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ICC-ASP-20100612-PR546
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Ambassador Christian Wenaweser, President of the
Assembly of States Parties, closing the Review
Conference |
On 11 June 2010, the Review Conference of the Rome Statute
concluded in Kampala, Uganda, after meeting for two weeks.
Around 4600 representatives of States, and intergovernmental and
non-governmental organizations attended the Conference.
Amendments
to the Rome Statute
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Hon. Khiddu Makubuya, Attorney General and Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Affairs, Uganda and
Ambassador Mirjam Blaak, Deputy Head of Mission of
Ugandan Embassy in Brussels |
The Conference adopted a resolution by which it amended the Rome
Statute so as to include a definition of the crime of aggression
and the conditions under which the Court could exercise
jurisdiction with respect to the crime. The actual exercise of
jurisdiction is subject to a decision to be taken after 1
January 2017 by the same majority of States Parties as is
required for the adoption of an amendment to the Statute.
The Conference based the definition of the crime of aggression
on United Nations General Assembly resolution 3314 (XXIX) of 14
December 1974, and in this context agreed to qualify as
aggression, a crime committed by a political or military leader
which, by its character, gravity and scale constituted a
manifest violation of the Charter.
As regards the Court’s exercise of jurisdiction, the Conference
agreed that a situation in which an act of aggression appeared
to have occurred could be referred to the Court by the Security
Council, acting under Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter,
irrespective as to whether it involved States Parties or
non-States Parties.
Moreover, while acknowledging the Security Council’s role in
determining the existence of an act of aggression, the
Conference agreed to authorize the Prosecutor, in the absence of
such determination, to initiate an investigation on his own
initiative or upon request from a State Party. In order to do
so, however, the Prosecutor would have to obtain prior
authorization from the Pre-Trial Division of the Court. Also,
under these circumstances, the Court would not have jurisdiction
in respect to crimes of aggression committed on the territory of
non-States Parties or by their nationals or with regard to
States Parties that had declared that they did not accept the
Court’s jurisdiction over the crime of aggression.
The Conference also adopted a resolution by which it amended
article 8 of the Rome Statute to bring under the jurisdiction of
the Court the war crime of employing certain poisonous weapons
and expanding bullets, asphyxiating or poisonous gases, and all
analogous liquids, materials and devices, when committed in
armed conflicts not of an international character.
Furthermore, the Conference adopted a resolution by which it
decided to retain article 124 in its current form and agreed to
again review its provisions during the fourteenth session of the
Assembly of States Parties, in 2015. Article 124 allows new
States Parties to opt for excluding from the Court’s
jurisdiction war crimes allegedly committed by its nationals or
on its territory for a period of seven years.
Stocktaking
of international criminal justice
The Conference concluded its stocktaking exercise on
international criminal justice with the adoption of two
resolutions, a declaration and summaries of discussions.
The resolution on the impact of the Rome Statute system on
victims and affected communities, inter alia, recognized, as
essential components of justice, the right of victims to equal
and effective access to justice, support and protection,
adequate and prompt reparation for harm suffered and access to
information concerning violations and redress mechanisms.
Moreover, the Conference underlined the need to optimize
outreach activities and called for contributions for the Trust
Fund for Victims.
The Conference also adopted a resolution on the issue of
complementarity, wherein it recognized the primary
responsibility of States to investigate and prosecute the most
serious crimes of international concern and the desirability for
States to assist each other in strengthening domestic capacity
to ensure that investigations and prosecutions of serious crimes
of international concern can take place at the national level.
In the Declaration on Cooperation, the Conference emphasized
that all States under an obligation to cooperate with the Court
must do so. Particular reference was made to the crucial role
that the execution of arrest warrants played in ensuring the
effectiveness of the jurisdiction of the Court. Moreover, the
Review Conference encouraged States Parties to continue to
enhance their voluntary cooperation and to provide assistance to
other States seeking to enhance their cooperation with the
Court. In addition, the Conference took note of the summary of
the roundtable discussion on cooperation.
The Conference further took note of the moderator’s summary of
the panel discussion held on the issue of “peace and justice”.
The panel highlighted the paradigm shift the Court had brought
about; there was now a positive relation between peace and
justice. Although tension between the two continued to exist and
had to be addressed, amnesties were no longer an option for the
most serious crimes under the Rome Statute.
Enforcement of sentences
In its resolution on strengthening the enforcement of sentences,
the Conference called upon States to indicate to the Court their
willingness to accept sentenced persons in their prison
facilities and confirmed that a sentence of imprisonment may be
served in prison facilities made available through an
international or regional organization, mechanism or agency.
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