The first test of the new policy will come when ICC prosecutor and author of the policy paper Fatou Bensouda decides whether or not to try a case filed in 2014 against Cambodia for illegal land grabbing practices that Global Diligence, a London-based human rights firm, reports has forced 350,000 people from their homes to live in poverty since 2002.
"The systemic crimes committed under the guise of ‘development’ are no less damaging to victims than many wartime atrocities," said Richard Rogers, a partner at Global Diligence, in a statement. "The ICC Prosecutor has sent a clear message that such offences may amount to crimes against humanity and can no longer be tolerated.”
ICC: Environmental destruction is a crime against humanity
shift in thought
The International Criminal Court is moving toward investigating a broader range of war crimes.
Christian Science Monitor | 17 September 2016
The
International Criminal Court (ICC) announced this week that it would start
considering cases involving environmental destruction, misuse of land, and land
grabs as crimes against humanity.
The move reflects a broadening perspective on what constitutes a
war crime, as seen in recent prosecutions for cultural devastation and coral
reef destruction.
"They
aren't changing the definitions of crimes or expanding the law or creating new
crimes or anything like that," Alex Whiting, a professor at Harvard Law
School, told the Washington Post.
"They are paying particular attention to crimes that are committed by use
of environmental impact or have consequences of environmental impact."
This
represents a significant shift in strategy at the ICC, which since its 1989
inception has been charged with investigating war crimes and human rights
offenses when national governments were incapable of doing so. In
practice, ICC’s announcement will likely expand the number people who could
find themselves prosecuted by the court beyond the usual politicians, military
commanders, or rebel leaders who are investigated for violent war crimes.
“Company
bosses and politicians complicit in violently seizing land, razing tropical
forests, or poisoning water sources could soon find themselves standing trial
in The Hague alongside war criminals and dictators," said Gillian
Caldwell, executive director of the advocacy group Global Witness, in a statement.
Global
Witness reports that 2015 was the deadliest year on record for land-grab
victims, with more than three people killed each week in territory
conflicts with miners, loggers, hydro-electric dams, or agribusiness firms.
Some
observers say that the ICC does not have the capacity to properly monitor the
issue, and that the announcement is actually signaling a much more hands off
approach.
"I
wouldn't say those kind of prosecutions would be likely. They would be very
hard to bring," David Bosco told the Washington Post. The assistant
professor at American University's School of International Service and author
of a book on the ICC, "Rough Justice," added that perhaps the
ICC will partner with national governments on environmental cases but not
prosecute in ICC courts.
Even
before the policy paper was published, the ICC had begun to shift its focus.
In
August, former Islamist rebel Ahmad al-Fahdi al-Mahdi became the first man to
be charged in the ICC with cultural destruction as a war crime,
a strategy which has become increasingly common in the last decade.
Additionally,
the ICC ruled that China was violating its obligation under the UN’s Convention on the Law of the Seato
protect fragile ecosystems when it damaged coral reefs in the process of
building artificial islands to solidify its claim of sovereignty over the
South China Sea.
The
first test of the new policy will come when ICC prosecutor and author of the
policy paper Fatou Bensouda decides whether or not to try a case filed in 2014
against Cambodia for illegal land grabbing practices that Global Diligence, a
London-based human rights firm, reports has forced 350,000 people from their homes to
live in poverty since 2002.
"The
systemic crimes committed under the guise of ‘development’ are no less damaging
to victims than many wartime atrocities," said Richard Rogers, a partner
at Global Diligence, in a statement. "The ICC Prosecutor has sent a clear
message that such offences may amount to crimes against humanity and can no
longer be tolerated.”
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