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Press Release
. Communiqué de presse
(Exclusively for the use of the media. Not an official document)
CC/PIO/273-E
The Hague, 9 December 1997
ICTY
PROSECUTOR JUSTICE LOUISE ARBOUR
ADDRESSES THE "DAYTON" PEACE IMPLEMENTATION COUNCIL:
"IT
IS NOW TIME FOR THE PROSECUTION OF SUSPECTED WAR CRIMINALS
TO BE PLACED AT THE TOP OF THE PEACE AGENDA...
JUSTICE MUST BE GIVEN A CONSIDERABLY HIGHER PRIORITY"
The Prosecutor
of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, Justice Louise
Arbour, and her Deputy, Mr Graham Blewitt, addressed earlier today the Plenary
Meeting of the "Dayton" Peace Implementation Council for Bosnia and
Herzegovina, in Bonn (Germany).
They delivered
the following Statement:
"Mr.
Chairman, the Prosecutor is a separate organ of the Tribunal, independent of
the Judges, and although I speak in my separate capacity, I fully agree with
the President, and wish to stress that it is now time for the prosecution of
suspected war criminals to be placed at the top of the peace agenda.
The Security
Council, acting under Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter, has created
the ICTY to play a unique, crucial and timely role in the peace process. Until
now, international justice has often been subordinated to other objectives,
as though justice was not considered part of the restoration of the democratic
process in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
I agree that
we should focus on solutions, and I would add this: I would urge this Council
to accept the fact that, in future, those parties who refuse to surrender indicted
persons for trial in The Hague are unlikely to respond, any more than they have
in the past, to further calls that they comply with their obligations. The plain
truth is that, if accused are to be arrested and brought before the ICTY, the
international community must take the initiative. The Tribunal was created in
1993 on the basis that the widespread commission of war crimes in the former
Yugoslavia constituted a threat to international peace and security. I suggest
to you that this threat persists, and will remain unless and until all indictees
are brought to trial. While there is still a substantial international military
presence on the ground, the Council should call for the immediate apprehension
of persons charged with genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes, and
should urge NATO to secure this objective.
Mr Chairman,
having made a substantial bid for increased resources in 1998, the Tribunal
is now poised to discharge its mandate fully and expeditiously. I urge the international
community to seize the opportunity that now exists to allow the Tribunal to
bring its unique contribution to bear on the peace process in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
And we should
not forget that the contribution of the International Tribunal also has an important
impact on the criminal process at the national level. But so far, only intermittent
and insufficient resources have been made available to the Prosecutor under
the Rules of the Road Agreement. The Prosecutor’s resulting inability to review
cases promptly amounts to a de facto immunity or amnesty for many accused,
and that situation is anathema both to the Prosecutor and to the criminal process.
Once again, justice must be given a considerably higher priority."
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