on the basis of ethnicity, or any other discriminatory ground, violates the right to security[3] of the members of the targeted group and therefore constitutes “actual discrimination”. However, the Appeals Chamber is not satisfied that hate speech alone can amount to a violation of the rights to life, freedom and physical integrity of the human being. Thus other persons need to intervene before such violations can occur; a speech cannot, in itself, directly kill members of a group, imprison or physically injure them.

987. The second question is whether the violation of fundamental rights (right to respect for human dignity, right to security) is as serious as in the case of the other crimes against humanity enumerated in Article 3 of the Statute. The Appeals Chamber is of the view that it is not necessary to decide here whether, in themselves, mere hate speeches not inciting violence against the members of a group are of a level of gravity equivalent to that for other crimes against humanity. As explained above, it is not necessary that every individual act underlying the crime of persecution should be of a gravity corresponding to other crimes against humanity: underlying acts of persecution can be considered together. It is the cumulative effect of all the underlying acts of the crime of persecution which must reach a level of gravity equivalent to that for other crimes against humanity. Furthermore, the context in which these underlying acts take place is particularly important for the purpose of  assessing their gravity.

[1] On the content of this right, see for example the Universal Declaration on Human Rights, the Preamble of which expressly refers to the recognition of dignity inherent to all human beings, while the Articles set out its various aspects.

[2] In this regard, it should be noted that, according to the Kvočka et al. Appeal Judgement (paras. 323-325), violations of human dignity (such as harassment, humiliation and psychological abuses) can, if sufficiently serious, constitute acts of persecution.

[3] On the right to security, see for example Article 3 of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights (“Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of person”).

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ICTR Statute Article 3(h) ICTY Statute Article 5(h)
Notion(s) Filing Case
Appeal Judgement - 09.05.2007 BLAGOJEVIĆ & JOKIĆ
(IT-02-60-A)

127. […] The actus reus need not serve as condition precedent for the crime and may occur before, during, or after the principal crime has been perpetrated.[1] The Appeals Chamber has also determined that the actus reus of aiding and abetting may be satisfied by a commander permitting the use of resources under his or her control, including personnel, to facilitate the perpetration of a crime.[2] […]

134. The Appeals Chamber observes that the question of whether a given act constitutes substantial assistance to a crime requires a fact-based inquiry. […] The Appeals Chamber, however, has already held that it is not required that the act of assistance serve as a condition precedent for the commission of the crime.[3] In making its findings, the Trial Chamber was aware of the more limited scope of assistance provided by the Bratunac Brigade in relation to other elements of the VRS and civilian authorities.[4] Nonetheless, the Trial Chamber described the contribution of the resources made available by Blagojević as “practical assistance” to the crimes which had a substantial effect on the commission of the crimes.[5] The Appeals Chamber recalls that, in a similar context, it reached the same conclusion in the Krstić Appeal Judgement.[6]

187. In the Blaškić Appeal Judgement, the Appeals Chamber considered whether the actus reus of aiding and abetting requires causation between the act of the accused and the act of the principal, or in other words, whether the contribution “must have a direct and important impact on the commission of the crime.”[7] The Appeals Chamber found that “proof of a cause-effect relationship between the conduct of the aider and abettor and the commission of the crime, or proof that such conduct served as a condition precedent to the commission of the crime, is not required.”[8] However, the Appeals Chamber reiterated that one of the requirements for the actus reus of aiding and abetting is that the support of the aider and abettor have a substantial effect upon the perpetration of the crime.[9]

188. In reaching this conclusion, in the Blaškić Appeal Judgement the Appeals Chamber referenced the definition of aiding and abetting in the Vasiljević Appeal Judgement, which is identical to that set out in the Tadić Appeal Judgement, and which, in specifying that the assistance given by an aider and abettor must be specifically directed, also contrasted aiding and abetting liability with that of joint criminal enterprise.[10] However, in the Blaškić Appeal Judgement the Appeals Chamber also found that the Trial Chamber correctly held that the standard for the actus reus was that set out in the Furundžija Trial Judgement: “consist[ing] of practical assistance, encouragement, or moral support which has a substantial effect on the perpetration of the crime.”[11]

189. The Appeals Chamber observes that while the Tadić definition has not been explicitly departed from, specific direction has not always been included as an element of the actus reus of aiding and abetting.[12] This may be explained by the fact that such a finding will often be implicit in the finding that the accused has provided practical assistance to the principal perpetrator which had a substantial effect on the commission of the crime. The Appeals Chamber also considers that, to the extent specific direction forms an implicit part of the actus reus of aiding and abetting, where the accused knowingly participated in the commission of an offence and his or her participation substantially affected the commission of that offence, the fact that his or her participation amounted to no more than his or her “routine duties” will not exculpate the accused.

195. The Appeals Chamber rejects the proposition that independent initiative, power, or discretion must be shown in order for the actus reus of aiding and abetting to be established. It recalls its previous rejection of the contention that there exists a special requirement that a position of superior authority be established before liability for aiding and abetting under Article 7(1) of the Statute can be recognized.[13] The apparent implication of that argument was that a person lacking sufficient authority to be considered a superior or to be acting independently, rather than in the course of routine duties, would necessarily also lack the sufficient authority or capacity to make a significant contribution to the commission of the crime. The Appeals Chamber considers that such a determination is to be made on a case by case basis. In this sense, an accused’s position of authority and ability to exercise independent initiative constitute contextual factors that may go to proving the significance of the accused's assistance in the commission of the crime.

[1] Blaškić Appeal Judgement, para. 48. See also Simić Appeal Judgement, para. 85; Ntagerura et al. Appeal Judgement, para. 372.

[2] Krstić Appeal Judgment, paras. 137, 138, 144.

[3] Simić Appeal Judgement, para. 85; Blaškić Appeal Judgement, para. 48.

[4] See, e.g., Trial Judgement, para. 191 (noting the primary role played by the MUP in the transport of Bosnian Muslim refugees out of Potočari on 13 July 1995); para. 835 (“In relation to Vidoje Blagojević, the Trial Chamber finds that he was not one of the major participants in the commission of the crimes”).

[5] Trial Judgement, paras. 747, 755, 757.

[6] Krstić Appeal Judgement, paras. 135-138.

[7] Blaškić Appeal Judgement, para. 43.

[8] Blaškić Appeal Judgement, para. 48. See also Simić Appeal Judgement, para. 85.

[9] Blaškić Appeal Judgement, para. 48.

[10] Vasiljević Appeal Judgement, para. 102.

[11] Blaškić Appeal Judgement, para. 46, quoting Blaškić Trial Judgement, para. 283 (quoting Furundzija Trial Judgement, para. 249).

[12] Krnojelac Appeal Judgement, para. 37, citing Tadić Appeal Judgment, para. 229; Čelebići Appeal Judgement, para. 345, citing Tadić Trial Judgement, para 688 (where the opposition is drawn between culpability where the accused “intentionally commits” a crime or where he “knowingly aids, abets or otherwise assists, directly and substantially, in the commission of such a crime” (emphasis added)). But see Čelebići Appeal Judgement, para. 352.

[13] Čelebići Appeal Judgement, para. 338 (in the context of the offence of unlawful confinement); Aleksovski Appeal Judgement, para. 170 (in relation to the offence of outrages of personal dignity consisting of the use of detainees for forced labour and as human shields).

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ICTR Statute Article 6(1) ICTY Statute Article 7(1)
Notion(s) Filing Case
Appeal Judgement - 28.02.2005 KVOČKA et al.
(IT-98-30/1-A)

323. Harassment, humiliation and psychological abuse are not listed as such under Article 5 of the Statute nor do they constitute specific offences under other articles of the Statute. The Appeals Chamber notes however that Common Article 3(1)(c) of the Geneva Conventions prohibits “outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment”. The specific offence of outrages upon personal dignity also appears in Article 75(2)(b) of Additional Protocol I.[1] The Appeals Chamber also considers that acts of harassment and other psychological abuse, depending on the circumstances, can clearly be assimilated to violations of the “mental well-being of persons” prohibited under Article 75(2)(a) of Additional Protocol I.[2] The Appeals Chamber recalls incidentally that acts underlying persecution under Article 5(h) of the Statute need not be considered a crime in international law.

See also paras 324-325.

[1] See also Article 4(2)(e) of Additional Protocol II.

[2] See ibid.

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ICTR Statute Article 3(h) ICTY Statute Article 5(h)
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Decision on Assignment of Counsel - 01.11.2004 MILOŠEVIĆ Slobodan
(IT-02-54-AR73.7)

11. Both the Trial Chamber and the Prosecutor recognize that defendants have a presumptive right to represent themselves before the Tribunal.  It is not hard to see why.  Article 21 of the ICTY Statute, which tracks Article 14 of the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights,[1] recognizes that a defendant is entitled to a basic set of “minimum guarantees, in full equality,” including the right “to defend himself in person or through legal assistance of his own choosing.”[2] This is a straightforward proposition:  given the text’s binary opposition between representation “through legal assistance” and representation “in person,” the Appeals Chamber sees no reasonable way to interpret Article 21 except as a guarantee of the right to self-representation.  Nor should this right be taken lightly.  The drafters of the Statute clearly viewed the right to self-representation as an indispensable cornerstone of justice, placing it on a structural par with defendants’ right to remain silent,[3] to confront the witnesses against them,[4] to a speedy trial,[5] and even to demand a court-appointed attorney if they cannot afford one themselves.[6]  In the words of the United States Supreme Court in Faretta v. California, which was recognized by the Trial Chamber as the classic statement of the right to self-representation,[7] an “unwanted counsel ‘represents’ the defendant only through a tenuous and unacceptable legal fiction,” such that “counsel [becomes] not an assistant, but a master.”[8] Defendants before this Tribunal, then, have the presumptive right to represent themselves notwithstanding a Trial Chamber’s judgment that they would be better off if represented by counsel.

12. While this right to self-representation is indisputable, jurisdictions around the world recognize that it is not categorically inviolable.  In Faretta itself, the United States Supreme Court noted that, since “[t]he right of self-representation is not a license to abuse the dignity of the courtroom,” a trial judge “may terminate self-representation by a defendant who deliberately engages in serious and obstructionist misconduct.”[9]  Recognizing this same basic contingency of the right, England,[10] Scotland,[11] Canada,[12] New Zealand,[13] and Australia[14] have all developed the principle that, in order to protect vulnerable witnesses from trauma, courts may severely restrict the right of defendants to represent themselves in sexual assault trials.  Scotland goes so far as to forbid such defendants from conducting any portion of their defenses in person.[15] And while this Appellate Chamber has not previously passed on the question, existing precedent from contemporary war crimes tribunals is unanimous in concluding that the right to self-representation “is a qualified and not an absolute right.”[16]

13. Recognizing that a defendant’s right to represent himself is subject to some limitations, however, does not resolve this case.  It must further be decided whether the right may be curtailed on the grounds that a defendant’s self-representation is substantially and persistently obstructing the proper and expeditious conduct of his trial.  The Appeals Chamber believes that, under the appropriate circumstances, the Trial Chamber may restrict the right on those grounds.  It is particularly instructive in this regard to consider the parallel statutory right of an accused before the Tribunal “to be tried in his [own] presence”[17] – a right that is found in the very same clause of the ICTY Statute as the right to self-representation.  Notwithstanding the express enunciation of this right in the Statute, Rule 80(B) of the Rules of Procedure and Evidence allows a Trial Chamber to “order the removal of an accused from the courtroom and continue the proceedings in the absence of the accused if the accused has persisted in disruptive conduct.”  If a defendant’s right to be present for his trial – which, to reiterate, is listed in the same string of rights and indeed in the same clause as the right to self-representation – may thus be restricted on the basis of substantial trial disruption, the Appeals Chamber sees no reason to treat the right  to self-representation any differently.

[1] See Report of the Secretary General Pursuant to Paragraph 2 of Security Council Resolution 808, 3 May 1993, S/25704, para. 106.

[2] Statute of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (hereinafter “ICTY Statute”), Art. 21, §4.

[3] ICTY Statute, Art. 21 §4(g).

[4] ICTY Statute, Art. 21 §4(e)

[5] ICTY Statute, Art. 21 §4(c).

[6] ICTY Statute, Art. 21 §4(d).

[7] Reasons for Assigning Counsel [Reasons for Decision on Assignment of Defence Counsel, 22 September 2004], para. 45.

[8] 422 U.S. 806, 820-821 (1975) (United States Supreme Court).

[9] 422 U.S. 806, 834 n.46 (1975) (United States Supreme Court).

[10] Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act (England) 1999, secs. 34-35

[11] Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995, sec. 288C(1), as amended by the Sexual Offences (Procedure and Evidence) (Scotland) Act 2002

[12] Criminal Code, RS 1985, sec. 486(2.3)

[13] Evidence Act 1908 (NZ), sec. 23F

[14] Crimes Act 1914 (Cth), secs 15YF, 15YG, 15YH; Evidence Act 1906 (Cth), sec. 106G; Criminal Procedure Act 1986 (NSW), sec. 294A; Sexual Offences (Evidence and Procedure) Act 1983 (NT), sec. 5; Evidence Act 1977 (Qld), sec. 21(L)-(S).

[15] Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995, sec. 288C(1), as amended by the Sexual Offences (Procedure and Evidence) (Scotland) Act 2002.  Civil law jurisdictions, of course, go further still:  as the Trial Chamber noted, defendants often have no choice but to accept representation by counsel in serious criminal cases.  E.g., Article 274 of the French Code of Criminal Procedure; Section 140 of the German Code of Criminal Procedure; Article 294 of the Belgian Code of Criminal Procedure; Article 71(1) of the Yugoslavian Code of Criminal Procedure; Articles 282 and 283 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of the Republic of Korea.

[16] Prosecutor v. Norman, Case No. SCSL-2004-14-T, Decision on the Application of Samuel Hinga Norman for Self Representation under Article 17(4)(d) of the Statute of the Special Court, 8 June 2004, paras. 9, 15 (Special Court for Sierra Leone) (denying defendant’s request to represent himself in significant part because of the “long adjournments” that would be necessary if the request were granted); see also Prosecutor v. Šešelj, Case No. IT-03-67-PT, Decision on Prosecution’s Motion for Order Appointing Counsel to Assist Vojislav Šešelj with his Defence,” 9 May 2003, para. 20 (recognizing that right to self-representation “is not absolute” and may be restricted on the basis of the Tribunal’s “legitimate interest in ensuring that the trial proceeds in a timely manner without interruptions, adjournments, or disruptions”).

[17] ICTY Statute, Art. 21 §4(d).

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ICTR Statute Article 20(4)(d) ICTY Statute Article 21(4)(d)
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Appeal Judgement - 29.07.2004 BLAŠKIĆ Tihomir
(IT-95-14-A)

593. The first issue for the Appeals Chamber to determine is whether international law criminalises the use of detainees to dig trenches of a military character per se because it necessarily constitutes cruel treatment. As regards the employment of civilians for such purposes, Article 51 of Geneva Convention IV, governing the treatment of civilians,[1] precludes the ‘Occupying Power’ from compelling ‘protected persons’ to serve in its armed or auxiliary forces.[2] The Occupying Power may in fact compel protected persons to work if they are over eighteen years of age, and subject to certain other conditions.[3] ‘Protected persons’ may not, however, be compelled to undertake any work which would involve them in the obligation to take part in military operations, and in no case shall the requisition of labour lead to a mobilization of workers “in an organisation of a military or semi-military character.”[4]

597. The Appeals Chamber has noted that the use of forced labour is not always unlawful.[5] Nevertheless, the treatment of non-combatant detainees may be considered cruel where, together with the other requisite elements, that treatment causes serious mental or physical suffering or injury or constitutes a serious attack on human dignity. The Appeals Chamber notes that Geneva Conventions III and IV require that when non-combatants are used for forced labour, their labour may not be connected with war operations[6] or have a military character or purpose.[7] The Appeals Chamber finds that the use of persons taking no active part in hostilities to prepare military fortifications for use in operations and against the forces with whom those persons identify or sympathise is a serious attack on human dignity and causes serious mental (and depending on the circumstances physical) suffering or injury. Any order to compel protected persons to dig trenches or to prepare other forms of military installations, in particular when such persons are ordered to do so against their own forces in an armed conflict, constitutes cruel treatment. The Appeals Chamber accordingly finds that a reasonable trier of fact could have come to the conclusion that the Appellant has violated the laws or customs of war under Article 3 of the Statute, and common Article 3(1)(a) of the Geneva Conventions, and is guilty under Count 16 for ordering the use of detainees to dig trenches.

[1] Found by the Trial Chamber to be applicable in this case; see Trial Judgement, paras. 133, 143, and 147.

[2] Article 51 of Geneva Convention IV reads as follows: “The Occupying Power may not compel protected persons to serve in its armed or auxiliary forces. No pressure or propaganda which aims at securing voluntary enlistment is permitted.

The Occupying Power may not compel protected persons to work unless they are over eighteen years of age, and then only on work which is necessary either for the needs of the army of occupation, or for the public utility services, or for the feeding, sheltering, clothing, transportation or health of the population of the occupied country. Protected persons may not be compelled to undertake any work which would involve them in the obligation of taking part in military operations. The Occupying Power may not compel protected persons to employ forcible means to ensure the security of the installations where they are performing compulsory labour.

The work shall be carried out only in the occupied territory where the persons whose services have been requisitioned are. Every such person shall, so far as possible, be kept in his usual place of employment. Workers shall be paid a fair wage and the work shall be proportionate to their physical and intellectual capacities. The legislation in force in the occupied country concerning working conditions, and safeguards as regards, in particular, such matters as wages, hours of work, equipment, preliminary training and compensation for occupational accidents and diseases, shall be applicable to the protected persons assigned to the work referred to in this Article.

In no case shall requisition of labour lead to a mobilization of workers in an organization of a military or semi-military character.”

[3] Ibid.

[4] Ibid.

[5] Indeed, Article 49 of Geneva Convention III begins: “The Detaining Power may utilize the labour of prisoners of war”. Geneva Convention IV (Article 51) specifies what labour is prohibited – there is no blanket prohibition against the use of protected persons for labour.

[6] Commentary to Geneva Convention III, [Commentary, III Geneva Convention relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War (1949), International Committee of the Red Cross, Geneva, 1960] p. 266, and Article 51 of Geneva Convention IV.

[7] Commentary to Geneva Convention III, p. 267. Commentary to Geneva Convention IV [Commentary, IV Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War (1949), International Committee of the Red Cross, Geneva, 1958], p. 294: “it is generally agreed that the inhabitants of the occupied territory cannot be requisitioned for such work as the construction of fortifications, trenches or aerial bases”.

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Other instruments Geneva Convention III: Article 49. Geneva Convention IV: Article 3(1)(a), 51.
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Appeal Judgement - 12.06.2002 KUNARAC et al.
(IT-96-23 & IT-96-23/1-A)

67. The determination of what constitutes a war crime is therefore dependent on the development of the laws and customs of war at the time when an act charged in an indictment was committed.  As was once noted, the laws of war “are not static, but by continual adaptation follow the needs of a changing world”.[1] There is no question that acts such as rape […], torture and outrages upon personal dignity are prohibited and regarded as criminal under the laws of war and that they were already regarded as such at the time relevant to these Indictments.

[1]   Trial of the Major War Criminals before the International Military Tribunal, Nüremberg, 14 November 1945-1 October 1946, vol 1, p 221.

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ICTY Statute Article 3
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Appeal Judgement - 12.06.2002 KUNARAC et al.
(IT-96-23 & IT-96-23/1-A)

142. With reference to the Torture Convention [1] and the case-law of the Tribunal and the ICTR, the Trial Chamber adopted a definition based on the following constitutive elements: [2]

(i) The infliction, by act or omission, of severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental.
(ii) The act or omission must be intentional.
(iii) The act or omission must aim at obtaining information or a confession, or at punishing, intimidating or coercing the victim or a third person, or at discriminating, on any ground, against the victim or a third person.

[…]

144. The Appeals Chamber largely concurs with the Trial Chamber’s definition[3] but wishes to hold the following. 

145. First, the Appeals Chamber wishes to provide further clarification as to the nature of the definition of torture in customary international law as it appears in the Torture Convention, in particular with regard to the participation of a public official or any other person acting in a non-private capacity. Although this point was not raised by the parties, the Appeals Chamber finds that it is important to address this issue in order that no controversy remains about this appeal or its consistency with the jurisprudence of the Tribunal.

146. The definition of the crime of torture, as set out in the Torture Convention, may be considered to reflect customary international law.[4] The Torture Convention was addressed to States and sought to regulate their conduct, and it is only for that purpose and to that extent that the Torture Convention deals with the acts of individuals acting in an official capacity.  Consequently, the requirement set out by the Torture Convention that the crime of torture be committed by an individual acting in an official capacity may be considered as a limitation of the engagement of States; they need prosecute acts of torture only when those acts are committed by “a public official...or any other person acting in a non-private capacity.”  So the Appeals Chamber in the Furundžija case was correct when it said that the definition of torture in the Torture Convention, inclusive of the public official requirement, reflected customary international law.[5] 

147. Furthermore, in the Furundžija Trial Judgement, the Trial Chamber noted that the definition provided in the Torture Convention related to “the purposes of [the] Convention”.[6]  The accused in that case had not acted in a private capacity, but as a member of armed forces during an armed conflict, and he did not question that the definition of torture in the Torture Convention reflected customary international law.  In this context, and with the objectives of the Torture Convention in mind, the Appeals Chamber in the Furundžija case was in a legitimate position to assert that “at least one of the persons involved in the torture process must be a public official or must at any rate act in a non-private capacity, e.g., as a de facto organ of a State or any other authority-wielding entity”.[7]  This assertion, which is tantamount to a statement that the definition of torture in the Torture Convention reflects customary international law as far as the obligation of States is concerned, must be distinguished from an assertion that this definition wholly reflects customary international law regarding the meaning of the crime of torture generally.

148. The Trial Chamber in the present case was therefore right in taking the position that the public official requirement is not a requirement under customary international law in relation to the criminal responsibility of an individual for torture outside of the framework of the Torture Convention. However, the Appeals Chamber notes that the Appellants in the present case did not raise the issue as to whether a person acting in a private capacity could be found guilty of the crime of torture; nor did the Trial Chamber have the benefit of argument on the issue of whether that question was the subject of previous consideration by the Appeals Chamber.

 

[1]   Article 1 of the Torture Convention: “For the purposes of this Convention, torture means any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession, punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having committed, or intimidating or coercing him or a third person, or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind, when such pain or suffering is inflicted by or at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in an official capacity.  It does not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in or incidental to lawful sanctions.”

[2]   Trial Judgement, para 497.

[3]   Trial Judgement, paras 142, 497.

[4]   See Furundžija Appeal Judgement, para 111; Čelebići Trial Judgement, para 459; Furundžija Trial Judgement, para 161 and Trial Judgement, para 472.  The ICTR comes to the same conclusion: see Akayesu Trial Judgement, para 593.  It is interesting to note that a similar decision was rendered very recently by the German Supreme Court (BGH St volume 46, p 292, p 303).

[5]   Furundžija Appeal Judgement, para 111: “The Appeals Chamber supports the conclusion of the Trial Chamber that “there is now general acceptance of the main elements contained in the definition set out in Article 1 of the Torture Convention [Furundžija Trial Judgement, para 161] and takes the view that the definition given in Article 1 [of the said Convention] reflects customary international law.”

[6]   Furundžija Trial Judgement, para 160, quoting Article 1 of the Torture Convention.

[7]   Furundžija Appeal Judgement, para 111, citing Furundžija Trial Judgement, para 162.

[8]   See Commission on Human Rights, Forty-eighth session, Summary Record of the 21st Meeting, 11 February 1992, Doc. E/CN.4/1992/SR.21, 21 February 1992, para 35: “Since it was clear that rape or other forms of sexual assault against women held in detention were a particularly ignominious violation of the inherent dignity and right to physical integrity of the human being, they accordingly constituted an act of torture.”  Other Chambers of this Tribunal have also noted that in some circumstances rape may constitute an act of torture: Furundžija Trial Judgement, paras 163 and 171 and Čelebići Trial Judgement, paras 475-493.

[9]   See Čelebići Trial Judgement, paras 480 and following, which quotes in this sense reports and decisions of organs of the UN and regional bodies, in particular, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and the European Court of Human Rights, stating that rape may be a form of torture.

[10]  Kunarac Appeal Brief [Appellant’s Brief for the Acused [sic] Dragoljub Kunarac Against Judgement of 22 February 2001, 16 July 2001 (public)] para 122 and Vuković Appeal Brief [Appellant’s Brief for the Acused [sic] Zoran Vuković Against Judgement of 22 February 2001, 12 July 2001 (confidential) (confidentiality lifted by Registry on 18 October 2001)], para 165.

[11]  Trial Judgement, paras 486 and 654.

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Appeal Judgement - 12.06.2002 KUNARAC et al.
(IT-96-23 & IT-96-23/1-A)

162. Contrary to the claims of the Appellant, the Appeals Chamber considers that the Trial Chamber was not obliged to define the specific acts which may constitute outrages upon personal dignity. Instead it properly presented the criteria which it used as a basis for measuring the humiliating or degrading character of an act or omission. The Trial Chamber, referring to the Aleksovski case, stated that the humiliation of the victim must be so intense that any reasonable person would be outraged.[1]  In coming to its conclusion, the Trial Chamber did not rely only on the victim’s purely subjective evaluation of the act to establish whether there had been an outrage upon personal dignity, but used objective criteria to determine when an act constitutes a crime of outrages upon personal dignity.

163. In explaining that outrages upon personal dignity are constituted by “any act or omission which would be generally considered to cause serious humiliation, degradation or otherwise be a serious attack on human dignity”,[2] the Trial Chamber correctly defined the objective threshold for an act to constitute an outrage upon personal dignity. It was not obliged to list the acts which constitute outrages upon personal dignity.  […]

[1]   Aleksovski Trial Judgement, para 56, quoted in  Trial Judgement, para 504.

[2]   Trial Judgement, para 507 (emphasis added).

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Appeal Judgement - 12.06.2002 KUNARAC et al.
(IT-96-23 & IT-96-23/1-A)

149. Torture is constituted by an act or an omission giving rise to “severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental”, but there are no more specific requirements which allow an exhaustive classification and enumeration of acts which may constitute torture. Existing case-law has not determined the absolute degree of pain required for an act to amount to torture.

150. The Appeals Chamber holds that the assumption of the Appellants that suffering must be visible, even long after the commission of the crimes in question, is erroneous. Generally speaking, some acts establish per se the suffering of those upon whom they were inflicted.  Rape is obviously such an act.  The Trial Chamber could only conclude that such suffering occurred even without a medical certificate. Sexual violence necessarily gives rise to severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, and in this way justifies its characterisation as an act of torture.[1]

151. Severe pain or suffering, as required by the definition of the crime of torture, can thus be said to be established once rape has been proved, since the act of rape necessarily implies such pain or suffering.[2] […]

[…]

[1]   See Commission on Human Rights, Forty-eighth session, Summary Record of the 21st Meeting, 11 February 1992, Doc. E/CN.4/1992/SR.21, 21 February 1992, para 35: “Since it was clear that rape or other forms of sexual assault against women held in detention were a particularly ignominious violation of the inherent dignity and right to physical integrity of the human being, they accordingly constituted an act of torture.”  Other Chambers of this Tribunal have also noted that in some circumstances rape may constitute an act of torture: Furundžija Trial Judgement, paras 163 and 171 and Čelebići Trial Judgement, paras 475-493.

[2]   See Čelebići Trial Judgement, paras 480 and following, which quotes in this sense reports and decisions of organs of the UN and regional bodies, in particular, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and the European Court of Human Rights, stating that rape may be a form of torture.

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Appeal Judgement - 20.02.2001 DELALIĆ et al. (Čelebići)
(IT-96-21-A)

338. [The Trial Chamber’s findings could be interpreted as suggesting that the] Trial Chamber believed that, as a legal matter, there could be no liability for unlawful confinement under Article 7(1) without superior responsibility under Article 7(3) being established. Such a legal interpretation is clearly incorrect, as it entwines two types of liability, liability under Article 7(1) and liability under Article 7(3). As emphasised by the Secretary-General’s Report,[1] the two liabilities are different in nature. Liability under Article 7(1) applies to direct perpetrators of crimes and to accomplices. Article 7(3) applies to persons exercising command or superior responsibility. As has already been acknowledged by the Appeals Chamber in another context, these principles are quite separate and neither is dependent in law upon the other. In the Aleksovski Appeal Judgement, the Appeals Chamber rejected a Trial Chamber statement, made in relation to the offence of outrages of personal dignity consisting of the use of detainees for forced labour and as human shields, that the accused “cannot be held responsible under Article 7(1) in circumstances where he does not have direct authority over the main perpetrators of the crimes”.[2] There is no reason to believe that, in the context of the offence of unlawful confinement, there would be any special requirement that a position of superior authority be proved before liability under Article  7(1) could be recognised.

[1]    Secretary-General’s Report, paras 56-58.

[2]    Aleksovski Appeal Judgement, para 170.

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Article 6(3)
ICTY Statute Article 7(1);
Article 7(3)
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Appeal Judgement - 24.03.2000 ALEKSOVSKI Zlatko
(IT-95-14/1-A)

27. [...] [T]he Appeals Chamber does not interpret the observation in the ICRC Commentary on the Additional Protocols, that the term “outrages upon personal dignity” refers to acts “aimed at humiliating and ridiculing” the victim,[1] as necessarily supporting a requirement of a specific intent on the part of a perpetrator to humiliate, ridicule or degrade the victims.  The statement seems simply to describe the conduct which the provision seeks to prevent.  The Trial Chamber’s indication that the mens rea of the offence is the “intent to humiliate or ridicule” the victim[2] may therefore impose a requirement that the Prosecution was not obliged to prove and the Appeals Chamber does not, by rejecting this ground of appeal, endorse that particular conclusion.

[1] Sandoz et al. (eds.), ICRC Commentary on the Additional Protocols of 8 June 1977 to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949 (1987) (“ICRC Commentary on the Additional Protocols”), para. 3047. This statement was referred to by the Trial Chamber at paras. 55 and 56.  There is no specific reference in the ICRC Commentaries to the Geneva Conventions to the mental element required in relation to the offence of outrages upon personal dignity.

[2] Judgement, para. 56.  The Trial Chamber also observed that an outrage against personal dignity is motivated “by contempt for the human dignity of another person” - para. 56.  Although this is no doubt true, it does not make such a motivation an element of the offence to be proved beyond reasonable doubt.

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ICTY Statute Article 3 Other instruments Geneva Convention III: Article 3(1)(c)