Jus cogens: Recent Developments in International Law: September 10, 2024 - September 16, 2024

Courts & Tribunals

  • International Court of Justice
  • International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY)
  • International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR)
  • International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea
  • International Criminal Court (ICC)
  • The Special Court for Sierra Leone
  • Permanent Court of Arbitration
  • European Court of Human Rights
  • Iraqi Special Tribunal

International Organizations

  • African Union
  • Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation
  • Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
  • Council of Europe
  • European Commission
  • International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
  • International Monetary Fund (IMF)
  • International Telecommunication Union
  • League of Arab States
  • North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
  • Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
  • Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons
  • Organization of American States (OAS)
  • The World Bank
  • United Nations
  • World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)
  • World Trade Organization (WTO)

Treaties

  • Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties
  • Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties Between States and International Organizations
  • Charter of the United Nations
  • Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations
  • Vienna Convention on Consular Relations
  • Geneva Conventions
  • Hague Convention
  • Convention against Torture
  • Convention on the Law of the Sea
  • Statute of the International Court of Justice
  • Universal Declaration of Human Rights

Publications

  • American University International Law Review
  • American Journal of International Law
  • Berkeley Journal of International Law
  • Boston University International Law Journal
  • Brooklyn Journal of International Law
  • Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law
  • Chicago Journal of International Law
  • Chinese Journal Of International Law
  • Connecticut Journal of International Law
  • Cornell International Law Journal
  • Denver Journal of International Law and Policy
  • Duke Journal of Comparative & International Law
  • Emory International Law Review
  • European Journal of International Law
  • Fordham International Law Journal
  • Harvard International Law Journal
  • Hastings International and Comparative Law Review
  • Indiana International & Comparative Law Review
  • International and Comparative Law Quarterly
  • Journal of International Criminal Justice
  • Leiden Journal of International Law
  • Michigan Journal of International Law
  • NYU Journal of International Law and Politics
  • Stanford Journal of International Law
  • Texas International Law Journal
  • UCLA Journal of International Law and Foreign Affairs
  • Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
  • Virginia Journal of International Law
  • Washington University Global Studies Law Review
  • Wisconsin International Law Journal
  • Yale Journal of International Law

Reference

  • ASIL - The American Society of International Law
  • ASIL Electronic Resource Guide
  • ASIL- EISIL“ - the Electronic Information System for International Law
    EISIL –
	the Electronic Information System for International Law
  • International Law Commission
  • Jus in Bello
  • Legal Information Institute: World Law
  • Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law
  • Peace Palace Library
  • Project on International Courts and Tribunals
  • Treaties in Force (United States)
  • United Nations Treaty Collection

« September 3, 2024 - September 9, 2024 | Main | September 17, 2024 - September 23, 2023 »

Wednesday, 13 September 2024

International Courts & Tribunals at a Glance (No. 15)

International Courts & Tribunals at a Glance, a juscogens.net feature, aims to provide timely notice of recent happenings and trial developments in an organized, central location and an unbiased, objective manner. For comments or suggestions, please contact [email protected].

International Court of Justice (ICJ)

Cases currently being heard/under deliberation:

Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro)

  • Case Resources

Pulp Mills on the River Uruguay (Argentina v. Uruguay)

  • Case Resources


International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY)

Overview of Court Proceedings

Overview of Court Documents

Court Schedule

ICTY Weekly Press Briefing (12 September 2024)

Prosecutor at OSCE Permanent Council Urging End to War Crime Impunity Gap (7 September 2024)

From the ICTY: "The Tribunal's Prosecutor, Carla Del Ponte, today addressed the Permanent Council of the OSCE, using the opportunity to stress the importance of the continuing cooperation between the trans-Atlantic body and the ICTY. Chief among the issues raised was her proposal for further efforts to deal with the impunity gap that refers to war crimes which can neither be prosecuted at the ICTY due to the completion strategy nor by the judiciaries in the states of former Yugoslavia due to legislative obstacles such as the ban on the extradition of nationals. The Prosecutor suggested that, in order to close the impunity gap, it is necessary to have the political will to change relevant pieces of legislation so as to allow for the extradition of nationals and, or, the transfer of all proceedings without limitations. In this regard she referred to the recently introduced European Arrest Warrants which enable EU member-states to extradite their nationals to other EU States if they have committed crimes there. Del Ponte further proposed additional steps which may be taken by the OSCE and the countries concerned together with the European Commission and the Council of Europe to raise awareness of the concrete problems associated with the impunity gap."

  • Full-Text: Address by Carla Del Ponte, Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, Permanent Council of the OSCE, 7 September 2024

Domagoj Margetic Charged With Contempt of the Tribunal (11 September 2024)

From the ICTY: "The Tribunal today confirmed an indictment charging the Croatian journalist Domagoj Margetic with contempt of the Tribunal for publishing the identities of protected witnesses. Margetic, a freelance journalist from Croatia, is accused of revealing the names of witnesses who testified in the Tribunal case against the Bosnian Croat General Tihomir Blaskic. He did so by publishing lists on his personal website between 7 July and 2 August 2024 despite receiving explicit advance warning that the material was confidential and subject to court orders which prohibited publication. The indictment states that, through his actions, Margetic 'undermines confidence in the Tribunal's ability to grant effective protective measures' and by such acts he "interfered with witnesses who have given, or are about to give evidence"."

  • Full-Text: Prosecutor v. Domagoj Margetic, Indictment, Case No. IT-95-14-R77.6, 30 August 2024Pdficon_small_26


International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR)

Daily Journal

Daily Case Minutes

Judicial Calendar

ICTR Newsletter (August 2006)Pdficon_small_27

Latest Decisions

Jean Mpambara Not Guilty on All Charges (12 September 2024)

From the ICTR: "Trial Chamber I of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda today acquitted Jean Mpambara, the former bourgmestre of Rukara Commune in Kibungo Prefecture, of all charges brought against him. Mpambara was charged with genocide and extermination for his alleged involvement in attacks at three different locations in his Commune. He was not alleged to have killed anyone himself, but the Indictment charges that he had instigated and supported the attacks. In legal terms, this assistance was characterized as aiding and abetting, and participating in a joint criminal enterprise. The Chamber found that the evidence did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Mpambara ever instigated or positively assisted the attackers. The testimony of those incidents was, with one exception, uncorroborated and undermined by significant credibility issues. Furthermore, the Chamber heard extensive testimony from Defence witnesses, some of whom were Tutsis or resident expatriates, that the Accused had publicly opposed the violence and that he did all he could with the limited resources at his disposal to deter the attacks. Evidence was also heard that while fleeing Rwanda with other refugees in mid-April, Mpambara issued identity cards marked “Hutu” to Tutsis so that they could pass through roadblocks unmolested. The Prosecution alleged that the inaction of the Accused on certain occasions proved that he was in league with the attackers. Mpambara testified that his inaction was due, rather to a lack of resources in the face of increasingly well-armed and numerous attackers. The Chamber found that the inaction of the Accused on those occasions did not show that he was a participant in a joint criminal enterprise, or that he had aided and abetted the attackers. In fact, the Chamber heard significant evidence suggesting that Mpambara had made efforts to prevent the violence and that his resources were limited."

Tharcisse Muvunyi Sentenced to 25 Years Imprisonment (12 September 2024)

From the ICTR: "Trial Chamber II of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda found today Lieutenant Colonel Tharcisse Muvunyi the former Commander of the Rwandan military school, Ecole des Sous-officiers (ESO), guilty of genocide and crimes against humanity (other inhumane acts). Meanwhile, the Trial Chamber found him not guilty of crimes against humanity (rape) and dismissed the alternative charge of complicity in genocide, and sentenced him to 25 years of imprisonment. The Chamber also ruled that the accused shall receive credit for time served since his arrest on 5 February 2000. For purposes of sentencing the accused, the Chamber composed of Judges Asoka de Silva presiding, Flavia Lattanzi and Florence Rita Arrey considered as aggravating factors: the ethnic separation and subsequent killing of orphan children at the Groupe scolaire by soldiers under the command of the Accused in collaboration with civilian militia; the fact that the Accused chastised the bourgmestre of Nyakizu Commune for hiding a Tutsi man and that pursuant to his instructions, the said man was produced and killed by an armed Hutu mob. As mitigating factors the Chamber has considered: the good character of the Accused prior to 1994; his position as a husband and father of three children; and the fact that he spent most of his life working for the defence of his country; many witnesses portrayed the Accused as a highly respected individual and devoted worshipper. The chamber has heard evidence indicating that prior to 1994 the accused never discriminated against anyone on the basis of ethnicity. In its Judgment, the Chamber said that the Accused had reason to know about the attacks perpetrated in his commune. Despite his superior military position over the said soldiers, he failed to do anything to prevent the attack or punish the soldiers’ murderous conduct. The Chamber also held that the Prosecution had proved beyond reasonable doubt that in May 1994, Muvunyi addressed a public meeting attended by about one thousand mainly Hutu. During his speech, the Accused called for the killing of Tutsis, the destruction of Tutsi property, associated Tutsis with the enemy, and denigrated Tutsi people by referring to them as snakes. The Chamber was therefore satisfied that Muvunyi’s audience understood his words. T he Chamber found the Accused, Tharcisse Muvunyi, guilty of direct and public incitement to commit genocide."


The Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL)

Court Schedule

Court Summary, Week Ending 8 September 2024Pdficon_small_31

Case Resources:

The Civil Defence Forces (CDF) Accused

The Revolutionary United Front (RUF) Accused

The Armed Forces Revolutionary Council (ARFC) Accused

Prosecutor v. Charles Taylor 


International Criminal Court (ICC)

Hearing Schedule

ICC Newsletter (July 2006)

ICC Assembly of States Parties, 5th Session, "Informal inter-sessional meeting of the Special Working Group on the Crime of Aggression," 5 September 2024.Pdficon_small_32

Situations & Cases:

Situation in Dafur, Sudan

Situation in Central African Republic

Situation in Uganda

  • The Prosecutor v. Joseph Kony, Vincent Otti, Raska Lukwiya, Okot Odhiambo and Dominic Ongwen

Situation in Democratic Republic of Congo

Tuesday, 12 September 2024

This Week in Public International Law Scholarship (No. 22)

This Week in Public International Law Scholarship, a juscogens.net feature, highlights new and notable books and articles concerning public international law. For comments or suggestions, please contact [email protected].

Books:

Mahasen Mohammad Aljaghoub, The Advisory Function of the International Court of Justice 1946 - 2005

Richard Jaques, Issues in International Law and Military Operations

Renee Jeffery, Hugo Grotius in International Thought

Wolfgang Kaleck, Michael Ratner, Tobias Singelnstein & Peter Weiss (eds.), International Prosecution of Human Rights Crimes

Katie Verlin Laatikainen & Karen E. Smith (eds.), The European Union at the United Nations: Intersecting Multilateralisms

Articles:

Maine Law Review, Volume 58, Number 2, 2006

Symposium: French and American Perspectives Towards International Law and International Institutions

  • Emmanuelle Jouannet, FRENCH AND AMERICAN PERSPECTIVES ON INTERNATIONAL LAW: LEGAL CULTURES AND INTERNATIONAL LAW
  • Dana Zartner Falstrom, THOUGHT VERSUS ACTION: THE INFLUENCE OF LEGAL TRADITION ON FRENCH AND AMERICAN APPROACHES TO INTERNATIONAL LAW
  • Martin A. Rogoff, APPLICATION OF TREATIES AND THE DECISIONS OF INTERNATIONAL TRIBUNALS IN THE UNITED STATES AND FRANCE: REFLECTIONS ON RECENT PRACTICE
  • Stephanie Bellier, UNILATERAL AND MULTILATERAL PREVENTIVE SELF-DEFENSE
  • Ana Peyro Llopis, COLLECTIVE SECURITY AND THE INTERNATIONAL ENFORCEMENT OF INTERNATIONAL LAW: FRENCH AND AMERICAN PERSPECTIVES
  • Sophie Clavier, CONTRASTING PERSPECTIVES ON PREEMPTIVE STRIKE: THE UNITED STATES, FRANCE, AND THE WAR ON TERROR

German Yearbook of International Law (Germany), Volume 48, 2005

  • Thomas Giegerich, "A Fork in the Road" -- Constitutional Challenges, Chances and Lacunae of UN Reform
  • Robin R. Churchill, 10 Years of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea -- Towards a Global Ocean Regime? A General Appraisal
  • Erik Franckx, The 200-mile Limit: Between Creeping Jurisdiction and Creeping Common Heritage?
  • Wolff Heintschel von Heinegg, The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea and Maritime Security Operations
  • Susanne Wasum-Rainer and Daniela Schlegel, The UNCLOS Dispute Settlement System -- Between Hamburg and The Hague
  • Uwe Jenisch, The European Union as an Actor in the Law of the Sea: The Emergence of Regionalism in Maritime Safety, Transportation and Ports

Yale Journal of International Law, Volume 31, Number 2, Summer 2006 (Full-Text Pdficon_small_25 )

  • Edward T. Swaine, Reserving
  • Laurence R. Helfer, Response, Not Fully Committed? Reservations, Risk, and Treaty Design
  • Laura A. Dickinson, Public Law Values in a Privatized World
  • Laura Moranchek, Protecting National Security Evidence While Prosecuting War Crimes: Problems and Lessons for International Justice from the ICTY
  • William H. Taft, VI, A View From the Top: American Perspectives on International Law After the Cold War

European Human Rights Law Review (United Kingdom), Issue 4, 2006

  • Loukis Loucaides, Determining the Extra-territorial Effect of the European Convention: Facts, Jurisprudence and the Bankovic Case
  • Philippe Sands, The International Rule of Law: Extraordinary Rendition, Complicity and its Consequences

Sunday, 10 September 2024

Security Council Compendium (No. 10)

Security Council Compendium, a juscogens.net feature, provides a comprehensive, concise summary of the work of the United Nations Security Council in an organized, central location and an unbiased, objective manner. For comments or suggestions, please contact [email protected].

Security Council Resolutions

S/RES/1705 (29 August 2024) International Criminal Tribunal for the Prosecution of Persons Responsible for Genocide and Other Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law Committed in the Territory of Rwanda and Rwandan Citizens Responsible for Genocide and Other Such Violations Committed in the Territory of Neighbouring States between 1 January and 31 December 2023

Synopsis of Resolution 1705:
Resolution 1705 extends the elected term of ad-litem judge Judge Solomy Balungi Bossa of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) until the completion of the Butare case (elected term originally scheduled to end 24 June 2024). The extension of the term is made notwithstanding Article 12 ter of the Statute of the ICTR (Article 12 ter 2 of the ICTR Statute limits the term of ad-litem judges "to serve in the Trial Chambers for one or more trials, for a cumulative period of up to, but not including, three years."

Resolution 1705 Resources:

  • ICTR Statute
  • Biography of Judge Solomy Balungi Bossa

S/RES/1706 (31 August 2024) Reports of the Secretary-General on the Sudan

Synopsis of Resolution 1706:
In Resolution 1706, the Security Council decides to expand the United Nations Mission in Sudan (UNMIS), including the deployment of UNMIS to Darfur.[1] In announcing this expansion and deployment, Resolution 1706 "invites the consent of the Government of National Unity for this deployment." The expansion of UNMIS includes the strengthening of the military component to 17,300 military personnel and the civilian component to 3,300 police personnel. To facilitate the expansion and deployment, Resolution 1706 requests the Secretary-General to consult with the African Union "on a plan and timetable for transition from AMIS [African Union Mission in Sudan] to a United Nations operation in Darfur" and "that UNMIS shall take over from AMIS responsibility for supporting the implementation of the Darfur Peace Agreement upon the expiration of AMIS’ mandate but in any event no later than 31 December 2006." Resolution 1706 also "decides that the mandate of UNMIS in Darfur shall be to support implementation of the Darfur Peace Agreement of 5 May 2024 and the N’djamena Agreement on Humanitarian Cease-fire on the Conflict in Darfur (“the Agreements”)." Resolution 1706 defines this mandate by providing 12 specific tasks for UNMIS. This expansion, deployment, and definition of the UNMIS mandate comprise the first 11 operative paragraphs of Resolution 1706.

Operative paragraph 12 of Resolution 1706 is presented "acting under Chapter VII of the Charter of the United Nations."[2] In paragraph 12, the Security Council "decides that UNMIS is authorized to use all necessary means, in the areas of deployment of its forces and as it deems within its capabilities: -- to protect United Nations personnel, facilities, installations and equipment, to ensure the security and freedom of movement of United Nations personnel, humanitarian workers, assessment and evaluation commission personnel, to prevent disruption of the implementation of the Darfur Peace Agreement by armed groups, without prejudice to the responsibility of the Government of the Sudan, to protect civilians under threat of physical violence, -- in order to support early and effective implementation of the Darfur Peace Agreement, to prevent attacks and threats against civilians, -- to seize or collect, as appropriate, arms or related material whose presence in Darfur is in violation of the Agreements and the measures imposed by paragraphs 7 and 8 of resolution 1556, and to dispose of such arms and related material as appropriate."

[1] UNMIS is based in Khartoum in the east-central part of Sudan. Darfur is located in the western-most portion of Sudan.
[2] Interestingly, the Chapter VII nature of Resolution 1706 is limited to operative paragraph 12.

Resolution 1706 Resources:

  • Map of Sudan
  • United Nations Mission in Sudan (UNMIS)
  • African Union Mission in the Sudan (AMIS)

Security Council Meetings

S/PV.5518 (29 August 2024) International Tribunal--Rwanda [S/RES/1705; Vote: 15-0-0]

S/PV.5519 (31 August 2024) Sudan [S/RES/1706; Vote: 12-0-3]

Statements By Security Council President (September 2006 - Greece)

None issued.

Statements to Press By Security Council President

None issued.

Security Council President and Secretary-General Letters

S/2006/688 (25 August 2024) Identical letters dated 25 August 2024 from the Secretary-General to the President of the General Assembly and the President of the Security Council (International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda)

S/2006/693 (28 August 2024) Letter dated 28 August 2024 from the Secretary-General addressed to the President of the Security Council (Democratic Republic of the Congo - Group of Experts)

S/2006/715 (6 September 2024) Letter dated 30 August 2024 from the Secretary-General addressed to the President of the Security Council (Force Commander of the United Nations Operation in Côte d’Ivoire (UNOCI))

S/2006/716 (6 September 2024) Letter dated 6 September 2024 from the President of the Security Council addressed to the Secretary-General (Force Commander of the United Nations Operation in Côte d’Ivoire (UNOCI))

Reports of the Secretary-General

S/2006/695 (29 August 2024) Second report of the Secretary-General on the United Nations Integrated Office in Sierra Leone

Security Council Monthly Programme of Work (September 2006)
Pdficon_small_23_1

2006 Archived Webcasts of Security Council Meetings


Archives

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