Venues for prosecuting Saddam Hussein: The legal framework
Diane
F. Orentlicher
The
capture of Saddam Hussein on December 14, 2003, has prompted wide-ranging
debate about where and how he should be tried. While In fact, potential
venues for prosecution range across a broad spectrum, it seems likely
that Hussein will be tried before a court in Iraq operating with some
form of international assistance.
Before
International Criminal Court (ICC)
Prosecutions before the year old International Criminal Court (ICC)
in The ague are unlikely for two reasons. First, the Court has jurisdiction
only with espect to crimes committed after July 1, 2002, the date that
its statute entered into force. The vast majority of charges likely
to be pressed against Hussein involve crimes committed before then.
Second,
the Court could exercise jurisdiction over crimes committed by Hussein
in Iraq only with the consent of Iraq or as a result of a referral by
the UN Security Council acting under Chapter VII of the UN Charter and
neither prospect is likely. Under the State consent regime of the Rome
Statute of the International Criminal Court (Rome Statute), which applies
in the absence of a Security Council referral, the requisite consent
must be provided by either the State where the crimes in question occurred
(the territorial State) or the State of nationality of the alleged perpetrator.
In
respect of crimes allegedly committed by Hussein in Iraq, Iraq is of
course both the territorial State and the State of nationality of the
alleged perpetrator. States can provide consent to ICC jurisdiction
either by adhering to the Rome Statute or by lodging a declaration accepting
the Court's exercise of jurisdiction with respect to the crime in question.
Iraq is not a party to the Rome Statute and, in light of the incumbent
US administration's opposition to the ICC, ad hoc consent during a US-led
occupation is inconceivable. Further, because most Iraqis would like
to prosecute Saddam Hussein in domestic courts, Iraqi consent to ICC
jurisdiction would be unlikely even if other barriers to ICC jurisdiction
could be surmounted. Finally, US opposition to the ICC would also preclude
Security Council referral, since the US would surely veto any such attempt.
An
ad hoc international court
In principle, the UN Security Council could establish an ad hoc tribunal
with urisdiction over crimes committed by the Ba'ath regime. But after
a decade f lengthy and costly trials before two other courts created
by the Security Council in the exercise of its powers under Chapter
VII of the UN Charter - the International Criminal Tribunal for the
former Yugoslavia and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
- there appears to be little appetite within the Council for the creation
of a third ad hoc tribunal. The United States, whose support for such
action would be essential, has taken the position that Iraqi courts
can and should take the lead in prosecuting Hussein-era crimes.
Hybrid
courts
A more plausible option is the creation of a hybrid court. Hybrid courts,
which now operate in Kosovo, East Timor and Sierra Leone, enforce a
combination of domestic and international criminal law and comprise
both local and international judges, prosecutors and administrative
staff. The courts in East Timor and Kosovo were established by United
Nations administering authorities, while the Special Court for Sierra
Leone (SCSL) was established by a treaty between the United Nations
and the government of Sierra Leone. Negotiations leading to conclusion
of the UN-Sierra Leone treaty were undertaken pursuant to a mandate
by the UN Security Council.
Based
in Freetown, Sierra Leone, the SCSL has been operatingsince 2002. A
majority of its judges and its Chief Prosecutor and Registrar were appointed
by the UN Secretary-General.
The
United Nations has agreed to participate in a hybrid court in Cambodia
as well. While the SCSL operates outside the regular court system of
Sierra Leone, the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia will
form part of the Cambodian judiciary. At the insistence of the Cambodian
government, a majority of judges and the most senior officers of the
Extraordinary Chambers will be Cambodian nationals. To address UN concerns
about the impartiality of the Cambodian judiciary, a super-majority
of judges must approve any verdict.
As
the contrasting details of the SCSL and the proposed Cambodian court
suggest, there is no single model for a hybrid court. Each has been
tailor-made to address the unique imperatives of the country or region
in which they operate.
Many
non-Iraqis support the creation of a hybrid court for Iraq. But the
Iraqi Governing Council's desire to retain the death penalty presents
a significant impediment to the creation of such a hybrid court operating
with UN support. Neither the United Nations nor most of the United States'
European allies would participate in a court that could impose capital
punishment.
Another
model of hybrid court favoured by some Iraqi and other jurists is a
special Iraqi tribunal with jurisdiction over crimes under international
law in which qualified jurists from other Arab states would participate
alongside Iraqi judges.
Domestic
trials
The option favoured by members of Iraq's Governing Council and by the
United States government is trial before reconstituted Iraqi courts,
purged of judges loyal to Saddam Hussein. One potential venue for prosecution
of Hussein is the "Iraqi Special Tribunal for Crimes Against Humanity,"
whose statute was adopted by the Iraqi Governing Council on December
10, 2003. The statute confers jurisdiction over Iraqi nationals and
residents accused of specified crimes committed between July 16, 1968
and May 1, 2003.
Pursuant
to this statute, the Iraqi tribunal's subject matter jurisdiction would
comprise a blend of domestic and international crimes. The latter include
the international crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity and war
crimes, while the former include the following offenses under Iraqi
penal law:
a)
For those outside the judiciary, the attempt to manipulate the judiciary
or involvement in the functions of the judiciary, in violation, inter
alia, of the Iraqi interim constitution of 1970, as amended;
b)
The wastage of national resources and the squandering of public assets
and funds, pursuant to, inter alia, Article 2(g) of Law Number 7 of
1958, as amended; and
c)
The abuse of position and the pursuit of policies that may lead to the
threat of war or the use of the armed forces of Iraq against an Arab
country, in accordance with Article 1 of Law Number 7 of 1958, as amended.16
As
adopted on December 10, 2003, the statute for the Iraq tribunal makes
only limited provision for international participation. Article 28 provides:
"The judges, investigative judges, prosecutors and the Director
of the Administration Department shall be Iraqi nationals." But
in an apparent concession to foreign concerns, Article 4(d) provides:
"The Governing Council, if it deems necessary, can appoint non-Iraqi
judges who have experience in the crimes encompassed in this statute,
and who shall be persons of high moral character, impartiality and integrity.
"Other provisions require the appointment of non-Iraqi nationals
"to act in advisory capacities or as observers."
Some
commentators have raised concerns about whether the Iraqi Governing
Council, whose members were appointed by the Coalition Provisional Authority
(CPA), may lawfully create such a court. Their concerns apparently derive
from provisions of the Geneva Convention (No. IV) Relative to the Protection
of Civilian Persons in Time of War restricting permissible changes to
the penal law of occupied territories by Occupying Powers.
The
Geneva Convention (No. III) Relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of
War may also have implications for how Saddam Hussein, who remains in
US custody, may be tried. As the government official who was ultimately
in control, commander in chief of the deposed regime's armed forces,
Hussein is entitled to prisoner-of-war status. As a prisoner of war,
he can be tried by the Detaining Power-in this case the United States-"only
by a military court, unless the existing laws of the Detaining Power
expressly permit the civil courts to try a member of the armed forces
of the Detaining Power in respect of the particular offence alleged
to have been committed by the prisoner of war."
Moreover,
"[i]n no circumstances whatsoever shall a prisoner of war be tried
by a court of any kind which does not offer . . . essential guarantees
of independence and impartiality."
Since
these provisions are designed to ensure that prisoners of war receive
specified protections if they are tried by a Detaining Power, it is
not clear whether or under what circumstances US authorities could surrender
Hussein for prosecution by Iraqi courts without circumventing its own
obligations under the Third Geneva Convention.
Trials
by third states
The governments of both Iran and Kuwait have indicated that they may
bring charges against Hussein for crimes committed against their nationals
by Iraqi armed forces. It is also conceivable that Iraqi officials other
than Hussein may be prosecuted in third states exercising universal
jurisdiction. In November 2002, Danish authorities placed an Iraqi defector,
General Nizar al-Khazraji, under house arrest in connection with accusations
relating to Iraq's use of poison gas against Kurds in northern Iraq
in 1988. Al-Khazraji disappeared from his home in Soroe, Denmark on
March 17, 2003 and reportedly fled to the United Arab Emirates.
Trials
by the United States
The United States could bring charges against Hussein in relation to
alleged war crimes committed against members of the US armed forces
during the 1991 Persian Gulf War and the current conflict in Iraq. In
April 2003, US officials stated that they were investigating possible
war crimes committed against American soldiers during the current conflict
for possible prosecution. Following the capture of Hussein, a senior
State Department official said that the United States "reserves
the right" to try Hussein for crimes Against US citizens.
Concluding
remarks
At this writing, the question of where and how Saddam Hussein will be
prosecuted remains in play. Although the US government has repeatedly
expressed support for prosecution of Ba'ath-era crimes in Iraqi courts,
the Bush administration has not yet endorsed the Governing Council's
desire to prosecute Hussein before the Special Iraqi Tribunal. Human
rights organisatins have pressed the Governing Council to consider amending
the Statute of the Special Iraqi Tribunal to provide for greater international
participation-effectively transforming the tribunal into a hybrid court-and
to ensure greater protection for the rights of defendants. As noted,
however, Iraqi insistence on retaining the death penalty would foreclose
participation in a hybrid court by many other countries and by the United
Nations.
Diane
F. Orentlicher is Professor of International Law and faculty director
of the War Crimes Research Office at American University in Washington,
D.C.