11.1 Reflection: The Situations in the Central African Republic
Introduction
This sub-chapter provides a critical reflection on the feminist reimagining of five selected decisions from the two ICC situations in the Central African Republic (CAR), known as ‘CAR I’ and ‘CAR II’. It begins by providing background to the relevant conflicts, as well as the procedural history of the cases prosecuted at the ICC. It goes on to summarise the key facts and outcomes of the ICC proceedings, before discussing how the authors of the reimagined decisions have departed from the original in adopting a feminist perspective. The sub-chapter considers what makes each decision ‘feminist’ and reflects upon how gender justice might be effected if we were to act beyond the ‘existing rules’ of international criminal law.
Background to the Conflict
Since gaining independence in 1960, CAR has experienced political instability, military coup attempts and army mutinies, and almost a constant state of rebellion which erupted into armed conflict a number of times. In 2001, (then) President Ange Félix Patassé faced two attempted coups, and in 2002 he faced another rebellion led by General François Bozizé. Unable to rely on his weakened army to fend off Bozizé’s rebellion, Patassé obtained the support of Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) politician Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo’s military group, the Mouvement de libération du Congo (MLC), which operated mostly in the southern CAR regions bordering the DRC. But Patassé was unsuccessful: the MLC was unable to defeat the rebels, and in 2003 Bozizé seized the presidency. Since that 2003 coup by Bozizé, the majority of the territory, and especially the northern areas, have been controlled by rebels.
In 2004, the CAR armed forces waged war against the Union of Democratic Forces for Unity (UFDR) but, despite efforts to achieve peace and disarmament, attacks against civilians persisted. In 2013, a coalition of various rebel groups known as Séléka (a predominantly Muslim group) accused the government of failing to abide by the peace agreements and seized the capital Bangui. Bozizé fled the country and Séléka leader Michel Djotodia declared himself president. Renewed fighting began between Séléka and militias opposed to them, called Anti-Balaka (a predominantly Christian coalition). In September 2013, President Djotodia disbanded the Sélékan, which had lost its unity after taking power, and resigned in 2014. He was replaced by Catherine Samba-Panza, but the conflict continued. Faustin-Archange Touadéra, who was elected president in 2016, ran and won the 2020 election. That triggered the main rebel factions to form an alliance opposed to the election, called the Coalition of Patriots for Change, which was coordinated by former President Bozizé. This non-international armed conflict in CAR is ongoing and has resulted in targeted violence against civilians suspected of being supporters of either group or on the basis of their religious or ethnic affiliation.
Situation in the Central African Republic I
After receiving a referral from the government of the CAR led by President Bozizé in 2004, the (then) ICC Prosecutor, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, opened a preliminary examination and investigation into alleged crimes against humanity and war crimes committed on the territory of CAR from 1 July 2002 to March 2003.Footnote 1 Notably, there would be no ICC trials against Bozizé’s forces; the ICC only prosecuted crimes committed by the opposing MLC.
The main case to be prosecuted was against Mr Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo (Mr Bemba), commander of MLC forces, for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by those forces, including the murder and rape of civilians and the pillaging of their homes and workplaces.Footnote 2 Proceedings were also initiated against Bemba and four other individuals for offences against the administration of justice, in connection with the Bemba case: Aimé Kilolo Musamba, Fidèle Babala Wandu, Jean-Jacques Mangenda Kabongo, and Narcisse Arido.
Bemba, as MLC president and commander-in-chief, deployed those troops to the CAR at the request of former CAR President Patassé. Between October 2002 and March 2003, MLC troops directed a widespread attack against the civilian population of the CAR, committing brutal murders, rapes, and pillaging. In 2016, he was convicted of crimes against humanity and war crimes by the ICC Trial Chamber on the basis that he was responsible for the crimes committed by MLC troops in the CAR under the principle of command responsibility. However, he was acquitted of all charges on appeal in 2018, when the majority of the Appeals Chamber overturned the Trial Chamber’s findings on command responsibility.Footnote 3
The following rewritten judgments reimagine four decisions in the Bemba case, including the Warrant of Arrest, Confirmation of Charges, Sentencing, and Appeal.
Feminist Reimagining of Select Judgments and Decisions
Judge David Eichert’s Reimagining of the Crime of ‘Forced Nudity’
The Pre-Trial Chamber’s Original Judgment
In the original judgment, the Pre-Trial Chamber declined to include forced nudity in the Warrant of Arrest against Mr Bemba.Footnote 4 The Chamber decided that the alleged acts of members of the MLC in ordering civilians (including cisgenderFootnote 5 men) to remove their clothes in public could not be considered ‘other forms of sexual violence’ as charged by the Prosecutor.Footnote 6 In the Chamber’s view, forced nudity was not conduct of ‘a gravity comparable to the other offences’ in Article 7(1)(g) of the Statute, such as rape, sexual slavery, enforced prostitution, forced pregnancy, or enforced sterilisation, or, regarding Article 8(2)(e)(vi), of comparable gravity to a serious violation of Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions.Footnote 7 The Chamber did not give any further reasoning for the exclusion.
The Reimagined Decision and Critical Reflection
The essential legal issue for the rewritten judgment was whether there were reasonable grounds to believe the specific acts of forced nudity by MLC members were of comparable gravity to other sexual offences found in Article 7(1)(g) or Article 8(2)(e)(vi).Footnote 8 Judge David Eichert concludes that, in this case, there were such reasonable grounds.
Although international tribunals have established that forced nudity can be considered a sexual crime, this is not always the case. As noted by the rewritten judgment, whether or not forced nudity is a sexual crime depends on the context of the acts themselves.Footnote 9 However, it is the particular context where international tribunals and the ICC have declined to acknowledge forced nudity and other acts similarly not specified in Articles 7(1)(g) and 8(2)(e)(vi) as ‘sexual crimes’ that has been considered problematic by scholars, including feminist scholars,Footnote 10 and specifically in cases where victims have been cisgender men.
Historically, conflict-related sexual violence against anyone was largely ignored by national and international regimes alike. Through decades of feminist scholarship and advocacy there are now well-established international instruments and norms that recognise the victimisation of cisgender women and girls by conflict-related sexual violence, including the Rome Statute itself. However, it was not until relatively recently that cisgender men and boys were recognised as a unique category of victims of such violence. The international criminal tribunals for Rwanda and for the former Yugoslavia tried a number of cases that defined rape and sexual violence in a way that included violence against cisgender men and boys.Footnote 11 The Rome Statute also incorporates gender-neutral definitions of sexual violence. Nevertheless, as Sandesh Sivakumaran has argued, despite the recent recognition, problems remain in the implementation of the law.Footnote 12 For example, where victimisation of cisgender men and boys was not prosecuted as ‘sexual violence’ but as torture instead,Footnote 13 or where individual acts of violence against men were acknowledged but not prosecuted at all (as in this case).Footnote 14 Such approaches reinforce the idea that the violence that happens to men during conflict is not ‘sexual’ or that it is separate from, and in some cases perceived as ‘less serious’ than, the violence perpetrated against women.Footnote 15 Failing to recognise or prosecute such violence also ignores and invalidates the unique harm that victims suffer.
The catch-all words in Articles 7(1)(g) and 8(2)(e)(vi), ‘any other form of sexual violence’, potentially capture a range of violent acts perpetrated against cisgender men and boys; however, as illustrated by Valerie Oosterveld’s research, the ICC Prosecutor is rarely successful in arguing for the inclusion of such acts.Footnote 16 Judge Eichert’s rewritten judgment seizes an opportunity for the Chamber to fill the legal gap and recognise that forced nudity may, in some circumstances, be used to weaponise cultural ideas and beliefs about ‘gender, sexuality, religion, chastity, respect, social position, or dignity’.Footnote 17 Starting from an understanding of the crime of forced nudity that captures its potential to weaponise norms of gender, Judge Eichert creates space for the recognition of cisgender men, and, as further explored below, gender-diverse people, including trans people, as victims of a ‘sexual’ crime.
Judge Eichert outlines the unique ‘sexual’ harm of forced nudity that is tied to cultural and social context. All societies have socially constructed ideas about gender and sexuality, and a perpetrator can use forced nudity to weaponise these ideas against any gender. He describes such harm as mental anguish, being traumatising and humiliating.Footnote 18 By taking into consideration the social context, Judge Eichert acknowledges the potential psychological harm that can be inflicted on victims of forced nudity. His judgment also makes clear that perpetrators of any gender can weaponise such norms against a person of any other gender.Footnote 19 Forced nudity is therefore committed within the context of the perpetrators and the victim’s gender in light of the socially constructed norms of gender and sexuality. Thus, in certain circumstances the act of forced nudity can be just as dehumanising and harmful as the physical manifestations of sexual violence specified in Articles 7(1)(g) and 8(2)(e)(vi).
Unlike in the Pre-Trial Chamber’s original judgment, where the voices of victims were absent, in assessing the gravity of the particular alleged acts presented by the ICC Prosecutor, the reimagined judgment centres the victims’ experience. Judge Eichert stresses the importance of listening to victims when considering the social and cultural context that informs the gender norms being weaponised as ‘sexual’ harm. In doing so, he decides that there are reasonable grounds to believe the acts of forced nudity are of sufficient gravity to be included in the arrest warrant as ‘other forms of sexual violence’.
Utilising queer theory, the rewritten judgment also challenges gender duality by recognising the existence of transgender, intersex, and gender minorities and acknowledging the unique harms that forced nudity inflicts on such groups.Footnote 20 Traditionally, international law has reproduced a gender binary and, with that, unequal relations of power based on (cis)gender, thereby rendering gender-diverse people invisible and at risk of violence, including sexual violence, perpetrated to enforce rigid ideas about gender – that is, to maintain the heterosexual, binary order.Footnote 21 As a result, gender-diverse people are all but absent from international law and in international criminal trials. In the rewritten judgment, Judge Eichert makes these invisible victims visible.Footnote 22 Further, the kind of harm experienced by gender-diverse people as victims of forced nudity is different to cisgender people. For example, Judge Eichert explains how gender-diverse people’s bodies may not conform to socially policed ideas about gender and so being forced to be naked may lead to social exclusion; that their gender-diverse status may be exposed, leading to increased risk of violence; they may suffer gender dysphoria and again suffer mental anguish, humiliation, and further dehumanisation.Footnote 23
Judicial decisions can serve as a source of knowledge and is one way in which societies construct or reconstruct reality. Feminists have criticised what is considered accepted ‘knowledge’ as representing a male perspective of ‘reality’, thereby excluding women’s experiences.Footnote 24 That perspective is also predominantly a Western one. Similarly, the absence of gender minorities from international criminal trials reproduces the gender binary and excludes the particular experiences of those groups. If the ICC were to listen and publish the voices of such groups, especially those from non-Western societies, it would disrupt the power of the gender binary and redistribute some of that power to gender-diverse people.
However, such inclusion of gender-diverse people must be made in connection to gender-diverse communities themselves. Although Judge Eichert impresses the importance of listening to victims, if victims themselves are reluctant to expose their gender-diverse status then the responsibility will fall to the ICC Prosecutor to bring such existence and harms to the attention of the Chamber. Accordingly, the rewritten judgment also raises important questions about the sensitivities towards gender identity and sexuality of those who conduct investigations into atrocity crimes and the Office of the Prosecutor.
Judge Loyce Mrewa’s Reimagining of Confirmation of Charges for the Crime of Rape
The Pre-Trial Chamber’s Original Judgment
In 2009, Pre-Trial Chamber II confirmed the charges against Mr Bemba on five counts: the war crimes of rape, murder, and pillage, and the crimes against humanity of rape and murder.Footnote 25
However, the Prosecutor’s submission and the Document Containing the Charges also included the charges of torture as a war crime and as a crime against humanity, as well as outrages upon personal dignity as a war crime.Footnote 26 These three charges utilised the same factual content that the Prosecutor presented to the Chamber regarding the charges of rape also imposed against Mr Bemba.
In the original confirmation of charges, the Pre-Trial Chamber refused to apply the doctrine of cumulative charging,Footnote 27 stating that both torture and outrages upon personal dignity were entirely subsumed by the crime of rape, and therefore declined to confirm those charges.Footnote 28
The Reimagined Decision and Critical Reflection
In her reimagined confirmation of charges, Judge Loyce Mrewa confirms the ability of the Pre-Trial Chamber to apply the doctrine of cumulative charging by using a feminist approach and reflecting on the importance of a judicial understanding of the gender implications of cumulative charging for sexual and gender-based crimes. This approach arguably prevents flawed and gender-insensitive legal reasoning and reflects the extent of victimisation on the ground.Footnote 29
Judge Mrewa first focuses on demonstrating, through the jurisprudence of international tribunals,Footnote 30 that cumulative charging is permitted under international criminal law as a component of the fair labelling of crimes, considered a general principle of law, although not explicitly spelled out in the Rome Statute.Footnote 31 Basing her reasoning on prior authoritative jurisprudence, she argues that the accused can be charged and convicted with different offences in relation to the same set of facts under international criminal law if the relevant statutory provisions are designed to protect different social interests, each offence has a distinctive element, and the charges reflect the total culpability of the accused.Footnote 32
In the case under examination, Judge Mrewa recalls that the Prosecutor submitted cumulative charges for torture and outrages upon personal dignity which are based on the same factual conduct and are mainly related to acts of rape. She argues that rape is often used to achieve different ends, which should be carefully considered and distinguished from each other. For instance, the crimes of torture and rape protect different human rights, namely physical and mental integrity and physical autonomy and protection from non-consensual violations of bodily autonomy, respectively.Footnote 33 The threshold of suffering is also different, as torture requires ‘severe suffering’ whereas for rape non-consensual bodily invasion or penetration is sufficient.Footnote 34 Similarly, outrages upon dignity committed through acts of rape expand on the psychological harm caused by rape, reflecting on its far-reaching consequences such as humiliation, degradation, and attack on personal dignity.Footnote 35
Therefore, subsuming these crimes would fail not only to respect the principle of fair labelling, but also to reflect the full culpability of the accused and the extent of the harm suffered by victims.Footnote 36 Charging and convicting the accused for torture and outrages upon personal dignity allegedly committed through acts of rape shows the severity of rape, the intent to perpetrate ‘severe suffering’ as well as to humiliate, undermine personal dignity, and disempower the victim through sexual violence.
By reimagining the confirmation of charges through a feminist lens, Judge Mrewa successfully underlines the shortcomings of judicial decisions that oversimplify the breadth of lived experiences of survivors of conflict-related sexual violence and the complexity and interrelated nature of sexual crimes with other serious human rights violations and abuses.
Like Judge Eichert, Judge Mrewa places the voices of the victims at the centre of the discussion, noting that to ignore the reality of rape as a method of torture or an outrage upon personal dignity excludes the lived experiences of survivors.
While Judge Mrewa’s legal reasoning effectively encompasses a feminist lens in her analysis of cumulative charging through fair labelling of different crimes, she could have further expanded on the practical gender implications of the lack of cumulative charging for torture or outrages upon personal dignity by referring to factual elements of the case, as included in the Prosecutor’s Amended Document containing the charges. For instance, the Prosecutor indicated that:
Civilian properties were systematically looted, and civilians were forced to cook and clean for the MLC troops against their will and with no payment. Men, women and children were raped by multiple MLC perpetrators in their homes, raped in front of family members, forced to watch rapes of family members, and raped in public locations including streets, fields and farms. Many of the women victims of rapes and gang-rapes contracted HIV, and became pregnant as a result of these rapes. Civilians that were killed included those who tried to prevent or resist rapes, attacks or lootings.Footnote 37
More specifically, in the case of civilians raped in front of family members or in public locations, charging the accused solely with rape without considering the element of public humiliation through the crime of outrages upon personal dignity and related long-term psychological trauma of both survivors of sexual violence and family members forced to watch their loved ones being abused, fails to reflect the extent of victimisation on the ground and minimises the complexity of sexual violence in conflicts and its societal impact beyond the direct victims of crime.
Judge Mrewa could have also reflected on the wide range of survivors of sexual violence and the specific impact that the lack of cumulative charging could have on men or gender-diverse victims. As discussed above, historically there has been a certain reluctance to include men and boys as victims of sexual violence and whenever the abuse was recognised it was hardly seen as sexual violence ‘for the issue was often buried under the rubric of abuse or torture’.Footnote 38
Concepts of masculinity, virility, and procreative capacity also play out in relation to the frequency of violence and torture aimed at male reproductive organs during conflicts, as ‘survivors of sexual torture often relate anxiety about the possibility of having children to injury of sexual organs or fear of no longer being considered fully a man or to function as a man’.Footnote 39 Therefore, failure to recognise the interconnected nature of torture and conflict-related sexual violence, including through cumulative charging, gives the false idea that international crimes are gender-blind, whereas acts of rape may constitute torture and torture may be intrinsically gendered and perpetrated with the intention of causing a gender-based crime.
Judge Kirsten Keith’s Reimagining of Sentencing for ‘Pillaging’
The Trial Chamber’s Original Judgment
In 2016, Trial Chamber III handed down the sentencing decision for Mr Bemba.Footnote 40 Bemba had been convicted for the war crimes of murder, rape, and pillaging, and the crimes against humanity of murder and rape committed by soldiers of the MLC who were proven to be under Bemba’s effective authority and control, in CAR between 26 October 2002 and 15 March 2003.Footnote 41 For the war crime of pillaging, Bemba was sentenced to sixteen years’ imprisonment.Footnote 42 The ICC judgment is the first to include a conviction for rape as a war crime and a crime against humanity, marking an important turning point in terms of accountability for sexual violence as an international crime.
In determining the gravity of the crime as the principal consideration to impose the sentence,Footnote 43 the Trial Chamber noted the special nature of the crimes of rape and pillaging.Footnote 44 In particular, it considered the aggravating circumstances for both crimes, such as the location of the crime (victims’ homes, churches, hospitals), the victims’ ages (as young as ten years old for sexual violence), the duration and repeated nature of the acts (against the same victim, in the presence of the victim’s family members, and committed by multiple MLC soldiers), the perpetrator’s motives, and the violent and humiliating nature of the acts, finding beyond reasonable doubt that Bemba knew the factors relevant to prove the alleged aggravating circumstances for both rape and pillaging.Footnote 45
In determining the aggravating circumstances, the Chamber found that ‘many of the same factors considered in relation to the circumstances aggravating the crimes of rape are equally applicable in assessing the aggravating circumstances alleged for pillaging’.Footnote 46 For instance, after having displayed great sensitivity to the psychological, medical, and societal impact of rape on victims in CAR,Footnote 47 while determining the particular cruelty of the crime of rape as an aggravating circumstance, it highlighted that ‘all acts of rape were committed together with, or during the course of, acts of murder and pillaging’.Footnote 48
Likewise, when assessing the gravity of the crime of pillage, the Chamber found that ‘MLC soldiers pillaged property from CAR civilians on a large scale and with grave consequences for the victims, impacting various aspects of their personal and professional lives, often leaving victims with nothing’,Footnote 49 including the necessities. The Chamber also found that acts of pillage were often accompanied by acts of murder and rape and always by physical and verbal abuse, threats of violence, death, and/or rape.Footnote 50 The modus operandi for pillage and rape proved to be similar: during acts of pillaging, MLC soldiers often targeted the unarmed victims in their homes, places of civilian sanctuary such as churches and hospitals, or in the bush while seeking refuge. They committed the crime repeatedly against the same victims and families, without regard to the victims’ age, gender, social status, livelihood, or well-being, ‘such as the ability to seek treatment, arrange burial or funeral services, or even feed their families’.Footnote 51 Common to both rape and pillage was also the MLC soldiers’ underlying motive of self-compensation,Footnote 52 for not receiving sufficient financial gain from their military operations, confirming the traditional use of rape victims as war booty.
In sentencing Bemba for the crime of rape as a war crime and crime against humanity, the original Trial Chamber’s verdict has the merit of reiterating many of the Rome Statute’s important gender-sensitive legal standards, to provide for a detailed account of some of the most appalling rape cases against men, women, and children and even to return to expert opinions to offer a comprehensive analysis of the magnitude of negative and permanent psychiatric, medical, and social consequences faced by rape victims in CAR. However, when it comes to pillage, while the Court clearly stated that it occurred simultaneously with rape and recognised its long-term negative impact on victims’ lives and well-being,Footnote 53 it failed to further expand on the broader socio-economic context and financial consequences for victims as well as to explore its gender dimension.
The Reimagined Judgment and Critical Reflection
Judge Keith fills this gap by considering the broader socio-economic context within which the crime of pillaging occurred. In her judgment, this approach helps to ‘frame the Chamber’s understanding of the gravity of the crime and the physical, social, and economic distress it creates for its victims, rather than viewing the impacts of the crime in isolation’.Footnote 54 Keith does so by recalling that CAR is one of the poorest countries in the world, ranking 169 out of 175 countries in 2003 on a world poverty index, and by identifying the personal experiences recalled by victims and witnesses during trial.Footnote 55 The gravity of the crime of pillage in CAR’s socio-economic context is particularly evident in the factual circumstances of the case reported in testimonies: many victims were killed in an attempt to protect their property from destruction or confiscation,Footnote 56 showing the centrality of certain daily items that, despite not having an objective considerable financial value, were deemed necessary to preserve victims’ human dignity and survival. In doing so, Judge Keith highlights the difficulty of international criminal law in considering individual experiences in the face of mass atrocities, as well as its selectivity and inability to redress harm experienced by all conflict-related victims. She also notes the need to refrain from considering victims of international crimes as homogenous groups while also stressing the inevitable need to consider victims’ common socio-economic background. In integrating victims’ voice into the narrative, Keith demonstrates that robbing civilians of everyday items such as clothing, food, cooking utensils, foam mattresses, money, and vehicles in a context characterised by extreme poverty deprived them of their basic necessities, whose impact is still visible today.Footnote 57 She demonstrates the grave harm caused by destruction and confiscation of property during conflict, a violation that, like many economic, social, and cultural rights violations, is often overlooked in international human rights law and, even more so, in international criminal law.Footnote 58 Importantly, she also explores the financial loss caused by pillage, with lack of access to medical treatment and education.Footnote 59
Judge Keith partially develops the notion of the gendered impact of poverty, which affects women differently as they often bear the sole financial responsibility for their children in times of conflict.Footnote 60 This is particularly true when women have been victims of rape and have to raise children born out of rape, either because their husbands left them due to cultural stigma or because they have been killed. So, even when women’s financial situation is not the direct consequence of pillaging, the ‘crime of pillaging can leave women in a position of financial precariousness’.Footnote 61 While the original judgment solely focuses on the psychological impact of rape on victims, Keith comprehensively addresses the multidimensional nature of pillaging, which also includes a psychological component as it is often perpetrated in conjunction with other heinous crimes such as rape and murder. Similar to the original judgment, Keith concludes by confirming the serious gravity of the crime of pillage, highlighting its enduring impacts on victims and their families’ lives, which ‘exacerbate their vulnerabilities’.Footnote 62
Judge Keith’s reimagined judgment reveals the limitations of international criminal law in investigating both the socio-economic dimension of conflict-related sexual violence and the gendered nature of economic and social rights violations that may amount to international crimes, such as pillage. However, her feminist approach, which considers the wider contextual lives of women in legal reasoning, could have been broadened.
While Judge Keith sheds light on some of the gendered aspects of pillage, such as the lack of financial means for girls to access education or medical treatment as a result of pillaging, she mainly focuses on the socio-economic dimension of the crime of pillage. An important element indicated in the original judgment which Keith could have built on is that ‘all acts of rape were committed together with, or during the course of, acts of murder and pillaging’.Footnote 63 This means that all rape victims have also been victims of pillage (other than having witnessed the murder of one or more family members) in their household.
Applying feminist contextual reasoning implies considering how pillage affects men and women differently because of gender discrimination, especially when perpetrated in connection with rape and against the same victims. Given that rape disproportionately affected women and girls who were also victims of pillage within their households, while the negative consequences of pillage impacted all family members, depriving them of their basic necessities, it is self-evident that women and girls had to bear the worst physical, psychological, and financial consequences resulting from both crimes. In a context already characterised by widespread poverty and gender discrimination, pillage exacerbated women’s and girls’ vulnerabilities, for instance by depriving them of the financial resources necessary to access medical treatment to prevent sexually transmitted diseases and unwanted pregnancies that may have resulted from the rape suffered or by forcing them to resort to coping strategies, such as forced marriage or trafficking in persons for sexual exploitation (for example, ‘survival sex’) to feed the family and their children after having lost everything.Footnote 64 As indicated also in the testimonies of some of the victims,Footnote 65 pillage further deteriorated the already dire living conditions of many families in CAR. Extreme poverty forced many children, especially girls, to drop out of school to take up employment in the informal sector, exposing them to further risks of gender-based violence, depriving them of the opportunity to continue their education and thus access better employment opportunities with the hope to improve their lives and break the cycle of poverty and violence.
In conclusion, international justice must take seriously the intergenerational trauma for women and girls stemming from the links between conflict-related sexual violence and intergenerational poverty which is exacerbated by the crime of pillage. In a 2021 UN report by the Special Representative of the Secretary General on Sexual Violence in Conflict (SRSG-SVC), reflecting voices of survivors worldwide, sexual violence survivors from CAR noted that one of their most frequent and unmet demands over the course of the past twenty years has been the necessary financial assistance to gain economic independence, which is essential for accessing other rights (including food, healthcare, education, access to justice) for themselves and their dependants.Footnote 66 The follow-up of the SRSG-SVC in 2022 noted that survivors of conflict-related sexual violence in CAR ‘continued to come from socioeconomically marginalized communities, including in remote and rural areas’.Footnote 67 Providing a gender lens to economic, social, and cultural rights violations may help international justice to better reflect the extent and heterogeneity of victims’ grievances and experiences and move a step forward towards recognition and redress of the multifaceted nature of the harm suffered.
Judges Suzanne Varrall and Sarah Williams’ Reimagining of Command Responsibility
The Appeal Chamber’s Original Judgment
Having been convicted for war crimes and crimes against humanity in 2016, Mr Bemba successfully appealed his conviction in 2018. The Appeal Chamber’s acquittal of Bemba on all charges, including those relating to rape and sexual violence, was a bitter disappointment for victims and a setback for feminist advocates and scholars, who criticised the decision as allowing immunity for sexual and gender-based crimes.Footnote 68
The original decision was in part based on the third ground of Bemba’s appeal – that the Trial Chamber used the wrong legal standard of command responsibility according to Article 28(a). Of particular interest is the Appeals Chamber’s interpretation of Article 28(a)(ii): ‘that military commander or person failed to take all necessary and reasonable measures within his or her power to prevent or repress their commission or to submit the matter to the competent authorities for investigation and prosecution’.Footnote 69 In the original judgment, the majority of the Appeals Chamber accepted Bemba’s argument that commanders were allowed to undertake ‘cost/benefit analysis when deciding which measures to take, bearing in mind their overall responsibility to prevent and repress crimes committed by their subordinates’, thereby de-emphasising the word ‘all’ and instead emphasising the words ‘necessary’ and ‘reasonable’.Footnote 70 Additionally, the Chamber introduced the concept of a ‘remote commander’ as Bemba was located in the DRC.Footnote 71 According to the Appeals Chamber, this impacted on what ‘necessary and reasonable’ measures were ‘feasible’.Footnote 72
The Rewritten Judgment and Critical Reflection
Judges Suzanne Varrall and Sarah Williams focus on Article 28(a)(ii) and the failure of a commander to take ‘all necessary and reasonable measures’. They begin by centralising the concept of protection under international humanitarian law (IHL) and argue that this rationale informs and underlies command responsibility itself.Footnote 73 Furthermore, the rewritten judgment utilises a textual interpretation of ‘necessary’ and ‘reasonable’ in Article 28(a)(ii) to articulate the ‘correct’ legal standard, finding that there are minimum actions that must be taken by commanders.Footnote 74 Unlike the original judgment, Varrall and Williams do not limit those minimum necessary actions according to the geographical remoteness of the commander. Applying what they argue is the ‘correct’ legal standard, the rewritten judgment dismisses Bemba’s appeal as he failed to take the minimum necessary actions informed by the protective concept of IHL which included, inter alia, ensuring troops are properly trained in IHL.
Judges Varrall and Williams place a feminist lens at the heart of their rewritten judgment by first centralising the protective concept of IHL. One of the key principles of IHL is the protection of people who do not take part in the fighting. Importantly, this includes the protection of civilians against all forms of violence and degrading treatment.Footnote 75 Additionally, certain groups considered especially vulnerable, including women and girls, are specified as needing special protection from certain kinds of violence.Footnote 76 Article 27 of Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions dictates that women are to be especially protected against rape and sexual violence. Varrall and Williams state that this concept of protection also underlies the notion of command responsibility. Under IHL, commanders are expected to exert control over their forces and train them in IHL, including the obligation to protect civilians.Footnote 77 Article 28(a) holds commanders responsible for the crimes committed by their own subordinates, including violence against civilians. Consequently, Varrall and Williams argue that the rationale for command responsibility must be informed by the protective principle of IHL. Therefore, the protection of everyone from rape and sexual violence, as a central part of the concept of protection, informs the rewritten judgment’s approach to the legal standard of ‘all necessary and reasonable’ measures.
Another key principle under IHL is that of ‘proportionality’. According to this principle, some degree of harm to civilians is permitted, provided it is not disproportionate to the anticipated military advantage.Footnote 78 However, Varrall and Williams state that there is no possible military advantage to be gained by the targeting of civilians for sexual violence.Footnote 79 By taking this argument off the table, the principle of protection in the context of crimes of rape and sexual violence will always be a paramount consideration. This is a powerful feminist statement. Due to the prevalence of sexual and gender-based violence during armed conflict, particularly against women and girls, this approach recognises both the gravity of the harm such violence causes and elevates the protection of vulnerable groups of civilians above that of military advantage. Moreover, the rewritten judgment links this to command responsibility, arguing that all commanders should be considered to be effectively on notice of the risk of sexual and gender-based violence and of their duty to take all necessary and reasonable measures to minimise it.Footnote 80 Overall, although absent from the original judgment, Varrall and Williams consider their legal reasoning having regard to the particular nature of the crimes committed by MLC forces, specifically rape and sexual violence.
When discussing the ‘correct’ legal standard of Article 28(a)(ii), the rewritten judgment uses a textual interpretation of ‘all necessary and reasonable measures’ according to the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties.Footnote 81 Because the protective concept of IHL underlies command responsibility, Varrall and Williams begin by asserting that there must be a high standard expected of commanders to exercise control over their troops.Footnote 82 In contrast to the original judgment, Varrall and Williams emphasise the word ‘all’ so that what is determined as ‘necessary and reasonable’ cannot be watered down.Footnote 83 Accordingly, assessment of measures must start with that which is ‘necessary’ to prevent or repress the commission of crimes by subordinates. Importantly, what is necessary should be informed by the obligation to protect civilians from known risks associated with armed conflict: sexual and gender-based violence.
Judges Varrall and Williams then break down the three distinct obligations created by Article 28(a)(ii): ‘first to prevent crimes; second to repress crimes; and third to submit criminal matters to competent authorities for investigation and prosecution’.Footnote 84 They link the protective rationale of IHL to each of these obligations. Applying this reasoning to the facts, Varrall and Williams determine that part of the basic requirements of responsible command includes ensuring that subordinates are properly trained in the rules of IHL.Footnote 85 As already set out, essential to these rules is the principle of protection of civilians from risks that armed conflict creates.Footnote 86 A further basic requirement of responsible command is ensuring adequate supervision of troops, especially where there are known risks to civilians due to the armed conflict, especially of rape and sexual violence.Footnote 87 Leaving open the possibility that there may be circumstances where such measures would not be reasonable, the rewritten judgment makes it clear that this was not the case with Bemba. The rewritten judgment finds that Bemba had extensive material ability to prevent or repress crimes and failed to take necessary and reasonable measures arising from the basic requirements of responsible command.Footnote 88 Significantly, this included a failure to ensure that MLC troops were trained in the rules of IHL and adequate supervision of troops.
The rewritten judgment’s approach to Article 28(a)(ii) frames sexual and gender-based violence during armed conflict as a central concern for commanders where their failure to train and supervise their troops contributes to an environment of rape and sexual violence. The judgment also elevates the so-called special protected status according to IHL of women and girls above that of military necessity or advantage in a way that challenges the traditional patriarchal view that sexual violence against civilians is inevitable or, in some cases, purposefully weaponised against them. Judges Varrall and Williams are careful not to limit the protection of victims to only women and girls. Such an articulation of ‘women and girls’ as an especially vulnerable and protected group under IHL, while a feminist position in and of itself (for reasons outlined above), is equally contested within feminist scholarship. The merging of ‘womenandchildren’ as one category under international law has been critiqued as both erasing the agency and individual experiences of children and infantilising women as passive victims of violence in need of masculine protection.Footnote 89 Therefore, the rewritten judgment avoids similar criticism of being a continuation of (a Western patriarchal) law essentialising the experience of women and the assumption that women lack agency and individual personhood separate to that of children. However, although Varrall and Williams specifically mention men as a class of victims, they do not acknowledge gender-diverse people, which may be criticised as silencing the experiences of such victims of sexual and gender-based violence.
Judges Varrall and Williams’ approach also has implications for the responsibility of commanders that go beyond Mr Bemba. Although the rewritten judgment highlights the importance of assessing ‘reasonable’ measures contextually and that such measures do not need to be successful, the assertion that commanders should be considered put ‘on notice’ regarding sexual and gender-based crimes raises the issue of strict liability. As noted in the rewritten judgment itself, there is a significant link between increased sexual violence and armed conflict. It is difficult to imagine a situation where such crimes are being committed by subordinates, and a commander, although they may make some efforts to repress those crimes, would not be found to have responsibility to them given the emphasis in the rewritten judgment on Mr Bemba’s overall lack of ‘adequate’ supervision of MLC forces. During the drafting stages of Article 28(a), drafters were careful not to create such situations of strict liability. However, this risk of strict liability should be considered against the risk of ongoing impunity for sexual and gender-based crimes. It can be argued that the duty on commanders should be a heavy burden.
Situation in the Central African Republic II
The ICC Prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, opened a preliminary investigation in 2014 and determined there was a reasonable basis to believe war crimes and crimes against humanity had been committed in CAR since 2012.Footnote 90 Alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by both Séléka and Anti-Balaka include inter alia murder, torture, persecution and other inhumane acts, use of child soldiers, rape, and sexual violence.
The subject of the final rewritten judgment is the first case arising from the ICC’s second investigation into the CAR, against Alfred Yekatom, alleged former Anti-Balaka commander, and Patrice-Edouard Ngaïssona, alleged former senior leader in the Anti-Balaka movement, who both had warrants of arrest issued against them in 2018.Footnote 91
Judge Valerie Oosterveld’s Reimagining of Amending Charges Using Evidence of Sexual Violence
The Pre-Trial Chamber Original Judgment
In 2019, Pre-Trial Chamber II partially confirmed charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity against Mr Alfred Yekatom concerning events in CAR between 5 December 2013 and August 2014.Footnote 92 In March 2020, pursuant to Article 61(9) of the Rome Statute, the prosecution requested the Pre-Trial Chamber to amend the charge of rape confirmed against Ngaïssona to include and confirm a second instance of rape under Counts 40 and 41 of the Document Containing the Charges (DCC) and notified its intention to seek to add additional charges against Yekatom to include the war crimes of rape and sexual violence.Footnote 93 However, Pre-Trial Chamber II declined to include those charges, adopting a ‘precautionary and restrictive approach’, noting that such an approach was required in order to avoid ‘unjustified recourse to this prerogative by the Prosecutor turn[ing] into abuse’.Footnote 94 The Chamber cautioned the prosecution for continuing to investigate following the confirmation of charges and noted that Article 61(9), while sanctioned, cannot be used to address ‘gaps’ in the case of the prosecution.Footnote 95 Throughout its reasoning, the Chamber put at the centre the fundamental rights of the accused, including the right to be tried expeditiously, affirming that such was the rationale of Article 61(9) during the preparatory works of the Statute, which also guides international human rights treaties and the jurisprudence of international criminal tribunals in relation to implementation of Article 61(9) of the Statute. Importantly, the Chamber’s reasoning almost exclusively focused on the request to amend charges for the accused Ngaïssona, on which also heavily relied the decision on the Prosecutor’s request to add additional charges against Yekatom, with no separate analysis. Consequently, although the Prosecutor submitted witness statements from victims detailing alleged sexual violence, there were no charges of rape against Ngaïssona or Yekatom.
The Rewritten Judgment and Critical Review
Judge Valerie Oosterveld expertly re-examines Article 61(9) of the Rome Statute, granting the Prosecutor’s request to introduce additional charges against Yekatom, while she rejects the request to amend charges against Ngaïssona by including and confirming a second instance of rape. Contrary to the original decision, Judge Oosterveld’s arguments largely focus on Yekatom, rather than Ngaïssona, distinguishing the Prosecutor’s request to amend charges for Ngaïssona from the request to add additional charges for Yekatom on the basis that the latter ‘considers entirely new charges with new evidence justified by different reasons’ while the former was aimed at ‘reintroducing non-confirmed charges for which evidence was lacking’.Footnote 96 As a result, regarding Ngaïssona, Oosterveld rejects the request for amendment as it ‘would not satisfy the accused’s fair trial rights’.Footnote 97
Judge Oosterveld begins by partially challenging the procedural history of the caseFootnote 98 and briefly examines the arguments of both the defence and the prosecution.Footnote 99 Importantly, she further substantiates what in the original Prosecutor’s submission was vaguely anticipated as mere notice of intention, by clarifying that the additional charges of rape and sexual slavery as war crimes against Yekatom are ‘fully substantiated and more fully reflect his alleged culpability’ and that, in light of the ‘seriousness and importance of these charges, the proposed amendment is in the interest of justice’.Footnote 100 Judge Oosterveld also anticipates the Chamber’s main objection on the need to ensure the right to defence by introducing an important factual element, namely that no trial date has been set and highlighting the Court’s duty to establish the truth.Footnote 101 Importantly, she integrates the view of the common legal representatives of the former child soldiers and of the victims of other crimes (CLRV), stating that it is in the interest of the victims that the proposed charges are added, considering also that concerns about the lack of charges related to gender-based crimes has already been expressed by the CLRV in their 9 July 2019 submissions.Footnote 102 Such an approach acknowledges that individual victims of sexual and gender-based crimes do not often report those crimes immediately, due to trauma and cultural or social barriers that are not always apparent to an international tribunal located outside of that context. Access to justice is better served when these localised and victim-centred contexts are recognised and mainstreamed throughout the entire trial process.
Judge Oosterveld’s core argument revolves around the three Article 61(9) factors, namely: (1) the importance of the additional charges to ensure a complete understanding and full consideration of the relevant issues; (2) the reasonable diligence of the Prosecutor in bringing additional charges, including the reasonableness of continuing investigations after the Pre-Trial Chamber’s confirmation of charges; and (3) whether the adjudication of additional charges would cause undue prejudice to the rights of the accused.Footnote 103 Regarding the first factor, Judge Oosterveld cites the Court’s jurisprudence as well as that of other international criminal tribunals such as the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY), which recognised that ‘the duty to establish the truth is not limited to the time before the confirmation hearing’ so the Prosecutor must be allowed to continue the investigation beyond the confirmation hearing.Footnote 104 Consequently, she found that, since the war crimes of rape and sexual slavery are the only proposed charges of conflict-related sexual violence against the accused, ‘the victims, in particular, have an interest in the full consideration of the responsibility of the accused and the extent of victimisation’.Footnote 105
The rewritten judgment’s feminist approach is most obvious regarding discussion of the second factor. Judge Oosterveld clarifies that the underlying rationale of Article 61(9) is that the continued investigation should only be related to essential pieces of evidence that were not known or could not have been collected by the Prosecutor prior to the confirmation hearing and the reasons for such an investigation must be properly justified.Footnote 106 Judge Oosterveld comprehensively expands on the Prosecutor’s original submission by meticulously detailing the factual circumstances hampering the Prosecutor in providing such evidence prior to the confirmation hearing. In particular, Oosterveld demonstrates the material lack of time for the Prosecutor to carry out field missions to CAR, including during the COVID-19 pandemic and related travel restrictions, as well as to assess risks related to witness and victim protection and related procedural matters, such as translation into French. Importantly, Oosterveld incorporates a feminist approach by highlighting the inherent challenges related to collecting credible evidence on conflict-related sexual violence, such as survivors’ reluctance in revealing the crime suffered due to security threats, as well as societal and cultural stigma. Oosterveld also recalls how trauma, lack of meaningful protection mechanisms, and health reasons should not be underestimated when dealing with survivors of conflict-related sexual violence.Footnote 107
Regarding the third factor, in assessing the right to a fair trial of the accused, Judge Oosterveld considers the duration of pre-trial custody, the extent of the delay in case of adjudication of additional charges, and whether it would amount to undue delay.Footnote 108 She skilfully relies on the same ICC jurisprudence – namely Al Hassan and Ruto and SangFootnote 109 – already cited in the original judgment, proving that it could equally serve to substantiate her arguments and showing how the Court already previously balanced the search for the truth with the fairness and expeditiousness of the proceedings, prioritising the former over the latter.Footnote 110 Judge Oosterveld concludes by affirming that the proposed charges are limited both in scope and time and connected to existing charges. Hence, only the defence would have to carry out an additional investigation, which would be narrow in focus, in consideration also of the fact that the trial is unlikely to happen in the near future.Footnote 111 Finally, Oosterveld also offers mitigating steps to ensure the rights of the accused, such as prompt disclosure of witness statements to the defence and subtracting time in custody in case of conviction, showing that the Chamber could have opted for a less restrictive approach, better balancing two competing and equally relevant interests.Footnote 112
Judge Oosterveld’s reimagined judgment clearly highlights how a restrictive and excessively procedural approach to the amendment of charges following the Pre-Trial Chamber’s confirmation of charges poorly serves the interest of justice, failing to recognise the extent and complexity of survivors’ experiences and needs, especially with regard to conflict-related sexual violence. The Chamber’s blank dismissal of the charges of rape and sexual slavery, justified almost exclusively on the need to safeguard the accused’s right to defence, without even minimally factoring in the gravity of the crimes allegedly committed or the severity of the consequences on victims’ rights and lives, is concerning for international justice. Such a decision confirms, inter alia, how the gender analysis referred to in ICC policy papers is still largely lacking in practice and needs to be updated and mainstreamed throughout all phases of the proceedings.Footnote 113
By following the procedural and legal steps of the original judgment, Judge Oosterveld fills this gap, attributing gender-based crimes the centrality they deserve in an international criminal tribunal. While carefully considering the procedural and restrictive approach of the Chamber, Oosterveld strikes a balance between the need to preserve the accused’s right to a fair trial – including by offering mitigating measures to ensure an expeditious trial – and the duty to establish the truth in the interest of justice, adopting a victim-centred, trauma-informed, and gender-sensitive approach. Her feminist approach is particularly evident in the examination of the second factor, namely the reasonableness of continuing investigation after the confirmation of charges. In this context, she offers factual details on the two incidents affecting the additional victims which were missing in the original Prosecutor’s request and also delves into the specific challenges related to the collection of evidence of conflict-related sexual violence. While some of these challenges are inherent to most survivors of human rights violations, such as security risks, lack of protection measures, and investigators’ difficulties to find confidential spaces to conduct interviews during ongoing conflicts, specific cultural and societal barriers leading to further stigmatisation for survivors of conflict-related sexual violence were also highlighted. This paragraph is central to the purpose of rewriting ICC decisions through a gendered lens and could have probably been further expanded, for instance by providing a more detailed analysis on the crime of sexual slavery and additional challenges of individuals subjected to extreme forms of exploitation and completely deprived of their freedom and agency to timely and meaningfully testify on the multiple violations suffered without the risk of re-victimisation. In addition, this feminist approach could have been integrated throughout the other two factors examined in the rewritten judgment, namely that of the importance of the additional allegations to a complete understanding of the Prosecutor’s case and that of whether the additional charges would cause undue prejudice to the rights of the accused. While this was partially done, it could be further strengthened, for instance highlighting the gravity of the crimes by referring to victims’ testimonies, as well as to CLRV’s previous submissions.
Overall, Judge Oosterveld illustrates, using a feminist approach, that it is possible to respect the rationale of Article 61(9) of the Rome Statute exercising caution on the risk of abuse by the Prosecutor, while fully recognising the extent of victims’ lives and experiences, in the interest of justice and truth. Judge Oosterveld’s rewritten judgment also highlights the importance of mainstreaming a gender-sensitive and trauma-informed analysis throughout all phases of judicial proceedings and not just during the investigation phase. While survivors of gross human rights and humanitarian law violations share similar challenges in accessing international justice, survivors of conflict-related sexual violence face additional cultural and social barriers, such as family and community stigma and lack of social and economic support which may deter them from testifying before an international accountability body. The risk of re-victimisation is also higher for survivors of conflict-related sexual violence, especially when they face social exclusion, have to raise children born out of rape, or are rejected by their families. Victims of sexual slavery in particular, due to the severe and protracted multifaceted exploitation, are often compromised in their capacity to take decisions for themselves, and the time required to recover from the long-term effects of such trauma may at times be incompatible with the legalistic requirements of tribunals. However, Judge Oosterveld proves that a balance between respect for the rights of the accused and recognition of the extent of victimisation on the ground is possible even when dealing with amendment of charges following a confirmation decision and that a feminist approach is key to avoiding sexual violence charges being left out of international courtrooms, failing to provide survivors with justice and redress, which is the ultimate goal for which international tribunals were created.
Imagining Gender Justice beyond the Rules
The preceding reflections of rewritten judgments highlight both the opportunities but also the limitations of using a feminist approach within the confines of international criminal law and the Rome Statute. Engaging in truly feminist legal reasoning requires reasoning from context rather than reasoning from the abstract. Thus, consideration must be given to the lived experiences of victims of international crimes, such as gender-based crimes, and how those crimes may be experienced differently depending on gender (norms). Therefore, judges should be free to incorporate information that contextualises the crimes further, and should include the contextualisation of gender norms as it relates to gender-diverse people.
As an example, in Judge Keith’s rewritten judgment, she could have further expanded on the socio-economic consequences of rape, including victims’ financial lack of capacity to be able to access a series of basic rights, such as healthcare, education, and employment opportunities as essential components of their reintegration into society. An analysis of structural gender-based discrimination predating the conflict and further exacerbated by it could also have enriched the contextual background. For instance, in its concluding observations on the Central African Republic in 2000, the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child expressed its concern about ‘extensive discrimination against girls with regard, in particular, to access to education and inheritance rights’.Footnote 114 Similarly, in 2006, the UN Human Rights Committee noted with concern a persistent pattern of discrimination against women, both in the exercise of their political rights and in the area of education. It was also concerned about discrimination against women in the marriage relationship, in particular with regard to the exercise of parental authority and the choice of residence.Footnote 115 In addition, the Committee expressed its concern with regard to the practices of female genital mutilation and polygamy that adversely impact women’s rights.Footnote 116 Structural gender inequalities and stereotyping, including discriminatory access to education, employment opportunities, and therefore financial resources, significantly hamper women’s and girls’ rehabilitation, empowerment, and social inclusion, which are also key for prevention and non-recurrence of sexual violence.Footnote 117
Another example relates to Judge Eichert’s reimagining of ‘forced nudity’. The gendered harm of the crime could have been better contextualised in a non-Western setting where sexual orientation and gender identity are not really publicly discussed. In this regard, going beyond the rules may include making an extra effort to search for cultural, customary, or other traditional practices that could support integration of gender-diverse people and recognition of forced nudity as a form of gender-based violence grounded in agreed cultural norms in that society which may not necessarily coincide with codified international criminal law.
We conclude by observing that there is no one universal feminist frame used throughout all rewritten judgments. This is both purposeful and necessary. When (re)writing judgments concerning diverse peoples with diverse conceptions of pain and loss, it is useful and necessary to approach complex legal issues with fully contextualised understanding of those issues, including contexts of gender, sexuality, race, and culture.
11.2 Forced Nudity in the Bemba Warrant
In 2008, ICC Pre-Trial Chamber III issued a warrant of arrest against Mr Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo for crimes which allegedly occurred between 25 October 2002 and 14 March 2003 in CAR while Mr Bemba led the Mouvement de Libération du Congo (MLC).Footnote 118 The prosecution’s application for arrest included forced nudity as both a crime against humanity under Article 7(1)(g) and as a war crime under Article 8(2)(e)(vi) of the Rome Statute.Footnote 119
The warrant issued by the Chamber authorised three counts of crimes against humanity and five of war crimes but declined to include the crime of forced nudity, stating that it did not meet the ‘comparable gravity threshold’ as either a war crime or crime against humanity; that is, the Chamber found forced nudity not to be as grave as sexual crimes such as rape or sexual slavery.Footnote 120
In his rewritten warrant of arrest, David Eichert confirms the crime of forced nudity and explores the idea of comparable gravity, focusing on the way forced nudity weaponises cultural ideas and norms of gender, utilising the approaches of international conventions and courts. Drawing attention to the social impact of such a crime, Eichert notes that any person can experience harm through this crime, but that cisgender men and gender-diverse individuals experience a unique harm which has often been disregarded at the ICC, and he directs his focus to the voices of such victims.
Decision on the Prosecutor’s Application for a Warrant of Arrest against Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo No.: ICC-01/05-01/08
Date: 10 June 2008
Original: English
PRE-TRIAL CHAMBER III(B)
Before: Judge David EICHERT
SITUATION IN THE CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC
IN THE CASE OF THE PROSECUTOR v. JEAN-PIERRE BEMBA GOMBO
Procedural History
1. On 9 May 2008 the Chamber was seized of the Prosecutor’s application, in which the Prosecutor sought the issuance of a warrant of arrest against Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo (Mr Bemba) for four counts of crimes against humanity and six counts of war crimes.Footnote 121 On 23 May 2008 the Prosecutor filed an Application for Request for Provisional Arrest under Article 92 and later that same day an arrest warrant pursuant to Article 58 of the Rome Statute was issued.Footnote 122 On 27 May 2008 the Prosecutor submitted additional information and supporting material (Prosecutor’s Submission on Further Information and Materials).Footnote 123
2. Included among these allegations was the claim that members of the MLC, under the command of Mr Bemba, committed the crime of sexual violence in violation of Articles 7(1)(g) and 8(2)(e)(vi) of the Rome Statute during the time period being investigated. Specifically, the Prosecutor alleged that members of the MLC forced civilians to undress in public in order to humiliate them, and that these acts amounted to crimes against humanity and war crimes.Footnote 124 The Prosecutor alleged that Bemba, as commander in chief of the MLC forces, is criminally responsible under Article 25(3)(a) of the Statute, jointly with another person or through other persons, for such acts.Footnote 125
3. The Prosecutor’s allegations focus on three separate instances of forced nudity, although they included additional redacted acts of sexual violence which are not discussed here.Footnote 126
4. The first allegation of forced nudity comes from a twenty-two-year-old man who was attacked by a group of ten MLC combatants. After being beaten and robbed, the man was taken aside and forced to undress by a female combatant. Once naked, he was forced to have sex with the woman, who threatened to tell her male colleagues to beat him again if he did not comply.Footnote 127
5. Another allegation involved a male government minister who was told to strip naked by female MLC combatants. Amnesty International notes that this was done in a context of active armed conflict in which the wives of other ministers and government officials were being raped by combatants. Allegedly the perpetrators who forced the man to undress ‘wanted to see a naked government minister because they had not seen one before’, in a manner meant to humiliate the victim.Footnote 128
6. The final allegation of forced nudity involved a woman who was forced to undress by a group of MLC men who wanted to rape her. However, they saw that she was suffering from scabies and did not rape her.Footnote 129
7. The question before this Chamber is whether, pursuant to Article 58(1)(a), there are reasonable grounds to believe that such acts are of sufficient gravity as to justify further action by the Court. This gravity requirement is outlined in the Elements of Crimes: Article 7(1)(g)-6(2) requires that an act of sexual violence be ‘of a gravity comparable’ to the other sexual offences outlined in Article 7(1)(g), while Article 8(2)(e)(vi)-6(2) requires that acts alleged to be war crimes must constitute ‘a serious violation of Article 3 common to the four Geneva Conventions’.Footnote 130
Determination by the Chamber
8. This Chamber affirms that forced nudity can meet these requirements and, where appropriate, should be considered a crime of sexual violence in violation of the Rome Statute. Allegations of forced nudity and other acts of sexual violence should be assessed on a case-by-case basis to determine the gravity of such claims, taking into consideration the culturally situated messages about gender conveyed by such acts.
Previous Treatment of Forced Nudity in International Legal Sources
9. Forced nudity has been recognised in multiple international contexts as a serious violation that is comparable to other sexual crimes and forms of inhuman treatment. Notably, the Istanbul Protocol, an authoritative United Nations document about torture, states that ‘[s]exual torture begins with forced nudity … An individual is never as vulnerable as when naked and helpless. Nudity enhances the psychological terror of every aspect of torture, as there is always the background of potential abuse [or] rape’.Footnote 131
10. Forced nudity has been addressed in cases before other international tribunals. Notably, in Akayesu the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) ruled that the accused was criminally responsible for various crimes of sexual violence, including one episode where a young girl was forced to undress and do gymnastics for a group of soldiers.Footnote 132 The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) similarly found that sexual violence had occurred in the judgment for Kunarac et al., where three women were forced to dance on a table nude,Footnote 133 and in Brđanin, where a woman was forced to undress in front of a crowd of cheering male soldiers.Footnote 134
11. Moreover, pursuant to Article 21(3) of the Statute which requires that the interpretation of law be consistent with internationally recognised human rights, it is notable that human rights courts and treaty bodies have ruled on the issue of forced nudity. Both the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and the European Court of Human Rights have found forced nudity to be a serious human rights violation, especially where the victim is forced to be nude in unhealthy or cold conditions,Footnote 135 in the presence of unmuzzled dogs,Footnote 136 or before an officer of a different gender.Footnote 137 The UN Human Rights Committee and the Committee against Torture have similarly ruled that forced nudity can amount to a serious human rights violation, such as in cases where the victim was whipped while naked,Footnote 138 forced to comply with humiliating strip searches,Footnote 139 forced into painful poses while naked,Footnote 140 or forcibly undressed before family members.Footnote 141 Furthermore, the Human Rights Committee has even ruled that being threatened with public nudity without actually being forced to undress can amount to a human rights violation, as in the case of one man who experienced threats that the police would ‘parade him naked in front of women and female children’.Footnote 142
12. The potential seriousness of forced nudity was also reaffirmed by the Appeals Chamber for the Special Court of Sierra Leone, which asserted that the prohibition on ‘inhumane acts’ could include different forms of sexual violence, including the ‘forced undressing of women and marching them in public, forcing women to perform exercises naked, … torture, sexual violence, humiliation, harassment, psychological abuse, and confinement in inhumane conditions’.Footnote 143
Discussion
Understanding Sexual Violence in Context
13. Forced nudity may be a sufficiently serious crime when such acts weaponise closely held beliefs about gender, sexuality, religion, chastity, respect, social position, or dignity. In many parts of the world public nudity is believed to be a shameful act, and many religions and legal systems restrict nudity to a small number of acceptable situations. Many societies also place special significance on being nude in the presence of individuals from a different gender, which may further intensify the harm of being forced to undress in public. Alternatively, in some social contexts public nudity in the presence of individuals of the same gender may be interpreted as perverted or homosexual, which can be similarly harmful to victims.
14. The Prosecutor has not included specific information about the cultural meaning of public nudity in the Central African Republic (CAR), but from limited UN material it appears that public nudity is often interpreted as being deeply shameful.Footnote 144
15. While being forced to undress can be a serious violation by itself, forced nudity can also be accompanied by situational considerations which aggravate the harm even more. For example, if a victim becomes involuntarily aroused during the experience, that can be personally confusing to the individual or inspire further violence. Perpetrators may take photographs and videos of the crime or threaten to tell other members of the victim’s community about the nudity. Such threats contribute to the harm and dehumanisation that can be experienced by victims, leading to mental anguish.
16. For victims of any gender, forced nudity may result in traumatic feelings associated with vulnerability, shame, and humiliation. Victims of forced nudity may have traumatic fears about the possibility of further sexual assault or rape once they are naked. This is especially true in situations like the one currently before the Court, where armed forces are alleged to have committed widespread sexual assault on civilians. Furthermore, one of the three victims included in the Prosecutor’s submission was allegedly raped after being forced to undress, while another was allegedly forced to undress so that soldiers could carry out their intention of raping her. It is therefore reasonable to conclude, given the potential for serious physical abuse and mental harm due to forced nudity, that the crimes alleged by the Prosecutor could be sufficiently serious to merit further attention from this Court.
17. Forced nudity also preys upon norms about gender and can cause long-term harm in a person’s life. For cisgender women, being forced to undress may result in social isolation or rejection for the perceived violation of norms about modesty and chastity. Cisgender women may also lose their standing in their community or be perceived negatively by community members.
18. Similarly, cisgender men who are forced to publicly undress may experience negative social repercussions for the perceived violation of community norms. Some men may lose their social position due to a perceived inability to protect themselves from sexual humiliation or be shunned for violating religious rules around nudity. In instances where a female perpetrator forces a man to undress publicly, such an act may be interpreted as humiliating or sexually exploitative due to culturally specific ideas about sexual autonomy and control. Notably, for the government minister who was forced to undress by female soldiers, it would be reasonable to assume that the alleged crime could have been influenced by social norms about nudity and social status, and therefore potentially traumatic for the victim.
19. Forced nudity may similarly be harmful to transgender, intersex, and gender-minority individuals whose bodies do not conform to widespread beliefs about gender. In such situations, forced nudity may expose individuals to further social exclusion or result in greater feelings of insecurity. This is especially true for individuals who are not public about their gender-minority status or who live in situations where knowledge about a person’s gender-minority status would put them at greater risk of physical violence. Moreover, for individuals with gender dysphoria, being forced to publicly undress may result in significant anguish and humiliation connected to their mental state.
20. These examples are not exhaustive, and ideas about modesty, chastity, social position, or strength can be weaponised to harm individuals of any gender.
21. Additionally, individuals who do not comply with cultural norms about nudity and sexuality can also be victims of forced nudity. For example, sex workers may experience tremendous harm and humiliation from being forced to undress publicly, even if they have consented to public nudity in the past. Similarly, individuals who have non-normative beliefs about nudity, who engage in non-normative sexual relationships, or who otherwise fall outside conventional beliefs about public morality may all nevertheless experience harm from forced nudity in a situation of armed conflict.
Using Victim Testimony to Understand the Gravity of Forced Nudity
22. While expert opinion may be useful for understanding the significance and gravity of forced nudity in a specific cultural context, ultimately the most reliable source is the victim or survivor who experienced the crime. Victims are the most qualified individuals for articulating how a crime made them feel, the long-term ramifications of the crime, and how ideas about gender or sexuality were weaponised by the crime. Presenting victims’ perspectives is therefore essential for understanding the gravity of a particular situation, especially for a crime like sexual violence whose use is informed by nuanced and culturally specific ideas about gender and sexuality.
23. Situating victims’ claims in the wider context of an armed conflict can clarify the significance and gravity of forced nudity. This is because the crime of forced nudity rarely happens in a vacuum; rather, forced nudity often occurs at the same time as other sexual crimes and outrages upon personal dignity. Victims’ beliefs about the gravity of their experiences can thus be confirmed by situating those claims in the wider context of sexual and non-sexual violence at the time. For example, a victim who is forced to undress in a situation where sexual assault is a well-known occurrence, such as in this case, may report much higher rates of traumatisation than a person who undresses in a more peaceful situation.
24. This deference to victims’ claims is particularly important when considering sexual crimes against men, which have featured in relatively fewer cases before international tribunals. Notably, in some instances allegations of sexual violence against men have been classified as ‘cruel treatment’ or another non-sexual label,Footnote 145 while in other cases no charges have been brought despite evidence of sexual violence against men being available.Footnote 146 While much of the international case law regarding sexual violence involves situations where cisgender women have been harmed by cisgender men, it is important to note that men sometimes also experience sexual violence which can have a serious effect on their well-being. As shown in two of the allegations submitted by the Prosecutor, cisgender women are capable of committing acts of sexual violence against cisgender men, often in conjunction with other male or female combatants, and these crimes should not be interpreted as less serious just by virtue of the victims’ gender.
25. Similarly, crimes against transgender, intersex, or gender-minority individuals have been absent from international criminal trials about sexual violence, even though they too can be victims of forced nudity and other sexual crimes. These harms demonstrate the importance of trusting victims of all genders to correctly express and articulate the gravity of their experiences, since this articulation is essential to a proper understanding of the scope of violence in a specific context.
The Categorisation of Non-Penetrative Sexual Violence
26. Finally, identifying forced nudity as a ‘sexual’ crime, rather than as an outrage upon personal dignity or cruel treatment, can be important for understanding the scope and meanings of a certain act. The crimes listed in Articles 7(1)(g) and 8(2)(e)(vi) weaponise ideas about gender and sexuality in specific ways not reflected by other categorisations, and this weaponisation allows perpetrators to target both an individual’s bodily autonomy and wider community cohesion through gendered shame and humiliation. Identifying a crime as ‘sexual’ can therefore be useful for reflecting the gravity and meaning of certain crimes in a specific instance of armed conflict. This is not to say that forced nudity cannot also be categorised as an outrage upon personal dignity or cruel treatment, but rather that the categorisation of ‘sexual’ is useful for expressing some of the unique harms associated with such crimes.
27. Moreover, the delegates who drafted the Rome Statute felt it necessary to include the crime of sexual violence as outlined in Articles 7(1)(g) and 8(2)(e)(vi) as a distinct category separate from other sexual crimes. The crime of sexual violence is thus distinct from rape in that there is no penetrative element, but despite this absence, the categorisation is still considered serious enough to be included as both a crime against humanity and a war crime. As noted in a previous case, ‘[t]he crimes listed in Articles 5 to 8 of the Statute have been carefully selected’Footnote 147 and thus the inclusion of a non-penetrative form of sexual violence is not accidental.
28. While the crime of sexual violence must be of comparable gravity to the other enumerated sexual crimes, there is no hierarchy among these crimes. If a victim reasonably alleges that a non-penetrative form of sexual violence such as forced nudity has occurred, and that such an act led to serious harm for the victim, the allegation should be sufficient for believing that such an act is serious enough to merit further consideration by this Court.
Request for Further Information
29. In all three allegations submitted by the Prosecutor, it would be reasonable to assume that the victims experienced significant harm from the weaponisation of gendered ideas and the humiliation of public nudity. Moreover, the threat of rape after being forced to undress could have left victims with a deep feeling of insecurity and unease, especially given the larger context of alleged rape by MLC combatants. These elements suggest that the charges listed by the Prosecutor are of sufficient gravity to merit further consideration by this Court.
30. Pursuant to Article 69(3) of the Rome Statute, the Court has ‘the authority to request the submission of all evidence that it considers necessary for the determination of the truth’. Because the Prosecutor provided little background about the meaning of forced nudity in the CAR, this Chamber deems it necessary to request that all parties provide specific information about gendered norms which are relevant to understanding public perceptions of nudity in the local context. Ideally much of this information should come from the victims themselves, who are the most capable of articulating the feelings evoked by their experiences. Such testimony can be complemented by expert testimony about gender in the CAR and evidence about other crimes committed during the conflict to situate victims’ allegations of harm.
For These Reasons, the Chamber Hereby
DECIDES that forced nudity can qualify as sexual violence as described in Articles 7(1)(g) and 8(2)(e)(vi) of the Rome Statute;
DECIDES to issue a warrant of arrest against Jean-Pierre BEMBA GOMBO, as a separate document in the place of the warrant issued on 23 May 2008, for his alleged criminal responsibility within the meaning of Article 25(3)(a) of the Statute in the commission of crimes against humanity and war crimes under the following counts:
rape as a crime against humanity under Article 7(1)(g);
other forms of sexual violence as a crime against humanity under Article 7(1)(g);
rape as a war crime under Article 8(2)(e)(vi);
other forms of sexual violence as a war crime under Article 8(2)(e)(vi);
torture as a crime against humanity under Article 7(1)(f);
torture as a war crime under Article 8(2)(c)(i);
outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment, as a war crime under Article 8(2)(c)(ii);
murder as a crime against humanity under Article 7(1)(a);
murder as a war crime under Article 8(2)(c)(i);
pillaging a town or place as a war crime under Article 8(2)(e)(v); and
REQUESTS all parties to provide additional context about the culturally specific meaning of sexual violence and forced nudity in the Central African Republic, to aid in understanding how the alleged acts may be seen in the local context.
Judge David Eichert
11.3 Charging Sexual Crimes in the Bemba Confirmation of Charges
Pre-Trial Chamber II confirmed the charges against Mr Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo in 2009.Footnote 148 The Prosecutor’s submission, the Document Containing the Charges, contained the charges of torture as a war crime and as a crime against humanity, as well as outrages upon personal dignity as a war crime.Footnote 149 These three charges utilised the same factual conduct that the Prosecutor presented to the Chamber regarding the charges of rape also levied against Mr Bemba. In the original confirmation of charges, the Pre-Trial Chamber declined to confirm the crime of torture as a war crime because the Prosecutor failed to prove the specific intent requirement related to this crime.Footnote 150 The Pre-Trial Chamber also refused to apply the doctrine of cumulative charging, stating that both torture as a crime against humanity and outrages upon personal dignity as a war crime were entirely subsumed by the crime of rape, and therefore declined to confirm those charges.
In this reimagined confirmation of charges decision, Loyce Mrewa focuses on the charges of torture as a crime against humanity and outrages upon personal dignity as a war crime, which the Pre-Trial Chamber declined to confirm as cumulative charges. Mrewa confirms the ability of the Pre-Trial Chamber to apply the doctrine of cumulative charging to the charges of torture as a crime against humanity and outrages upon personal dignity as a war crime. In considering the application of the doctrine from other international tribunals, Mrewa places the voices of the victims at the centre of the discussion, noting that to ignore the reality of rape as a method of torture or an outrage upon personal dignity is a failure not just to apply the requirement of fair labelling but is akin to denying the lived experiences of the victims and relegating their harm without comment.
Mrewa applies a close reading of the Elements of Crime to conclude that the charges under consideration meet the threshold of being materially different while protecting different interests and that cumulative charging is necessary to record the full culpability and blameworthiness of the accused and to accurately characterise the experiences of victims of sexual and gender-based crimes. Mrewa concludes that cumulative charging using the same factual conduct for multiple counts is authorised, and these counts would likely be confirmed if additional evidence was publicly accessible because the accused, Mr Bemba, was convicted of the crime of rape at trial.Footnote 151
Decision pursuant to Article 61(7)(a) and (b) of the Rome Statute on Charges of the Prosecutor against Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo No.: ICC-01/05-01/08-424 B
Date: 15 June 2009
Original: English
PRE-TRIAL CHAMBER II(B)
Before: Judge Loyce MREWA
SITUATION IN THE CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC
IN THE CASE OF THE PROSECUTOR v. JEAN-PIERRE BEMBA GOMBO
PRE-TRIAL CHAMBER II (the Chamber) of the International Criminal Court (the Court) issues this decision pursuant to Article 61(7)(a) and (b) of the Rome Statute (the Statute), on the charges brought by the Prosecutor in the case of the Prosecutor v. Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo (the Case).
The Person Charged
1. The Prosecutor of the Court submits the charges against Mr Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo (Mr Bemba) a national of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).Footnote 152 In 1998, Mr Bemba established a military movement known as the Mouvement de Libération du Congo (MLC), in Kisangani, DRC.Footnote 153 He was the president and commander-in-chief of the MLC until 13 July 2002, when he obtained the rank of a general.Footnote 154
Procedural Background
2. The Central African Republic referred to the Prosecutor of the Court the situation in the CAR in a letter dated 18 December 2004.Footnote 155 The letter referred to the situation in which crimes against humanity and war crimes within the jurisdiction of the Court had allegedly been committed on the territory of the CAR since 1 July 2002.Footnote 156
3. The Presidency of the Court assigned the situation in the CAR to Pre-Trial Chamber III pursuant to Regulation 46(2) of the Regulations of the Court on 19 January 2005.Footnote 157
4. On 9 May 2008, the Prosecutor submitted an application for the issuance of a warrant of arrest against Mr Bemba on four counts of crimes against humanity and six counts of war crimes.Footnote 158
5. On 21 May 2008, the Chamber issued the Decision Requesting Additional Information in Respect of the Prosecutor’s Application for Warrant of Arrest under Article 58 of the Statute, in which, inter alia, it requested the Prosecutor to provide additional information and supporting material on various aspects of the application, in particular on the counts of other forms of sexual violence and murder, both offences being characterised under crimes against humanity and war crimes.Footnote 159
6. On 23 May 2008, the Prosecutor filed an Application for Request for Provisional Arrest under Article 92 of the Statute, in which, inter alia, he requested the Chamber to consider the prosecution’s application for a warrant of arrest of Mr Bemba, filed on 9 May 2008, on an expedited basis in light of the circumstances where the possibility of apprehending Mr Bemba could disappear, while apprehension in the Kingdom of Belgium appeared feasible.Footnote 160
7. The accused, Mr Bemba, was arrested on 24 May 2008 by the authorities of the Kingdom of Belgium, after an arrest warrant was issued against him on 23 May 2003 on two counts of crimes against humanity and four counts of war crimes.Footnote 161 On 27 May 2008, the Prosecutor submitted additional information and supporting material in response to the Chamber’s decision of 21 May 2008 (Prosecutor’s Submission on Further Information and Materials).
8. On 10 June 2008, in light of the Prosecutor’s Submission on Further Information and Materials, the Chamber deemed it necessary to issue a new warrant of arrest replacing the original warrant of arrest issued on 23 May 2008.Footnote 162 The new warrant of arrest referred to the same events allegedly committed in the CAR between 25 October 2002 and 15 March 2003 and added two counts of murder as both crimes against humanity and war crimes to the original two counts of crimes against humanity and four counts of war crimes.Footnote 163
9. On 12 January 2009, the Confirmation of Charges Hearing commenced but was adjourned by the Chamber and the Prosecutor was requested to submit amended charges establishing the mode of liability under Article 28 of the Statute, and within the context and meaning of Article 61(7)(c)(ii) of the Statute.Footnote 164
10. On 19 March 2009, the Presidency assigned the CAR situation to Pre-Trial Chamber II and dissolved Pre-Trial Chamber III.Footnote 165
11. On 30 March 2009, the Prosecutor submitted an amended document containing the charges (DCC) against the accused, together with the Prosecutor’s Amended List of Evidence and Amended In-Depth Analytical Chart of Incriminatory Evidence.Footnote 166 The prosecution charged Mr Bemba pursuant to Article 25(3)(a) of the Statute with eight counts of the crimes against humanity and war crimes referred to in Articles 7 and 8 of the Statute. Alternatively, the prosecution charged Mr Bemba pursuant to Article 28(a) or Article 28(b) of the Statute for the crimes against humanity and war crimes in Counts 1–8 by virtue of his superior–subordinate relationship with the MLC troops.Footnote 167
12. In the amended DCC, the Prosecutor, pursuant to his authority under Article 61(3)(a) of the Statute, charged Mr Bemba with war crimes and crimes against humanity, as set forth below:
(i) Count 1 (Rape constituting a crime against humanity in violation of Articles 7(1)(g) and 25(3)(a) or 28(a) or 28(b) of the Statute);
(ii) Count 2 (Rape constituting a war crime in violation of Articles 8(2)(e)(vi) and 25(3)(a) or 28(a) or 28(b) of the Statute);
(iii) Count 3 (Torture constituting a crime against humanity in violation of Articles 7(1)(f) and 25(3)(a) or 28(a) or 28(b) of the Statute);
(iv) Count 4 (Torture constituting a war crime in violation of Articles 8(2)(c)(i) and 25(3)(a) or 28(a) or 28(b) of the Statute);
(v) Count 5 (Outrages upon personal dignity constituting a war crime in violation of Articles 8(2)(c)(ii) and 25(3)(a) or 28(a) or 28(b) of the Statute);
(vi) Count 6 (Murder constituting a war crime in violation of 8(2)(c)(i) and 25(3)(a) or 28(a) or 28(b) of the Statute);
(vii) Count 7 (Murder constituting a crime against humanity in violation of Articles 7(1)(a) and 25(3)(a) or 28(a) or 28(b) of the Statute);
(viii) Count 8 (Pillaging constituting a war crime in violation of Articles 8(2)(e)(v) and 25(3)(a) or 28(a) or 28(b) of the Statute).Footnote 168
13. The Chamber observes that the Prosecutor presented the same factual conduct, related mainly to acts of rape, for Count 3, torture as a crime against humanity under Article 7(1)(f) of the Statute,Footnote 169 Count 4, torture as a war crime under Article 8(2)(c)(i) of the Statute,Footnote 170 and Count 5, outrages upon personal dignity as a war crime under Article 8(2)(c)(ii) of the Statute.Footnote 171 The Chamber further notes that the Prosecutor submitted cumulative charges for Count 3,Footnote 172 Count 4,Footnote 173 and Count 5.Footnote 174
14. In view of the available evidence, the Chamber will begin by assessing the permissibility of cumulative charging for Count 3 on torture as a crime against humanity and Count 5 on outrages upon personal dignity based on the same factual conduct to determine whether the Prosecutor’s submissions are in accordance with the applicable law.
The Applicable Law
Legality of Cumulative Charging in International Criminal Law
15. Concerning the question of the legality of cumulative charging, the Chamber will consider the developments in international criminal law. The Chamber notes that cases from ad hoc criminal tribunals have mapped the developments and legality of cumulative charging, including the conditions in which this practice is permissible in the field of international criminal law. Due regard will be given to relevant case law within the field.
16. At the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), the Appeals Chamber in the Delalic case found ‘that multiple criminal convictions entered under different statutory provisions but based on the same conduct are permissible only if each statutory provision involved has a materially distinct element not contained in the other’.Footnote 175 The Delalic judgment indicates that cumulative charging is permitted when the charges relate to crimes containing materially distinct elements from the other crimes.
17. Trial Chamber I of the International Criminal Tribunal of Rwanda (ICTR) reached a similar conclusion in the Akayesu case by finding that:
On the basis of national and international law and jurisprudence, the Chamber concludes that it is acceptable to convict the accused of two offences in relation to the same set of facts in the following circumstances: (1) where the offences have different elements; or (2) where provisions creating the offences protect different interests; or (3) where it is necessary to record a conviction for both offences in order fully to describe what the accused did.Footnote 176
18. Multiple cases from the ICTR, ICTY, and the Special Court for Sierra Leone confirm that multiple criminal charges can be based on the same factual conduct.Footnote 177 In the Kupreskic case, the ICTY Trial Chamber endorsed cumulative charging if the statutory provisions relied on are designed to protect different social values and if each offence has a distinctive element.Footnote 178 This is demonstrated by the Trial Chamber’s finding that ‘the Prosecutor may be justified in bringing cumulative charges when the Articles of the Statute referred to are designed to protect different values and when each Article requires proof of a legal element not required by the others’.Footnote 179
19. Trial Chamber II of the ICTR also used a similar test for the concurrence of crimes and reached a similar conclusion in the Kayishema & Ruzindana case by finding that ‘it is only acceptable to convict an accused of two or more offences in relation to the same set of facts in the following circumstances: (1) where offences have differing elements or (2) where the laws in question protect differing social interests’.Footnote 180
20. Judge Tafazzal H. Khan, the dissenting judge in the Kayishema & Ruzindana case,Footnote 181 stressed the need for charges and convictions to reflect the total culpability of the accused rather than the distinct elements of cumulative crimes by finding that:
What must be punished is culpable conduct; this principle applies to situations where the conduct offends two or more crimes, whether or not the factual situation also satisfies the distinct elements of the two or more crimes, as provenFootnote 182 … where the culpable conduct was part of a widespread and systematic attack specifically against civilians, to record a conviction for genocide alone does not reflect the totality of the accused’s culpable conduct.Footnote 183
21. In assessing the tenability of cumulative charging and convictions, the ICTR Trial Chamber in Musema adopted Judge Khan’s reasoning regarding cumulative charging.Footnote 184 Thus, Judge Khan’s reasoning was used to assess the legality and scope of the application of cumulative charges and convictions in Musema, and cannot be regarded as obiter dicta: his opinion has been transformed into ratio decidendi, which has guided subsequent cases within the ICTR.
22. The ICTY and ICTR case law demonstrates the development of the criteria for cumulative charging but does not set a legally binding precedent for this Chamber. These cases, however, clarify the legality of cumulative charging in international criminal law and provide authoritative and persuasive reasoning for accepting cumulative charges. Moreover, the Rome Statute does not provide any contrary direction; thus the interpretations of the ICTY and ICTR will be considered in this Chamber’s evaluation of the cumulative charges submitted by the Prosecutor in accordance with Article 21 of the Statute.
23. The drafters of the ICC Elements of Crimes (EoC) also foresaw the likelihood of cumulative charging based on the same factual conduct.Footnote 185 The general introduction of the EoC stipulates that ‘a particular conduct may constitute one or more crimes’.Footnote 186 However, the general introduction of the EoC is a background and preamble, which is persuasive but not legally binding. The travaux préparatoires and preambular wording are used to aid the interpretation of the rights and duties arising from treaties.Footnote 187 In this particular case, the preambular wording will guide the Chamber in interpreting the Prosecutor’s submission of cumulative charges for torture (Count 3) and outrages upon personal dignity (Count 5).
24. The Chamber notes that each individual offence enshrined within the Statute has distinct elements and protects different interests. Article 7(1)(f) of the Statute recognises and prohibits ‘torture’, while Article 7(1)(g) of the Statute prohibits ‘rape, sexual slavery, enforced prostitution, forced pregnancy, enforced sterilisation, or any other form of sexual violence of comparable gravity’ committed, as crimes against humanity. The Chamber, therefore, further observes that the Statute allows for the prosecution of distinct forms of sexual and gender-based crimes within its provisions. The Chamber holds that the distinct recognition of offences under the Statute demonstrates how these are separate offences that are prohibited to protect different human rights interests.
25. The Chamber gives due regard to the interests that disparate statutory provisions of the Statute are meant to protect. In this case, the prohibition of torture as a crime against humanity aims to protect physical and mental well-being whilst rape as a crime against humanity focuses on physical autonomy and protection from non-consensual violations of bodily autonomy.Footnote 188
26. In light of the foregoing, notably the guidance provided by the case law from Kayishema & Ruzindana, Musema, and Kupreskic, the preambular wording of the Elements of Crimes, and the Statute itself, the Chamber concludes that it is justified to permit cumulative charging based on the same factual conduct under certain circumstances. The Chamber observes that a criminal act that meets the elements of multiple offences may constitute one or more crimes. The Chamber, therefore, holds that cumulative charging and convictions are acceptable in international criminal law if the relevant statutory provisions are designed to protect different social interests, each offence has a distinctive element, and the charges reflect the total culpability of the accused.Footnote 189 As a result, it is generally understood that the Prosecutor is permitted to cumulatively charge offences based on the same criminal conduct.
27. Turning to the case at hand, a full assessment of the culpability of the accused includes recognition of the varied uses of rape to achieve torture (Count 3) and outrages upon dignity (Count 5). The perpetration of torture and outrages upon personal dignity, through the instrument of rape,Footnote 190 highlights the breadth of uses of sexual and gender-based violence during conflict. The evidence in the case at hand shows that rape can be used to torture (Count 3), humiliate as outrages upon personal dignity (Count 5), and disempower when the power dynamics of rape itself are considered. The Chamber notes that the charges submitted by the Prosecutor categorise the different uses of rape to achieve different ends.
The Principle of Fair Labelling
28. The Chamber notes that the Statute does not directly mention fair labellingFootnote 191 but stipulates the importance of facilitating fair and expeditious trials.Footnote 192 In the determination of charges, the accused is entitled to a fair hearing with minimum guarantees, including ‘to be informed promptly and in detail of the nature, cause and content of the charge’.Footnote 193 The requirement to inform an accused of the charges in specific terms is also confirmed by scholars and cases from national and international courts such as the ICTR.Footnote 194 The Canadian Supreme Court also directly mentions the importance of labelling and punishing a person as a way to ‘stigmatise’ and attach ‘blameworthiness’ to the accused in a manner proportionate to the conduct of the accused.Footnote 195 Fair labelling of crimes accurately describes and distinguishes criminal conduct in proportion to blameworthiness.Footnote 196 Fair labelling is, therefore, important for describing, categorising, and communicating crimes to the accused clearly and fairly in accordance with Article 67(1)(a) of the Statute.
29. The Chamber further notes that Article 21(1)(c) of the Statute provides that general principles from domestic legal systems may be applied by the Court. Fair labelling is a general principle of law in most domestic legal systems because the description, distinguishing, and codification of crimes in domestic criminal codes and laws is an affirmation of fair labelling.Footnote 197 Scholars such as Zawati confirm the importance of fair labelling of crimes and argue that the objectives of domestic and international criminal law systems are similar and compatible, including fundamental principles such as fair labelling.Footnote 198 The application of fair labelling within the Chamber’s assessment of the charges brought by the Prosecutor is justified based on principles of fairness in the ICC Statute and the compatibility of general principles between domestic and international criminal law systems.
30. The Chamber notes that cumulative charging is consistent with the legal norm relating to the fair labelling of crimes in international criminal law. This principle of fair labelling requires that ‘distinctions between [the] kinds of offences and degrees of wrongdoing are respected and signalled by the law, and that offences are subdivided and labelled so as to represent fairly the nature and magnitude of the law-breaking’.Footnote 199 The Chamber further notes that the principle of fair labelling also extends to sentencing and stresses the need for the labelling of a crime to correspond to blameworthiness and proportionality between sentencing and guilt.Footnote 200 Consequently, accurate labelling of crimes and accurate descriptions of the degree of wrongfulness promotes justice for victims and the accused by ensuring the full recognition of harms endured by victims, proportionate punishment to the degree of wrongfulness, and consistency in sentencing and convictions.Footnote 201
31. In light of the above, the principle of fair labelling is important because it acknowledges the types and severity of wrongdoing and guarantees the legal recognition of various types of harm. This principle ensures an accurate description of the scope of wrongfulness, communicates reprehensible behaviour to society, recognises various types of harm, and ensures proportionate conviction and sentencing to the degree of wrongfulness.Footnote 202
32. Fair labelling of crimes also helps to fulfil the Article 21(3) requirement of the application and interpretation of the Statute in light of norms of non-discrimination on grounds such as gender.Footnote 203 The Chamber notes that fair labelling helps to bring visibility to sexual and gender-based crimes, which have failed to be adjudicated at all, or properly adjudicated, in the past, a situation which the ICC Statute aimed to remedy.Footnote 204 Such recognition also contributes to society’s understanding of the complexity of gendered violence, including its various forms, effects, and severity, which is instrumental in dispelling myths and assumptions about the nature of this violence.
33. The Chamber holds that the principle of fair labelling also demands an accurate and full representation of sexual and gender-based crimes within criminal charges. This approach avoids minimising and/or mischaracterising the experiences of victims of sexual and gender-based crimes and, therefore, contributes to the recognition of cumulative charging and convictions of these crimes.
34. The Chamber further notes that the Court attends to the crimes within its jurisdiction to protect the rights of all persons but also recognises its social function of clarifying the law and reinforcing norms. Addressing sexual and gender-based crimes acknowledges the complexity of these crimes, through the identification of acts that target and exploit gender identities, roles, and expectations, and develops progressive gender norms that could trickle down to domestic criminal justice systems.Footnote 205 The Chamber holds that fair labelling recognises and accurately describes sexual and gender-based violence, including how this violence can be used to achieve various objectives, which could guide domestic criminal justice systems in similar cases.
35. In conclusion, the Chamber holds that recognising torture and outrages upon personal dignity committed through rape as separate crimes fairly labels the types of harm done to victims and gives legal recognition to their lived realities. Therefore, fair labelling also leads to non-discriminatory and gender-sensitive recognition of torture and outrages upon personal dignity. Based on the foregoing, the Chamber deems it necessary to assess the nature and extent of the cumulative charges brought by the Prosecutor in the context of the principle of fair labelling and in accordance with Article 21(3) of the Statute.
Legal Findings of Cumulative Charging of Crimes
36. The Chamber recalls that cumulative charging and convictions are acceptable in international criminal law if the relevant statutory provisions are designed to protect different social interests, each offence has distinct elements, and the charges reflect the total culpability of the accused.Footnote 206 According to Judge Khan in Kayishema & Ruzindana, and as accepted by the majority in Musema, an assessment of charges should be proportionate to the blameworthiness of the accused.Footnote 207 A full assessment of criminal charges must reflect the total culpability of the accused.Footnote 208 The Chamber concurs with these conditions of cumulative charging in international criminal law.
37. The Prosecutor submitted cumulative charges for torture (Count 3) and outrages upon personal dignity (Count 5).Footnote 209 These charges are based on the same factual conduct and are mainly related to acts of rape.Footnote 210 The Chamber further notes that the Prosecutor’s request to cumulatively charge acts of torture and outrages upon personal dignity allegedly perpetrated through acts of rapeFootnote 211 is vital for adhering to the principle of fair labelling.
38. The Chamber recalls that the legal requirement to fairly and accurately label crimes is satisfied if criminal charges are proportionate to the blameworthiness of the accused and the severity of the criminal conduct.Footnote 212 Criminal charges must reflect the facts and the severity of criminal conduct. Acts of rape that meet the elements of torture and outrages upon personal dignity constitute forms of torture and outrages upon personal dignity that ought to be represented as such in the criminal charges against the accused.
39. Based on the foregoing, the Chamber holds that cumulative charging of torture (Count 3) and outrages upon personal dignity (Count 5), allows for the recognition of the full culpability of the accused and protects separate interests enshrined in distinct provisions of the Statute, including crimes not directly categorised as sexual and gender-based crimes. Therefore, the Chamber must consider whether the conditions for cumulative charging are met in the case at hand.
40. Despite being allegedly carried out through acts of rape, the charges brought by the Prosecutor are different crimes from rape as they have elements distinct from the crime of rape.Footnote 213 The conditions for cumulative charging require that the charges brought by the Prosecutor based on the same factual conduct, in this case of rape, contain distinct elements.Footnote 214 The Chamber will assess whether Counts 3 and 5 should be confirmed as torture and outrages upon personal dignity respectively. This assessment will analyse whether these crimes have materially different elements, are conceptually different, and protect different social values.
Count 3: Torture as a Crime against Humanity
41. The Chamber observes that the material elements of rape as a crime against humanity are different from the material elements of torture as a crime against humanity.Footnote 215 Torture requires the infliction of severe physical or mental suffering by the perpetrator whilst rape requires an act of bodily invasion by the perpetrator resulting in the penetration of any part of a victim’s body.Footnote 216
42. For the crime of rape, ‘psychological oppression’ is an element of the crime that can be used as a means to exert control.Footnote 217 Although ‘psychological oppression’ is an element of the crime of rape, the inherent material element of rape is bodily invasion,Footnote 218 unlike the infliction of severe physical or mental pain or suffering, in the custody or control by the perpetrator, necessitated for fulfilling the material elements of torture.Footnote 219
43. Additionally, torture requires ‘severe physical or mental pain or suffering’ while for the crime of rape, bodily invasion or penetration, ‘however slight’, committed by ‘force, or by threat of force or coercion … or against a person incapable of giving genuine consent’ is sufficient.Footnote 220 The wording in the Elements of Crimes shows that for the crime of rape, any violation of bodily integrity by non-consensual invasion or penetration is considered severe.Footnote 221 In other words, any invasion of bodily integrity in a sexual manner is a severe offence that can amount to a crime against humanity. This distinction suggests differences in the nature of conduct necessary to fulfil the elements of the crime of rape and torture.
44. The crimes of rape and torture are also conceptually different and protect distinct human rights (different social interests). The prohibition of torture aims to protect physical and mental well-being and related interests whilst rape focuses on physical autonomy and protection from non-consensual violations of bodily autonomy.Footnote 222 Charging torture allegedly committed through acts of rape shows the severity of rape, including the severe violation of both the physical and mental well-being of the victims.
45. The Chamber holds that the differences between the material elements of rape and torture demonstrate that Count 3 on torture meets the conditions for cumulative charging: the fair reflection of the harm caused as well as the total culpability of the accused, distinct criminal element, and the protection of different human rights.Footnote 223 Additionally, the Chamber finds that Count 3 should not be subsumed in other crimes such as rape because it violates the principle of fair labelling, does not reflect the full blameworthiness of the accused, and fails to recognise the complexity of sexual and gender-based violence.
46. In conclusion, this Chamber finds that the three conditions for cumulative charging have been fulfilled for Count 3 on torture as a crime against humanity within the meaning of Article 7(1)(f) of the Statute.Footnote 224
Count 5: Outrages upon Personal Dignity as a War Crime
47. The Chamber recalls that the elements of outrages upon personal dignity and rape as a war crime are different.Footnote 225 The elements of outrages upon personal dignity as a war crime are focused on whether ‘the perpetrator humiliated, degraded or otherwise violated the dignity of one or more persons’.Footnote 226 Therefore, this crime requires criminal conduct that is intended to inflict grave psychological and mental harm aimed at humiliating, degrading, and violating the dignity of victims.Footnote 227 The subjective psychological effect of criminal conduct that results in humiliation, degradation, and the violation of dignity is the distinct element and interest protected by this provision.
48. The material elements of the crime of rape are focused on bodily invasion ‘resulting in penetration, however slight’ and ‘committed by force, or by threat of force or coercion … or against a person incapable of giving genuine consent’.Footnote 228 This wording demonstrates how the Court ought to recognise any invasion of a person’s body in a sexual manner as a serious offence that has a severe impact on the victim.
49. The crime of rape and outrages upon personal dignity committed as war crimes are also conceptually different. The essence of each crime captures a different social value. The crime of rape deals with the violation of bodily integrity and autonomy and the crime of outrages upon personal dignity deals with violations of one’s dignity.Footnote 229 In other words, the crime of rape captures the invasion of bodily integrity, while the crime of outrages upon personal dignity captures the violation of a person’s sense of worth or being as a person.Footnote 230 The Aleksovski and Kunarac cases, of the ICTY, confirm that the crime of outrages upon personal dignity prohibits inhumane acts that cause humiliation and degradation,Footnote 231 and protects ‘respect for the human personality’.Footnote 232
50. The elements of the crimes of rape and outrages upon personal dignity also protect different social interests. The prohibition of outrages upon personal dignity aims to protect human dignity, a fundamental guarantee protected in instruments such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.Footnote 233 The prohibition of rape protects physical autonomy and protection from non-consensual violations of bodily autonomy.Footnote 234 Given these distinct elements, these crimes should be fairly labelled as separate offences falling within the Statute and considered as separate criminal charges. Charging outrages upon personal dignity allegedly committed through acts of rape shows the psychological effects of a violation of bodily autonomy, which can have far-reaching consequences such as humiliation, degradation, and/or violation of one’s dignity.
51. This Chamber, therefore, holds that an act of physical bodily invasion in a sexual manner can satisfy the legal definition of both rape and outrages upon personal dignity. The Chamber further holds that the differences in the material elements and protected interests of these crimes demonstrate that Count 5 on outrages upon personal dignity meets the conditions for cumulative charging: the fair reflection of the harm caused as well as the total culpability of the accused, distinct criminal element, and the protection of different human rights.Footnote 235 Cumulative charging for Count 5 on outrages upon personal dignity highlights the full blameworthiness of the accused, recognises the effects of sexual acts, and complies with Article 21(3) ICC Statute in respect of fair labelling and non-discriminatory application of the law based on gender or another status.
52. In conclusion, this Chamber finds that the three conditions for cumulative charging have been fulfilled for Count 5 on outrages upon personal dignity within the meaning of Article 8(2)(c)(ii) of the Statute.Footnote 236
53. In light of the foregoing, the Chamber shall determine whether the evidentiary standard for confirming Count 3 on torture as a crime against humanity and Count 5 on outrages upon personal dignity and the other criminal charges submitted by the Prosecutor have been met. Having thoroughly assessed the evidence, the Chamber adjourns the Confirmation of Charges hearing and requests additional evidence from the Prosecutor, in accordance with Article 61(7)(c) of the Statute.Footnote 237
For These Reasons, the Chamber
(a) DECIDES to adjourn the hearing;
(b) REQUESTS the Prosecutor to consider submitting to the Chamber no later than 31 September 2009 an amended document containing additional evidence, including witness statements, and an in-depth analysis chart on the basis of any new evidence and evidence already submitted to the Chamber;
(c) INVITES the Defence to respond to the amended document, with a written submission not exceeding thirty pages, no later than 31 October 2009;
(d) INVITES the legal representatives for victims to submit written observations not exceeding thirty pages, no later than 30 October 2009;
(e) DECIDES that the sixty-day period required for the issuance of the decision on the confirmation of charges will commence anew as of the date of receipt of the last written submission.
Done in both English and French, the English version being authoritative.
Judge Loyce Mrewa
11.4 Pillage in the Bemba Sentencing
In 2016, Trial Chamber III handed down the sentencing decision for Mr Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo.Footnote 238 For the war crime of pillaging, Mr Bemba was sentenced to sixteen years’ imprisonment.Footnote 239 In this rewritten sentence by Kirsten M. F. Keith, the gendered aspects of pillaging are brought to the fore. Utilising evidence available to the original Chamber, Keith provides a greater analysis of the socio-economic context of Central African Republic (CAR) and how the impacts of pillaging resonate in a particular way for this society.
In considering a variety of harms, both the direct and indirect impacts are unpacked, with a particular focus on the financial and psychological aftermath. In delving into the harm experienced, Keith situates gender, highlighting realities not explored in the original sentence, noting the differentiated harms, as well as the similarities.
Decision on Sentence pursuant to Article 76 of the Statute No.: ICC-01/05-01/08
Date: 21 June 2016
Original: English
TRIAL CHAMBER III(B)
Before: Judge Kirsten M. F. KEITH
SITUATION IN UGANDA
IN THE CASE OF THE PROSECUTOR v. JEAN-PIERRE BEMBA GOMBO
Introduction/Summary of Conviction
1. On 21 March 2016, the Trial Chamber convicted Mr Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo (Mr Bemba) of murder as a war crime and crime against humanity under Articles 7(1)(a) and 8(2)(c)(i) of the Rome Statue (Statute), rape as a war crime and crime against humanity under Articles 7(1)(g) and 8(2)(e)(vi) of the Statute, and pillaging as war crime under Article 8(2)(e)(vi) of the Statute. Mr Bemba was convicted for the crimes committed by Mouvement de libération du Congo (MLC) forces based on his responsibility as a person effectively acting as a military commander of those forces, pursuant to Article 28(a) of the Statute.
Applicable Law Regarding the Determination of Sentence
2. Article 78(1) of the Statute and Rule 145 of the Rules of Procedure and Evidence (Rules) provide the framework for the determination of sentence. While Article 78(1) requires the Court ‘to take into account such factors as the gravity of the crime and the individual circumstances of the convicted person’, Rule 145(1)(c) provides a non-exhaustive list of additional factors that may be considered in the determination of sentence. These include ‘the extent of the damage caused, in particular the harm caused to the victims and their families, the nature of the unlawful behaviour and the means employed to execute the crime’. Additionally, Rule 145(2) requires the Court to ‘take into account, as appropriate’, any mitigating and aggravating circumstances.
3. In accordance with Rule 145(1)(b), the Chamber is to ‘balance all relevant factors, including any mitigating and aggravating factors and consider the circumstances both of the convicted person and of the crime’, based on ‘its intimate knowledge of the case’.Footnote 240
4. The framework for the determination of sentence, therefore, requires the Chamber to (a) identify and assess factors relevant to sentencing and (b) weigh and balance them and pronounce a sentence for each crime pursuant to Rule 145(1)(b).Footnote 241 However, the Statute and Rules are silent as to any requirements for such a process. Consequently, it falls to the Chamber, in the exercise of its discretion, to balance and weigh those factors it deems relevant to sentencing. The importance of this broad discretion was highlighted by the Appeals Chamber when it held that ‘the weight given to an individual factor and the balancing of all relevant factors in arriving at the sentence is at the core of a Trial Chamber’s exercise of discretion’.Footnote 242
Gravity
5. One of the principal considerations in the determination of a sentence, as specified in Article 78(1), is the gravity of the crime.Footnote 243 Consistent with jurisprudence from the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), when assessing the gravity of a crime within the context of persons convicted on the basis of command responsibility, two factors must be considered:
1. the gravity of the underlying crime committed by the subordinates; and
2. the gravity of the convicted person’s own conduct in failing to prevent or repress the underlying crimes.Footnote 244
6. Gravity is generally assessed in abstracto, by analysing the legal elements of the crime and the mode of liability in general terms, and in concreto, by assessing the particular circumstances of the case, the gravity of crimes committed by subordinates and the convicted person’s culpability.Footnote 245 Factors that are considered in relation to the gravity of a crime cannot be ‘double-counted’ and taken into account as aggravating circumstances for the same crime, and vice versa.Footnote 246
Analysis of the Crimes
7. The Chamber will now address the crime of pillaging, with regard to the gravity of the offence and, if applicable, any aggravating and/or mitigating circumstances. Mr Bemba’s culpability, individually and as a military commander, and his convictions for rape and murder are addressed in subsequent sections of this Decision, where the Chamber pronounces a sentence for each crime in accordance with Article 78(3).
Pillaging
8. The Chamber convicted Mr Bemba of the war crime of pillaging on the basis that pillaging was committed by MLC forces against civilians in the CAR with grave consequences for the victims.Footnote 247
Factors Relevant to the Determination of Sentencing the Crime of Pillaging
Gravity
9. In assessing the gravity of the crime, the Chamber considers Mr Bemba’s ongoing failure, as someone acting as a military commander, to fulfil his duty to prevent or repress the crime of pillaging. Such failure to act may have the implicit effect of encouraging subordinates to believe they can commit further crimes with impunity. Although this issue has not been previously considered by this Court, such reasoning accords with jurisprudence from the ICTY. In the Halilović case, the Trial Chamber considered ‘[t]he argument that a failure to punish a crime (committed by subordinates) is tacit acceptance of its commission is not without merit’.Footnote 248 Drawing on the words of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) Commentary to the Additional Protocol, the ICTY Trial Chamber held that a commander who fails to act has ‘tolerated breaches of the law of armed conflict’.Footnote 249 In view of such judicial reasoning, this Chamber finds that Mr Bemba’s ongoing failure to act is of serious gravity.
10. In its assessment of the gravity of the crime, the Chamber also considers the following factors listed in Rule 145(1)(c): the circumstances of manner, time, and location, and the extent of damage caused, in particular the harm caused to the victims and their families. Before doing so, and in the exercise of its discretion in identifying and assessing relevant factors, the Chamber will first consider the broader socio-economic context within which the crime of pillaging occurred. This contextual approach helps frame the Chamber’s understanding of the gravity of the crime and the physical, social, and economic distress it creates for its victims, rather than viewing the impacts of the crime in isolation.
11. The Chamber is cognisant that in assessing the gravity of the crime of pillaging, it is also important to consider the harm caused from multiple dimensions. This requires the Chamber to consider the compounding effects of the harm, particularly when viewed within the socio-economic context of the CAR, and to assess the harm against victims not as a homogenous group but as persons with their own unique lived experiences resulting from the crime of pillaging.
Socio-economic Context
12. With more than 66.6 per cent of the population living on less than US$1 per day, the CAR is one of the poorest countries in the world, with the rate of poverty increasing to 75 per cent in 2003.Footnote 250 According to the Human Development Index, in 2003 it ranked 169 out of 175 countries, with a schooling rate of 31 per cent, literacy at 48.6 per cent, and a life expectancy of forty-two years.Footnote 251 As explained by the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), the ‘total collapse of the economy over the last ten years’ is ‘due mainly to bad government and to repeated cycles of political and military violence’.Footnote 252 Against this backdrop, the cost of provision of care and social security is prohibitive, leaving the ‘system on its last legs’.Footnote 253
13. The lived experiences heard before this Chamber reflect the above data. Witnesses recounted that, prior to the conflict, they led subsistence lives, running small businesses trading goods, such as coffee and food, or working as small-scale farmers.Footnote 254 For many, their earnings were sufficient to provide their families with shelter and basic necessities; victims worked hard for many years to accrue their possessions and any savings. Those fortunate enough to complete more advanced education were able to enter professions and provide a greater degree of comfort for their families and their homes.Footnote 255
14. Framed within this socio-economic context, it is evident that the crime of pillaging has severe, long-term consequences for victims. As considered further below, the loss of their most essential belongings, many of which are necessary for the basic provision of food and shelter, has a multifaceted and enduring impact on victims. For some, the pillaging directly and significantly impacted on their livelihoods, as they lost the means to generate an income. For others, the pillaging also resulted in the loss of a person’s own agency and independence as, faced with nothing, they are compelled to return to live with family. The pillaging of items essential for their survival therefore impacts on the victims’ most basic of human rights.
The Circumstances of Manner, Time, and Location
15. The Chamber found that large-scale acts of pillaging occurred throughout the 2002–2003 CAR military operation, across a broad geographical area where MLC soldiers were present.Footnote 256 The Chamber found that a wide range of property was taken from civilians without their consent, covering everyday items such as clothing, food, cooking utensils, foam mattresses, radios, televisions, fridges, generators, suitcases, money, vehicles, and items of personal value.Footnote 257 The Chamber found that the MLC soldiers pillaged personal items for pecuniary gainFootnote 258 and with no regard for the victim’s livelihood or well-being, which included being able to feed their families, seek treatment, or arrange burial services.Footnote 259
16. The pillaging was systematic, forming part of the MLC’s modus operandi. When they took control of an area, they conducted house-to-house searches for remaining rebels and during these searches they pillaged goods.Footnote 260 Witness P-38 testified that the MLC also erected checkpoints to control the entire area and they would stop persons and ask them for money. If they had no money, they were stripped of their clothing and if the person had jewellery or a mobile phone, they would also take that.Footnote 261 Other witnesses explained that when houses were pillaged, they took everything except for the items they destroyed.Footnote 262 Many houses were occupied by the MLC during the CAR operation. Witnesses testified about the behaviour of the soldiers, who occupied these civilian houses with blatant disrespect for their belongings and homes, destroying whatever was left in the houses.Footnote 263 For instance, the Chamber recalls the testimony of P-73, who explained that the MLC looted the houses and left them empty and damaged, with the doors used as firewood. P-73 testified that if people fled their homes, the soldiers would then occupy their homes and do whatever they wanted to them ‘and you would be forced to struggle in order to buy everything all over again’.Footnote 264 Similarly, P-108 testified that he was ‘in a state of total desolation’ when he returned to his house as he could not recognise it. ‘It was beyond recognition. They practically took away everything, except those items that were destroyed … The house was very, very dirty.’Footnote 265
17. Items were also pillaged directly from victims while they were fleeing to safety. For instance, P-68 testified that she and her sister decided to flee from their house as the shooting and shelling in their neighbourhood made them very frightened.Footnote 266 While fleeing from their house to seek refuge in PK5, they were attacked by a group of soldiers. These soldiers took the few possessions P-68 had managed to take with her while fleeing and then subjected her to multiple violent rapes.Footnote 267
The Extent of Damage Caused, in Particular the Harm to Victims and Their Families
18. The Chamber found that the consequences of pillaging were far-reaching, impacting various aspects of victims’ personal and professional lives. Victims were often left with nothing, not even basic necessities,Footnote 268 with the impacts of the crime still evident today. As P-42 testified, ‘they looted everything I had and they left me with nothing at all, so until today I continue to sleep on a mat’.Footnote 269
19. The sense of loss and destitution was a recurring theme in many testimonies.Footnote 270 P-23, for instance, stated that upon completion of his testimony in the Hague, he would return home to ‘live in the poverty that [he] was plunged into’.Footnote 271 The knock-on effect of this is that many victims have been unable to rebuild their lives and homes; as P-73 described, ‘it’s difficult for us to be able to get our lives back. Everything that we had […] we’d made a huge effort to accumulate what we had’.Footnote 272
20. While recognising that the harm caused to victims and their families by the pillaging is unique to each individual, for the purposes of assessing the extent of the harm, the Chamber finds it useful to consider the financial and psychological impact of the crime on victims’ lives.
Financial Impacts
21. The Chamber heard evidence of the severe financial impacts that the acts of pillaging had on victims. Among these, direct financial losses were incurred, including money that was taken directly from victims or their homes, much of it representing their hard-earned savings. P-87, for instance, spoke of the theft of 67,000 francs that she had earned from selling coffee and 600,000 francs that belonged to her parents.Footnote 273 It also includes the costs of trying to replace or rebuild what was pillaged. P-108, for instance, explained that the estimated loss they incurred from the pillaging is between 20–30 million francs.Footnote 274 He further explained that even today, he has not been able to return the house to its former state because as a civil servant his salary was owed in arrears and he had existing bank loans, so it was not easy to repair the house.Footnote 275 Other witnesses also spoke of being unable to rebuild their lives and their homes owing to the financial constraints they face as a result of the pillaging.Footnote 276
22. The acts of pillaging also directly impacted victims’ businesses. Many lost items that were crucial to their business operations; without such items, their businesses ceased to operate. The Chamber, for instance, found that V-20’s tailoring business never recovered after his sewing machines were pillaged.Footnote 277 V-20 described how the loss of the machines and his clients’ clothing still makes him very sad.Footnote 278 Likewise, Witness P-23 testified about the many items pillaged from his house, including the vehicle he used to earn a living.Footnote 279 He later found the ruins of his car after all its parts had been taken; this was the only item of his that was found.Footnote 280 Other witnesses spoke of their livestock or food supplies being pillaged – items that were essential to their business that provided a means of subsistence.Footnote 281
23. The financial impact on businesses and the loss of potential earnings is hard to quantify and was not fully explored during witnesses’ testimony. However, it is evident that losing a business, which generates an income, has a severe and enduring impact on victims, particularly given the socio-economic context in the CAR.
24. The Chamber recognises that while the monetary value of items pillaged from the victims varies depending on their personal and professional circumstances, these items were essential to their lives. Consequently, regardless of the actual monetary value of the items pillaged, they were of great value to the victims and their loss resulted in severe consequences for the victims; many are living in prolonged poverty unable to rebuild their lives and their homes.
25. The financial harm caused by the pillaging continues to impact other aspects of victims’ lives, including their education. Some witnesses testified that as a result of the pillaging, they no longer have access to education as they cannot afford it. As Witness A/555/08 recalled, she was a child attending school when soldiers came to her area. She was then raped and abducted by the soldiers and eventually managed to flee and return to her family home four years later. On return she found her family ‘had been totally stripped of their belongings. They were living in poverty. They were farming and involved in a little bit of trading in order to be able to afford something to eat, even clothing themselves was difficult’.Footnote 282 As a result of the pillaging, her father can no longer afford to send her to school and she is deeply hurt by this.Footnote 283 She talked about seeing some of her peers who managed to complete their schooling and who have managed to secure employment with salaries.Footnote 284 She is severely depressed and has suicidal thoughts as a result of what happened to her and when she sees the huge difference between her life and others who work and have a salary.Footnote 285
26. A/555/08’s experience also highlights the intergenerational impact of pillaging vis-à-vis access to education, with her children also unable to attend school. She explained that she survives by the small-scale trading of vegetables, enabling her to just manage to feed and take care of her children, but she lacks the financial resources to send them to school.Footnote 286
27. The intergenerational impact of pillaging on access to education is also evident in A/480/08’s testimony. She explained that due to the events that occurred, including the pillaging, her children have been unable to return to school as there is no money to pay for it.Footnote 287
28. The Chamber notes the overarching importance of an education, with education being one of the UN Sustainable Development Goals that form part of a blueprint for global peace and prosperity.Footnote 288 An education provides people with knowledge and skills to help them gain employment, which links to better health and greater financial resources. It is, therefore, a critical tool that is essential to helping lift victims and their families out of poverty. For women and girls, in particular, education provides them with opportunities that may enable them to have greater autonomy over their lives. It represents hope and aspirations for a future that includes secure employment, enabling them to determine their own lives, rather than being dependent on family.
29. The harm resulting from pillaging therefore extends beyond the immediate loss of quantifiable possessions, to that which is intangible: the loss of an individual’s access to education and the resulting loss of opportunities associated with an education. Given the socio-economic context in the CAR, this Chamber considers that the intergenerational loss of access to education is significant and contributes to the enduring impact of pillaging on victims.
30. In addition to impacting individuals’ access to education, the crime of pillaging has also resulted in many victims lacking the financial resources to access medical treatment. The Chamber, for instance, found that P-73 lacked money to pay for medical treatment following the pillaging.Footnote 289
31. The loss of financial resources to pay for healthcare has added significance when viewing this factor contextually. As considered below, the Chamber found that the pillaging was accompanied by other crimes, including rape and other sexual violence against men, women, and children. As a result of these crimes, many victims have medical issues, including HIV, which require ongoing medical treatment.Footnote 290 However, the Chamber heard evidence that many of these victims were left destitute following the pillaging and are unable to afford the treatment.Footnote 291 For instance, P-81 testified that as a consequence of the rape, she has stomach problems but she cannot afford to get ‘treatment from an appropriate doctor’. As she has no one to help her pay for a doctor, she gets traditional treatment but ‘the results have not been good’.Footnote 292 Other victims, including Witness P-68, have to rely on family for financial help for their treatment.Footnote 293 The lack of access to treatment for ongoing medical conditions caused by rape highlights the intersectionality of the crimes and the continuing vulnerabilities of victims.
32. The Chamber heard evidence regarding the shame and humiliation facing victims of rape and other sexual violence, which has devastated their lives and communities.Footnote 294 Cognisant of this, the Chamber further considers that the reliance on family members to assist with payment for medical treatment adds considerable stress to the burdens they are already carrying.
33. The impact of pillaging and the consequent lack of financial means to access medical treatment is viewed within the context of the situation in the CAR. The International Federation of Human Rights found that despite the trauma victims suffering due to the crimes committed, there is no national support programme to provide them with medical and psychological assistance. Yet such support is essential given the prohibitive cost of care and the fact that social security is collapsing.Footnote 295
34. The Chamber also recognises a gendered dimension to the impact of pillaging in relation to the poverty in the CAR. Although many live in poverty, the situation facing women with sole financial responsibility for their children is particularly acute. There are numerous reasons why they bear such responsibility. For instance, some husbands left their rape-victim wives due to the associated cultural stigma rape brings to the family, particularly where there are children born of rape.Footnote 296 In other cases, husbands were killed, either outright or as a result of injuries sustained by violent physical attacks. Faced with severe financial hardship, some women received support from organisations such as Medicines sans Frontiers or Caritas,Footnote 297 although that support was intermittent and is no longer available. With sole financial responsibility for their children, the Chamber notes that the crime of pillaging has left some women in a position of desperate financial precariousness and vulnerability. The Chamber finds, therefore, that the crime of pillaging has an additional and significant impact on women and children.
Psychological Impact
35. The crime of pillaging also has a direct psychological impact on the victims. As Witness P-108 explained, prior to the conflict he had a good life, working as a magistrate, and he did everything he could to make his family comfortable. Then, ‘in one day’s time, we had to leave, we had to sleep on rugs on the floor. Before we were able to sleep in proper beds and, therefore, the children felt the impact of that; and still today they’re suffering from that, because in one day they had lost everything. So there is really truly psychological impact’.Footnote 298 P-108 estimated that if the moral and psychological damage to his family were included in the cost of harm, ‘it would bring the amount up to 60 million francs CFA’.Footnote 299
36. The Chamber notes that the full psychological impact on victims of the crime of pillaging is hard to gauge given many victims were subjected to other crimes. Further, most of the evidence adduced regarding the psychological impacts of crime focused on the impact of rape on victims and their families rather than the other crimes. Given this, the Chamber is unable to make a finding on the psychological impact of the crime of pillaging alone. However, in assessing the gravity of the crime, and drawing on the testimony of Dr Reicherter, the Chamber recognises the compounding effects of traumatic events, including pillaging, where one traumatic event has a clear mental health impact that is then exacerbated by other risk factors, including other acts of violence or the death of family.Footnote 300
37. The Chamber finds, therefore, that the harm caused by the acts of pillaging is multidimensional. It has an enduring impact on victims and their families’ lives that exacerbate their vulnerabilities. In particular, the Chamber has considered the intergenerational and gendered impact of the crime of pillaging, which has a significant impact on women, children, and other victims of rape and sexual violence. Such impact goes beyond the quantifiable harm caused by pillaging, namely the financial loss associated with pillaged belongings, to the intangible, non-financial harm. As mentioned, this includes the loss of agency and opportunities associated with an education that victims can no longer afford to access.
38. In view of the above circumstances, in particular the harm caused to victims and their families, the Chamber finds that the crime of pillaging is of serious gravity.
Aggravating Circumstances
39. The Chamber will now consider factors that support aggravating circumstances in the determination of sentence: where the victim is particularly defenceless and the commission of the crime with particular cruelty. It notes that these aggravating factors also apply to the other crimes Mr Bemba was convicted of. However, as the Chamber is bound to apply a sentence for each crime individually,Footnote 301 it holds that the same aggravating circumstance factors can be applied for each different crime.
Victim Is Particularly Defenceless
40. The Chamber found that civilians, including children, were subject to pillaging without distinction as to age, gender, profession, or social status.Footnote 302 Armed MLC soldiers targeted these unarmed civilians in or around their homes or their businesses, places of sanctuary including churches and hospitals, on MLC bases, in isolated locations including the bush, and/or while seeking refuge.Footnote 303
41. Witnesses spoke of the general sense of insecurity and chaos that prevailed during this period, with the arrival of armed soldiers causing many to flee the area.Footnote 304 Confronted with armed soldiers pillaging their personal belongings, victims were rendered defenceless. As P-87 stated in response to a question whether the items were taken with her consent:
Well, they come into your house, they have weapons and they say, ‘Give us the money, give us the money and we won’t fire’, but if we don’t give them our belongings, if we put up a resistance, they will kill us. So when they came into our houses, we would just let them do what they wanted and take away our belongings. It was to save our own lives.Footnote 305
42. In view of the above, the Chamber finds that the crime of pillaging was committed where the victims were particularly defenceless, as an aggravating circumstance provided in Rule 145(2)(b)(iii).
Commission of the Crime with Particular Cruelty
43. The Chamber found that acts of pillaging were often accompanied by other crimes, including rape, murder, and other forms or threats of physical violence or verbal abuse.Footnote 306 As P-6 recalled: ‘The looting was concomitant with the acts of rape. It was at the time the MLC troops were being deployed in the neighbourhoods when they went from house-to-house, searching these houses. At one and at the same time as the rapes were being committed, property of interest was being stolen.’Footnote 307
44. The Chamber heard from multiple survivors, both male and female, who were raped during the pillaging events. P-68 recalled how she was fleeing to safety when she and her sister-in-law were attacked by soldiers, who took their possessions. She was then threatened with a weapon and raped by two soldiers; her sister-in-law was raped by three soldiers.Footnote 308 Others who attempted to resist the pillaging were beaten or killed. P-69 testified that MLC soldiers entered his compound and demanded money from his sister. When she refused, they threw her on the ground, taking the money off her.Footnote 309 She was then shot ‘a bullet right into the head … it was as if an animal’s skull had been hit’.Footnote 310
45. The Chamber also found that many victims and their family members were subject to multiple acts of pillaging and other forms of violence.Footnote 311 For instance, P-87 testified that groups of armed soldiers came to her house twice on the same day just hours apart. The first time they took the TV, radio, furniture, and mattresses.Footnote 312 The second time they came, she was raped by multiple soldiers while other soldiers were pillaging the savings she had earned from selling coffee.Footnote 313
46. Based on the factors considered above, the Chamber finds that the war crime of pillaging was committed with particular cruelty, as an aggravating circumstance under Rule 145(2)(b)(iv).
Concluding Remarks on the Crime of Pillaging
47. The Chamber has identified and assessed the factors it considers relevant for determining a sentence for the crime of pillaging. In doing so, it has explored the far-reaching consequences this crime has on victims and their families, many of whom have been unable to rebuild their lives as a direct result. In particular, the Chamber has considered the harm pillaging causes, from a financial and psychological perspective, and the intergenerational and gendered effect of pillaging.
48. The Chamber finds that women and children are disproportionately impacted by the crime of pillaging. It impedes their access to education, which is critical given the socio-economic context and poverty rates in the CAR, and consequently impacts their potential for independence, agency, and earnings. Further, many women and girls, but also some men, are also victims of rape. This has a compounding impact on the trauma they endure, being victims of multiple crimes. Given the cultural stigma and sensitivity associated with rape, the Chamber is particularly aware of the indirect harm pillaging has on women and girls, particularly where they have to rely on family to pay for the ongoing medical treatment that is required as a result of the rapes. In the Chamber’s view, it is important to employ such a gendered lens when assessing the harm caused by pillaging in order to more readily reflect the lived experiences of the victims.
49. The Chamber finds these were acts deliberately targeted against vulnerable, defenceless civilians, including children, women, and the elderly. Their vulnerability was further compounded by the circumstances in which the crimes occurred. The pillaging of personal items and civilian property occurred in the context of a military operation, which forced many civilians to flee their home and seek safety elsewhere. It was committed by armed MLC soldiers, and accompanied by other serious crimes, including rape and murder.
50. The Chamber found that as a result of the systematic pillaging of civilians, and their homes and businesses, the victims were stripped of their belongings and resources. Their houses were also often destroyed following the pillage. Consequently, many victims were forced to live in poverty, which continues today. The Chamber finds that, while each victim has their own lived experience, the commonality between them is the overwhelming losses they suffered due to the pillaging. This has had multidimensional and enduring consequences on their lives and those of their families. Viewed within the context of the CAR, with its socio-economic challenges, it is evident that the crime of pillaging has a significant impact on vulnerable civilians, with many living an existence of prolonged poverty.
51. In view of the above, the Chamber finds the war crime of pillaging is a crime of serious gravity. The Chamber also finds that two aggravating circumstances apply to the crime of pillaging; it was committed:
(i) against particularly defenceless victims and
(ii) with particular cruelty.
52. On the basis of the above, coupled with Mr Bemba’s ongoing failure to prevent or repress the crimes committed by his subordinates, the Chamber sentences Mr Bemba to sixteen years of imprisonment for the crime of pillaging as a war crime.
Judge Kirsten M. F. Keith
11.5 Command Responsibility in the Bemba Appeal
In 2016, Mr Jean Pierre Bemba Gombo was found guilty of the war crimes and crimes against humanity of murder, rape, and pillage.Footnote 314 He was subsequently sentenced to eighteen years’ imprisonment.Footnote 315 In 2018, the Appeals Chamber acquitted Mr Bemba on all charges.Footnote 316 In this rewritten appeal decision, Suzanne Varrall and Sarah Williams reflect on the significance of the case as the first before the ICC to see convictions for sexual violence charges and for command responsibility as a mode of liability. Varrall and Williams critically engage with the doctrine of command responsibility and apply a feminist lens to the interpretation of the phrase ‘all necessary and reasonable measures’ in determining Mr Bemba’s third ground of appeal.
Varrall and Williams’ decision interprets and applies the correct legal standard for ‘all necessary and reasonable measures’, reflecting the protective function of international humanitarian law (IHL) and its special regard for women and children at risk of sexual violence. While they agree with the original Appeal Chamber’s finding that commanders cannot do the impossible, and that a case-by-case assessment of the facts must be applied, they categorically dismiss the use of criteria of ‘feasibility’ or ‘proportionality’ in interpreting the standard. Instead, Varrall and Williams note that the rules and principles of IHL that underpin responsible command establish a protective rationale for the doctrine and assign a special status to women and children and to sexual violence. Drawing on this framework, Varrall and Williams highlight the basic requirements of responsible command and situate these within the distinct obligations to prevent and repress crimes, and to submit them for investigation and prosecution. Comparing these requirements to the measures taken by Mr Bemba, Varrall and Williams find the basic requirements of responsible command have not been met and dismiss this third ground of appeal.
Judgment on the Appeal of Mr Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo against Trial Chamber III’s Judgment pursuant to Article 74 of the Statute No.: ICC-01/05-01/08 A
Date: 1 June 2018
Original: English
THE APPEALS CHAMBER (B)
Before: Judge Suzanne VARRALL
Judge Sarah WILLIAMS
SITUATION IN THE CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC
IN THE CASE OF THE PROSECUTOR v. JEAN-PIERRE BEMBA GOMBO
The Appeals Chamber of the International Criminal Court, in the appeal of Mr Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo (Mr Bemba) against the decision of Trial Chamber III entitled ‘Judgment pursuant to Article 74 of the Statute’ of 21 March 2016 (ICC-01/05-01/08-3343), by majority, delivers the following Judgment.
Background
1. Mr Bemba’s case represents a landmark for this Court on at least two fronts. It is the first case before the Court in which a charge and conviction has been recorded on the basis of command responsibility. Mr Bemba’s case is also the first case to include charges and a conviction for crimes of sexual violence. The Appeals Chamber notes that incidents of sexual violence outnumber the other crimes in this case: Mr Bemba was convicted of murder, rape, and pillaging on the basis of three murders, approximately twenty-two cases of pillage, and the rape of twenty-eight people (comprising twenty-six women and two men).Footnote 317 The sexual violence charges in this case were found to be of ‘utmost, serious gravity’,Footnote 318 committed against particularly defenceless victims, including children, and with particular cruelty.Footnote 319
Third Ground of Appeal
Overview
2. The third ground of appeal concerns Mr Bemba’s submission that the Trial Chamber erred when it found that he was responsible as a commander, pursuant to Article 28(a) of the Rome Statute, for crimes committed by troops under his control during the 2002–2003 operations in the Central African Republic (CAR Operation) – those being the crimes against humanity of murder and rape, and the war crimes of murder, rape, and pillaging. Mr Bemba was, at all relevant times, the president of the Mouvement de libération du Congo (MLC), a political party founded by him, and the commander-in-chief of its military branch.
3. As outlined in Article 28(a), command responsibility for crimes committed by subordinates comprises three elements: first, the commander had effective command and control, or authority and control, over those subordinates;Footnote 320 second, the commander knew, or should have known, that those forces were committing or about to commit crimes within the jurisdiction of this Court;Footnote 321 and third, the commander failed to take all necessary and reasonable measures within his or her power to prevent or repress their commission or to submit the matter to the competent authorities for investigation and prosecution.Footnote 322
4. The Appeals Chamber accepts the reasoning and conclusions of the Trial Chamber with respect to the first and second of these elements. It will therefore limit its assessment to arguments concerning the third element and Mr Bemba’s submissions in relation to the Trial Chamber’s finding that he failed to take all necessary and reasonable measures within his power.Footnote 323
5. The Appeals Chamber considers that the first of Mr Bemba’s five submissions, being that the Trial Chamber failed to apply the correct legal standard, is the decisive issue and will limit its considerations to this point. Because the underlying rationale for the mode of liability contained in Article 28(a) of the Rome Statute is critical to a correct interpretation of the relevant legal standard and its application, the following reasoning will commence with an exposition of how the concept of protection under IHL informs the doctrine of command responsibility. The Appeals Chamber will then outline the correct legal standard and apply this to the facts in Mr Bemba’s case.
The Protection Rationale Underlying Command Responsibility
The Relevance of International Humanitarian Law
6. As one of the oldest branches of international law, IHL forms the lex specialis governing conduct in warfare with the aim of mitigating the human suffering borne both by combatants and non-combatants. A primary focus of IHL is, therefore, the protection of the civilian population from the effects of hostilities.Footnote 324 Crucially, under IHL, women and children are entitled to special respect and protection from sexual violence.Footnote 325 This principle recognises the heightened risk of sexual and gender-based violence that armed conflict entails and the impact of this type of violence on women and girls. The Appeals Chamber notes that the Rome Statute and Rules also accord a special status to sexual crimes, crimes against children, and the victims thereof,Footnote 326 in recognition of their especially grave nature and consequences.
7. The Appeals Chamber considers the rules and principles of IHL to be central to applying and interpreting Article 28(a) of the Rome Statute concerning command responsibility for the following reasons. First, Mr Bemba has been convicted of serious violations of the laws of armed conflict, collectively described as war crimes under Article 8 of the Rome Statute, the nature of which are directly informed by IHL.Footnote 327 Second, the Rome Statute specifically provides that the Court shall apply the rules of IHL in its application and interpretation of the Statute, Elements of Crimes, and Rules.Footnote 328 Finally, the mode of liability of command responsibility codified in Article 28(a) of the Rome Statute is derived from IHL, as will be outlined further below.
Command Responsibility under IHL
8. It is from the rules and principles of IHL that the concept of responsible command derives. The notion that armed forces should always be ‘commanded by a person responsible for his subordinates’ was contained in Article 1(1) of the Regulations Respecting the Laws and Customs of War on Land annexed to the 1907 Fourth Hague Convention.Footnote 329 The principle of responsible command also featured in post–World War I international conventions (the precursors to the 1949 Geneva Conventions).Footnote 330
9. A positive legal duty for commanders was codified in the 1977 Additional Protocol I to the 1949 Geneva Conventions.Footnote 331 Article 86(2) provides that commanders are not absolved of responsibility for breaches by their subordinates ‘if they knew, or had information enabling them to conclude’ that the breaches were being committed or were about to be committed, and they did not take reasonable measures to prevent them.Footnote 332 Article 87 requires commanders to ‘prevent and, where necessary, to suppress and report’ breaches of the Geneva Conventions and Additional Protocol I, ‘ensure that members of the armed forces under their command are aware of their obligations’, and ‘initiate disciplinary or penal action against violators’.Footnote 333
10. The imposition of individual criminal responsibility on commanders for the breach of this duty was established in the statutes of various international criminal tribunalsFootnote 334 and in jurisprudence in the aftermath of World War II.Footnote 335 The responsibility of commanders for crimes committed by their subordinates is based on the commanders’ failure to take measures to prevent, repress, or report the commission of such crimes. In the post–World War II trial of Japanese General Tomoyuki Yamashita, a US Military Commission in the Philippines explained the liability thus:
[The] assignment to command military troops is accompanied by broad authority and heavy responsibility. This has been true in all armies throughout recorded history … where murder and rape and vicious, revengeful actions are widespread offences, and there is no effective attempt by a commander to discover and control the criminal acts, such a commander may be held responsible, even criminally liable, for the lawless acts of his troops, depending upon their nature and the circumstances surrounding them.Footnote 336
11. The Rome Statute codifies commanders’ criminal liability for the crimes of subordinates under Article 28. The responsibility of commanders and other superiors in this provision specifically adds to ‘other grounds of criminal responsibility’ found elsewhere in the Rome Statute. The provision distinguishes between the responsibility of military commanders and persons effectively acting as military commanders on the one hand, and other superiors (often referred to as ‘non-military’ or ‘civilian superiors’) on the other.
12. The responsibility of the former is addressed in Article 28(a), which applies to both international and non-international armed conflicts.Footnote 337 Responsibility will arise where three criteria are satisfied. First, the commander must have effective control over the troops. Second, the commander must have actual or constructive knowledge of the commission or potential commission of crimes. Third, the commander must have failed to take all necessary and reasonable measures within his or her power to prevent or repress the crimes or submit them to the competent authorities.
13. The Appeals Chamber considers that the application and interpretation of Article 28(a) concerning the command responsibility mode of liability must be consistent with the protective function of IHL and the special status it accords to women and children in relation to sexual violence. In particular, this approach must be applied in determining and applying the correct legal standard under Article 28(a)(ii) for whether a commander has taken all necessary and reasonable measures within his or her power to prevent, repress, or submit subordinates’ crimes to competent authorities.
The Correct Legal Standard: Article 28(a)(ii)
14. Mr Bemba argues that the Trial Chamber failed to assess his conduct in relation to the obligation to take all necessary and reasonable measures against the correct legal standard. The Trial Chamber found that whether or not a commander failed to take all necessary and reasonable measures should be established on a ‘case-by-case basis’, focusing on the ‘material power’ of the commander.Footnote 338 Mr Bemba submits that a commander need only take such measures that are ‘within his material possibility’Footnote 339 and that his conduct should be judged by a standard of what measures were ‘feasible and practicable at that time’.Footnote 340
15. In determining the correct legal standard to be applied, the Appeals Chamber notes that Article 21 of the Rome Statute stipulates the sources of law that the Court shall apply. The first of these is the Statute itself, as well as the Elements of Crimes and Rules of Procedure and Evidence.Footnote 341 In the second place, where appropriate, the Court shall apply relevant treaties, rules, and principles of international law including the established principles of IHL. The significance of this body of law has been discussed above and will be referred to throughout the following section of the judgment as relevant. Furthermore, Article 21(3) establishes a positive obligation on the Court to apply a gender-sensitive and intersectional interpretation of the law consistent with internationally recognised human rights.
16. As per the general rules of treaty interpretation, construing the provisions of Article 28(a)(ii) must commence with a textual interpretation, in accordance with the ordinary meaning of the words in their context and in light of the object and purpose of the Rome Statute.Footnote 342 The drafting history of the relevant provision may thereafter be considered in order to confirm the meaning resulting from the textual interpretation if required.Footnote 343
17. The text of Article 28(a)(ii) outlines the third criterion that must be satisfied before a military commander with effective control of his or her troops can be criminally responsible for crimes committed by those troops (the first criterion requires effective control and the second criterion requires actual or constructive knowledge). The text of the third criterion takes the following form: ‘That military commander or person failed to take all necessary and reasonable measures within his or her power to prevent or repress their commission or to submit the matter to the competent authorities for investigation and prosecution.’ The following inquiry shall consider firstly the phrase ‘all necessary and reasonable measures within his or her power’, and subsequently the three distinct obligations to ‘prevent’, ‘repress’, or ‘submit’.
All Necessary and Reasonable Measures within a Commander’s Power
18. The relevant categories of measures stipulated in Article 28(a)(ii) are described as those that are necessary and reasonable – not feasible, practicable, proportional, plausible, or any other formulation. The Appeals Chamber therefore cannot accept Mr Bemba’s submission that his conduct should be judged by a standard of what measures were ‘feasible and practicable at that time’.Footnote 344 A commander cannot be expected to do the impossible, certainly. But while it is appropriate to adopt a case-by-case approach to what is necessary and reasonable in the circumstances, an alternative and lesser standard of ‘feasible and practicable’ is neither warranted nor permissible. Although the word ‘feasible’ is used in Article 86(2) of Additional Protocol I, it was not included in Article 28(a)(ii), and we must assume this to be a deliberate choice by the drafters. Nor is ‘feasible’ used in the relevant provisions of the statutes of other international criminal tribunals, which use the ‘necessary and reasonable’ formulation.
19. An examination of the Rome Statute travaux préparatoires confirms this understanding and provides no reason to infer any intention that the provision should be construed beyond the ordinary meaning of the words ‘necessary and reasonable’. The choice of these words was not a contentious issue during the drafting process. The formulation was adopted in all drafts with no objections or amendments, and ultimately incorporated by the drafting committee.Footnote 345 It is the ordinary meaning of the words ‘necessary and reasonable’ that must guide an interpretation of the relevant provision.
20. The word ‘necessary’ means ‘needed’, ‘indispensable’, ‘vital’, or ‘essential’.Footnote 346 For example, water is necessary to sustain life. The word ‘reasonable’ means ‘within the limits of what it would be rational or sensible to expect’, ‘not extravagant or excessive’, ‘moderate’.Footnote 347 What is reasonable is inherently informed by context. Of course, what is necessary and reasonable to prevent or repress the commission of a crime by subordinates, or to submit those crimes for investigation and prosecution, is far from straightforward. Nevertheless, it is the task given to this Court under the Rome Statute to make such a determination, consistent with the rules and principle of IHL and internationally recognised human rights.
21. Attention must also be given to the use of the term ‘all’ preceding the categories of necessary and reasonable in Article 28(a)(ii). The use of this word in this context, given its ordinary meaning, stipulates that no exceptions or exclusions can be accepted in relation to the extent of measures to be taken within the relevant categories. If any necessary and reasonable measure has not been taken, then the standard has not been met.
22. However, Article 28(a)(ii) qualifies that the measures a commander must take are limited to those that are ‘within his or her power’. The Trial Chamber correctly stated that the word ‘power’ in this context is not to be understood as limited to a commander’s ‘explicit legal capacity’ but that it relates to the de jure and/or de facto power of the commander.Footnote 348 The scope of an individual commander’s power will therefore inform what measures are necessary and reasonable in the circumstances.
23. The Appeals Chamber notes, however, that command responsibility applies to all commanders, irrespective of their seniority, and whether they are physically in the field commanding troops or issuing orders from a distance. Both circumstances are relevant in Mr Bemba’s case. Thus, while Article 28(a)(ii) recognises the relevance of the scope of a commander’s power, it does not make any differentiation as to the standard applied to the actions (or omissions) of a commander based on either their seniority or their physical proximity to troops. Such a distinction is not only factually illogical, it would also be inconsistent with this Court’s duty to apply the Rome Statute equally to all persons without any distinction based on official capacity.Footnote 349
24. The phrase ‘within his or her power’ allows for consideration of the circumstances that may constrain a commander’s ability. A commander cannot do the impossible. However, this does not justify the failure to take measures on the basis that they may prove difficult, inconvenient, or even disadvantageous. It is true that, at a broad level, IHL allows for the balancing of military necessity against the protection of civilians. The principle of military necessity, first codified in the Lieber Code of 1863, requires that parties to a conflict adopt only ‘those measures which are indispensable for securing the ends of the war, and which are lawful according to the modern law and usages of war’.Footnote 350 So while military necessity recognises that the obligation to protect is never an absolute one, given the realities of war, it also maintains that unlawful means and methods of warfare are never permissible.
25. The Appeals Chamber agrees with the prosecution’s submission that conduct contrary to IHL, and a fortiori criminal conduct, is never a permitted means or method of warfare.Footnote 351 The Appeals Chamber considers that sexual and gender-based violence cannot under any circumstances be considered as legitimate acts in pursuance of military necessity or military advantage. The rape of women, men, and children would never bring any lawful military advantage, nor can there ever be a necessity to engage in such conduct. Such acts are always contrary to IHL.
26. In sum, the Appeals Chamber considers that the ordinary meaning of the words ‘all necessary and reasonable measures within his or her power’ establishes a high standard for commanders, but one which allows for consideration of factual limitations and does not require a commander to perform impossible feats. Nevertheless, this is a standard that cannot be incrementally lowered in response to what may or not be militarily advantageous, convenient, or economical at a particular point in time.
Prevent or Repress Crimes, or Submit to Competent Authorities
27. Article 28(a)(ii) specifies that all necessary and reasonable measures within a commander’s powers are to be taken to ‘prevent or repress’ the commission of crimes within the Court’s jurisdiction, ‘or to submit the matter to the competent authorities for investigation and prosecution’. This approach follows that found in Article 87 of Additional Protocol I, which requires commanders to ‘prevent and, where necessary, to suppress and report’ breaches.Footnote 352 The provision thus creates three distinct obligations on commanders, who must take all necessary and reasonable measures within their power first to prevent crimes; second to repress crimes; and third to submit criminal matters to competent authorities for investigation and prosecution. Each of these obligations captures a distinct temporal relationship to the commission of crimes. While IHL does not provide a list of the measures that are necessary and reasonable for a commander to take to fulfil these obligations and the standard must be considered on a case-by-case basis, basic requirements can be determined nevertheless on the grounds of the temporal dimensions of each obligation as well as the fundamental obligations of IHL and responsible command.
Obligation to Prevent
28. To ‘prevent’ means ‘to stop something from happening or someone from doing something’.Footnote 353 An obligation to prevent therefore exists in relation to a future event, and in the context of Article 28(a)(ii), a future crime. What measures are necessary and reasonable for a commander to take to prevent the commission of crimes by subordinates will be heavily context-dependent and should be determined on a case-by-case basis. However, the following observations are relevant universally on the basis that preventive measures are those measures that must be undertaken prior to the commission of a crime.
29. First, the obligation to take measures to prevent crimes compels commanders to make an assessment of the known and likely risks of military operations. The protective rationale of IHL underpinning command responsibility further requires commanders to have particular regard to the increased risk of sexual violence that accompanies armed conflicts, and the disproportionate impact of this on women and children. Armed conflict brings with it a range of characteristic and notorious risks, including but not limited to an increased likelihood of sexual and gender-based violence. According to the 2007 Paris Principles, ‘[g]ender inequalities, discrimination and violence are frequently exacerbated in times of armed conflict’.Footnote 354 It is a deeply distressing but well-known fact that there is a long-standing tendency of troops engaged in armed conflict, especially male combatants, to commit such crimes, particularly but not only against women and girls, and that this is amplified by failures of command to exercise proper control. It is the view of the Appeals Chamber that the commonly understood risk to women and girls that accompanies any and all armed conflicts must therefore inform the legal standards of both the knowledge element of command responsibility, and the requirement to take all necessary and reasonable measures.
30. Second, the obligation to take preventive measures encompasses the broadest temporal scope of the three obligations. This obligation does not only arise in the days or hours before a crime may be committed; nor does it only take effect when troops are deployed, or operations commence. Furthermore, preventive measures will not only be required in the days of operational planning or training. The obligation to take preventive measures will exist from the moment an individual takes command of troops, and it will continue to exist for the duration that the individual maintains a position of command.
31. Given commanders must consider the risks of certain crimes being committed by troops, particularly sexual violence crimes against women and children, and given the obligation to take preventive measures is ongoing from the time an individual takes command, certain basic requirements must be satisfied in order to fulfil the obligation to take all necessary and reasonable preventive measures. As noted above, some obligations under IHL are fundamental, such as the responsibility of commanders to ensure their troops are aware of their obligations under IHL.Footnote 355 Thus training troops in IHL, and particularly making them aware of prohibitions on sexual violence, at the earliest opportunity possible would constitute one such basic requirement of preventive measures. As would issuing lawful orders in accordance with the rules and principles of IHL. In addition, taking steps to ensure adequate supervision of troops and to establish clear communication and investigative and disciplinary procedures would also form basic requirements from the time of assuming command.
Obligation to Repress
32. To ‘repress’ means ‘to not allow something … to be expressed’; ‘to control what people do, especially by using force’.Footnote 356 Repression relates to something that is occurring in the present, and in the context of Article 28(a)(ii), the contemporaneous commission of a crime. The temporal context is critical to assessing what measures are necessary and reasonable for a commander to take to repress the commission of crimes by his or her subordinates. Unlike preventive measures, measures to repress crimes must be taken in response to unlawful conduct that has occurred and is continuing, or may continue, to occur. A commander must take all necessary and reasonable measures to repress the criminal conduct at the earliest possible opportunity, and must continue to do so for so long as the unlawful conduct or its probability persists.
33. The circumstances will determine what form such measures must take, and which lie within a commander’s power. Once again, however, the basic requirements of responsible command are instructive in such an assessment. Measures to repress criminal conduct must be responsive and timely and should at a minimum involve adequate supervision of troops and the issuance of lawful orders. Furthermore, investigative and disciplinary action must be undertaken to the fullest extent possible. Depending on the temporal span of the criminal activity, additional measures may become necessary and reasonable over time, including resolving the shortcomings or absence of investigative and disciplinary procedures. As with preventive measures, a commander’s obligation cannot be considered to be fulfilled on the basis of a one-off response.
Obligation to Submit Matter to Competent Authorities for Investigation and Prosecution
34. To ‘submit’ means ‘to give or offer something for a decision to be made by others’.Footnote 357 In the context of Article 28(a)(ii), what is to be submitted to the competent authorities for investigation and prosecution is the details of crimes that have already been committed. To do so will require a commander to facilitate the collection and communication of such details. There are no specifications under Article 28(a)(ii) as to what form this submission must take. It can be assumed, however, that a basic requirement of fulfilling this obligation necessitates, to the extent it is within a commander’s power, that he or she must ensure all the known details of criminal conduct are collected, documented, and provided in a fulsome, unprejudiced, and timely manner.
35. This obligation also entails another complexity, through the use of the adjective ‘competent’ to describe the nature of the relevant authority. A competent authority is not defined in Article 28(a)(ii); however, elsewhere the Rome Statute does provide guidance on the competence of national judicial systems.Footnote 358 The inability to carry out investigations and prosecutions is understood here as ‘a total or substantial collapse or unavailability’ of the judicial system in question. It is unlikely that a military commander is in a position to undertake a sophisticated assessment of the competence of relevant authorities; thus, for the purposes of Article 28(a)(ii), the Appeals Chamber considers a competent authority will be that which has the jurisdiction to conduct investigation and prosecution of the criminal matter in question and which is not affected by the ‘total or substantial collapse or unavailability’ of the judicial system.
Relevance of Outcome and Motive
36. It should be noted that the nature of the obligations encapsulated in Article 28(a)(ii) is one of action, not outcome. There is nothing in this provision that requires the crimes in question to be successfully prevented or repressed – indeed, the issue of a commander’s liability may not arise if such an outcome had been achieved. Nor is there an obligation on the commander as to the outcome of any investigation or prosecution relating to crimes, although the referral must be made in good faith that the investigation and/or prosecution will be genuine and not a sham. The commander must do all that is necessary and reasonable to submit a matter to the competent authorities, not ensure any particular result.
37. The Trial Chamber effectively recognised this approach in stating that a commander that has taken all necessary and reasonable measures cannot be held liable ‘even if the crimes nonetheless ultimately occur or the perpetrators go unpunished’.Footnote 359 The Appeals Chamber considers any implication to the contrary in the Trial Chamber’s decision to be erroneous and irrelevant, as is any direct reference to the inadequacy of the results of measures taken by Mr Bemba.Footnote 360 However, it is the Appeals Chamber’s view that such implications and references do not reach the threshold of having a material impact on the outcome of the decision.
38. Furthermore, there is no mention made in Article 28(a) as to the motivations behind a commander’s actions, and the Appeals Chamber does not accept that this should be a relevant consideration in making an assessment as to whether or not a commander failed to meet the requirements of Article 28(a). Beyond the fact that determining motives is an extremely subjective endeavour, it is possible, and in fact highly likely, that a commander will have multiple motivations in following any particular course of action. It is sufficient to note for present purposes that while the Appeals Chamber does not agree with the Trial Chamber’s treatment of motivation as an ‘aggravating’ factor in the Appellant’s case,Footnote 361 this approach has not materially affected the outcome and has no impact on the Appeals Chamber’s decision in the present appeal.
Basic Requirements of Responsible Command
39. As demonstrated above, it is possible to identify a number of basic requirements of responsible command that should inform the assessment of whether all necessary and reasonable measures have been taken to prevent and repress the commission of crimes and to submit criminal matters to competent authorities for investigation and prosecution. These basic requirements are reflective of what is required by international law in recognition of the inherent risks of armed conflict and the importance of properly trained, supervised, and disciplined troops. This standard is informed by the rules and principles of IHL, including the obligation to protect civilians and the special protection of women and children from sexual violence.
40. The Prosecutor’s submission identifies several such basic requirements of commanders,Footnote 362 including ensuring troops are properly trained in IHL; ensuring adequate supervision of troops; issuing proper and lawful orders; facilitating investigations, prosecutions, and punishments in light of potentially unlawful conduct; and replacing, dismissing, and removing subordinates as necessary. The Appeals Chamber concurs with this assessment and considers that it provides a non-exhaustive list of those basic requirements that must be considered in determining whether the criteria of Article 28(a)(ii) are satisfied. However, the Appeals Chamber would add that given the risk of sexual violence inherent in armed conflict, a responsible commander should adopt measures specifically aimed at the prevention, repression, and investigation/prosecution of sexual violence.
Conclusion
41. The Appeals Chamber considers that the correct legal standard in relation to the criteria contained in Article 28(a)(ii) requires a case-by-case approach to both: determining what measures were necessary and reasonable for a commander to take to prevent or repress crimes, or submit criminal matters to competent authorities, which at a minimum should include (but not be limited to) the basic requirements of responsible command; and assessing the commander’s de jure or de facto power and whether any necessary and reasonable measures were beyond this scope. Where a commander has failed to implement any necessary and reasonable measures within his or her power (and the other fault elements of effective control and knowledge have also been satisfied), then he or she will incur criminal liability.
Assessment of Measures Taken by Mr Bemba
Trial Chamber’s Findings
42. The Trial Chamber found Mr Bemba took ‘a few measures’ over the course of the 2002–2003 CAR Operation,Footnote 363 specifically that he:
(a) Established the Mondonga Inquiry which investigated alleged crimes committed by MLC troops in Bangui and produced a brief of evidence in relation to allegations of pillaging, but did not question suspects about the crime of murder or pursue reports of rape;Footnote 364
(b) Met with the UN representative in the CAR, General Cissé, and CAR President Patassé in November 2002, and reportedly committed to a progressive and organised withdrawal of troops and the punishment of soldiers who committed crimes, noting some had already been identified and disciplined;Footnote 365
(c) Addressed MLC troops in November 2002, referring to allegations of crimes against civilians and warning against further misconduct;Footnote 366
(d) Facilitated the trial of seven soldiers for pillaging at the Gbadolite Court-Martial, including by appointing the presiding judge and prosecutor (all seven accused were convicted);Footnote 367
(e) Sent an investigative commission to Zongo to investigate allegations of pillaging in December 2002, but which was unable to establish that MLC soldiers had committed the crime of pillaging;Footnote 368
(f) Wrote to General Cissé on 4 January 2003 stating that the MLC would not ignore serious violations of human rights, advising he had ordered the arrest of soldiers whose behaviour was contrary to instructions given before their departure to CAR, and requesting assistance with an investigation involving the CAR population;Footnote 369
(g) Wrote to the president of the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) on 20 February 2003 responding to a report on its investigative mission in Bangui;Footnote 370 and
(h) Dispatched a delegation of soldiers and officials to Sibut in response to reports of abuses in the towns of Sibut and Bozoum.Footnote 371
43. The Trial Chamber concluded that the measures taken by Mr Bemba were ‘limited in mandate, execution, and/or results’.Footnote 372 The Trial Chamber further found that ‘[i]n addition to or instead of the insufficient measures’ Mr Bemba took, and in light of his extensive material ability to prevent or repress the crimes, he could have inter alia taken a number of other measures. These included:
(a) Ensuring MLC troops in CAR were properly trained in IHL and properly supervised for the duration of the CAR operation;
(b) Initiating genuine and full investigations into the commission of crimes and properly tried and punished any soldiers alleged to have committed crimes;
(c) Issuing further and clear orders to commanders of the troops in CAR to prevent the commission of crimes;
(d) Altering the deployment of troops, including to minimise contact with civilian populations;
(e) Removing, replacing, or dismissing officers or soldiers that committed or condoned crimes;
(f) Sharing relevant information with CAR authorities and others and supporting them in investigations.Footnote 373
Notice of Measures
44. Mr Bemba submits that he was not given notice of the measures which the Trial Chamber found he could have taken because of their ‘hypothetical’ nature, and therefore it would be unfair to convict him without giving him the opportunity to defend himself. Mr Bemba asserts that the Trial Chamber erroneously compared his conduct to ‘a list of hypothetical measures’ compiled with the ‘benefit of hindsight from its post hoc position of superior information’.Footnote 374 He claims it was not the Trial Chamber’s role to speculate as to what measures might have ‘stemmed or mitigated the commission of the crimes’ and then evaluate Mr Bemba’s conduct against this hypothetical list.
45. The Appeals Chamber unequivocally rejects these arguments. It is not in dispute that an accused is entitled to notice of the factual allegations made against him or her in order that they may prepare an informed defence.Footnote 375 However, given the assessment to be made under Article 28(a)(ii) relates to the failure of a commander to take all necessary and reasonable measures, the inquiry is naturally concerned with omissions. This requires a judicial assessment as to what was not done but should have been. One may label this as hypothesising with the benefit of hindsight, but it is the nature of the task given to this Court by the Rome Statute. The Trial Chamber made no error in identifying a list of hypothetical necessary and reasonable measures that Mr Bemba could have taken but did not, as this was precisely what was required of it.
46. The Appeals Chamber notes that notice of necessary and reasonable measures not taken may be specific or general in form. With regard to the former, notice of specific measures should be provided through the indictment and confirmation of charges procedure. In relation to the latter, all commanders should be considered at all times to be on notice of measures which are in effect the inherent duties of command and would apply in every case, as discussed above.
47. In the present case, the Appeals Chamber agrees with the Prosecutor that Mr Bemba was given ‘sufficient notice’Footnote 376 of the scope and nature of measures he was found to have failed to take. First, all of the measures the Trial Chamber found Mr Bemba had failed to take fell within the scope of the notice provided to Mr Bemba through the Confirmation Decision and the Corrected Revised Second Amended Document Containing the Charges. Second, the Prosecutor submits and the Appeals Chamber accepts that at least four of the measures the Trial Chamber found Mr Bemba did not take can be considered to be basic requirements of responsible command, including ensuring proper IHL training and adequate supervision of troops.
Appeals Chamber’s Findings
48. The Appeals Chamber does not dispute the findings of the Trial Chamber as to what measures Mr Bemba took, or its view that these were limited and ultimately insufficient. However, the reasoning by which we have reached this conclusion differs, and is based upon the correct legal standard, as outlined above, to be applied to establish that the provisions of Article 28(a)(ii) have been met.
49. As noted above, the legal standard required by Article 28(a)(ii) sets a high threshold for the conduct of commanders in fulfilling their responsibility to exercise effective control over their troops, reflecting the protective function of IHL and its special regard for women and children at risk of sexual violence. The test to be applied is whether all necessary and reasonable measures within the commander’s power have been taken to prevent or repress crimes, or submit criminal matters to competent authorities. Although this assessment takes into account the scope of the commander’s de jure and/or de facto power, the provision contains no other criteria involving feasibility, seniority, outcome, or motive, and these do not form part of the relevant legal test for liability. While a case-by-case approach cognisant of contextual considerations is warranted, the basic requirements must be satisfied for a commander to fulfil the obligations placed upon them under international law and required under Article 28(a)(ii).
50. The Appeals Chamber notes that among the list of additional or alternate actions the Trial Chamber identified as necessary and reasonable measures that Mr Bemba failed to take are several basic requirements of responsible command, including his failure to ensure MLC troops were properly trained in IHL and adequately supervised for the duration of the CAR Operation. Mr Bemba’s submissions on appeal fail to address these findings, or offer a justification for why such measures were not within his power.
51. Ensuring troops are properly trained in IHL and made aware of the prohibitions on sexual violence against women and children is a basic requirement of responsible command and constitutes a necessary and reasonable measure for a commander to take to prevent violations of IHL by troops. Ensuring adequate supervision of troops, including issuing clear orders concerning the prohibition of sexual violence, is similarly an essential preventive measure and critical to repressing prohibited conduct. Failure to take these measures alone, without regard to the adequacy of his actions in submitting criminal matters for investigation and prosecution, mean that Mr Bemba has not fulfilled the obligations required of him. The Appeals Chamber therefore finds that Mr Bemba’s conduct did not satisfy the legal test for taking all necessary and reasonable measures as per Article 28(a)(ii) and that he is subject to criminal liability under the doctrine of command responsibility.
Conclusion
52. For the reasons outlined above, the Appeals Chamber finds that the Trial Chamber erred in referring to irrelevant considerations of outcome and motive in its reasoning. However, the weight given to these considerations in determining whether Mr Bemba failed to take all necessary and reasonable measures was limited and does not materially affect the findings or decision of the Trial Chamber.
53. In conclusion, the Appeals Chamber concurs with the Trial Chamber – but distinguishes its reasoning – in finding that Mr Bemba failed to take all necessary and reasonable measures within his power to prevent or repress the commission of crimes by his subordinates during the 2002–2003 CAR Operation, or to submit the matter to the competent authorities. The third ground of appeal is therefore dismissed.
Judge Suzanne Varrall and Judge Sarah Williams
11.6 Charging Sexual Crimes in the Yekatom Charge Amendment
In 2019, Pre-Trial Chamber II partially confirmed charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity against Mr Alfred Yekatom concerning events in Central African Republic (CAR) between 5 December 2013 and August 2014.Footnote 377 In May 2020, the Prosecutor filed a request under Article 61(9) of the Rome Statute to add charges of rape and sexual slavery as war crimes.Footnote 378 In June 2020, Pre-Trial Chamber II declined to include those charges, adopting a ‘precautionary and restrictive approach’, noting that such an approach was required in order to avoid ‘unjustified recourse to this prerogative by the Prosecutor turn[ing] into abuse’.Footnote 379 The Chamber cautioned the prosecution for continuing to investigate post the confirmation of charges and noted that Article 61(9), while sanctioned, cannot be used to address ‘gaps’ in the case of the prosecution.Footnote 380
In this rewritten decision concerning the Prosecutor’s request to amend the charges, Valerie Oosterveld reconsiders the three Article 61(9) factors permitting the introduction of additional charges, focusing on the inescapable realities of collecting evidence regarding sexual violence faced by investigating teams. In doing so, she criticises the restrictive approach undertaken by the Chamber, turning to the experience of other international tribunals to demonstrate how, particularly in the situation of sexual crimes, there is a need for a full appreciation of the experience of victims and ultimately confirms the inclusion of such charges against Mr Yekatom.
Decision of the Prosecutor’s Request to Amend the Charges against Alfred Yekatom No.: ICC-01/14-01/18
Date: 1 June 2020
Original: English
PRE-TRIAL CHAMBER II(B)
Before: Judge Valerie OOSTERVELD
SITUATION IN THE CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC II
IN THE CASE OF THE PROSECUTOR v. ALFRED YEKATOM AND PATRICE-EDOUARD NGAÏSSONA
PRE-TRIAL CHAMBER II of the International Criminal Court issues this Decision on the Prosecutor’s Request to Amend the Charges against Alfred Yekatom.
Procedural History
1. On 11 December 2019, the Chamber issued the Decision on the confirmation of charges against Alfred Yekatom and Patrice-Edouard Ngaïssona (Confirmation Decision, Yekatom, and Ngaïssona, respectively), in which, inter alia, it confirmed the charges presented against Yekatom and Ngaïssona to the extent specified in the decision and committed them to trial on the charges as confirmed.Footnote 381
2. On 2 March 2019, the Prosecutor filed a request for reconsideration or leave to appeal this decision.Footnote 382 On 11 March 2019, the Chamber rejected this request.Footnote 383
3. On 13 March 2020, the Registry transmitted the record of the proceedings to the Presidency,Footnote 384 which constituted Trial Chamber V and referred the case against Yekatom and Ngaïssona to it on 16 March 2020.Footnote 385
4. On 31 March 2020, the Prosecutor’s Request to Amend Charges pursuant to Article 61(9) and for Correction of the Decision on the Confirmation of Charges, and Notice of Intention to Add Additional Charges (Ngaïssona Article 61(9) Request) was filed:Footnote 386 the Prosecutor requested the Chamber, inter alia, to ‘amend the charges of rape confirmed against’ Ngaïssona by ‘includ[ing] and confirm[ing] a second instance of rape’.
5. On 14 May 2020, the Chamber issued the Decision on the Prosecutor’s Request to Amend Charges pursuant to Article 61(9) and for Correction of the Decision on the Confirmation of Charges, and Notice of Intention to Add Additional Charges (14 May 2020 Decision), rejecting the Ngaïssona Article 61(9) Request.Footnote 387
6. Also on 14 May 2020, the Prosecution Motion to Amend the Charges against Alfred YEKATOM (Request) was filed:Footnote 388 the Prosecutor seeks that the Chamber (i) ‘grant permission to amend the charges’ confirmed against Yekatom ‘under Article 61(9) to add charges of rape and sexual slavery as war crimes’ and (ii) ‘issue a scheduling order for the confirmation hearing [on those charges] for as soon as practicable’.
7. On 26 May 2020, the Yekatom Defence Response to Motion to Amend the Charges (Yekatom Response), opposing the Request, was filed before Trial Chamber V.Footnote 389
8. On 26 May 2020, the common legal representatives of the former child soldiers and of the victims of other crimes (CLRV) filed their joint response, seeking that the Chamber grant the Request in its entirety.Footnote 390
Submissions of the Parties and Participants
Defence for Yekatom
9. As a preliminary matter, the Chamber notes that the corrected version of the Yekatom Response, addressed to Pre-Trial Chamber II, was received by the Registry on 27 May 2020, at 15:51 hours, after the time limit for responses to the Request had expired. The defence for Yekatom did not request an extension of time prior to the expiration of the deadline. Accordingly, the Chamber will not consider the Yekatom Response.
Prosecutor
10. The Prosecutor submits that ‘credible evidence of rape and sexual slavery allegedly committed by Anti-Balaka elements subordinate to’ Yekatom, in the form of witness statements, was uncovered ‘[d]uring the course of finalising [the] investigation into the conscription, enlistment, and use of children under the age of 15 years’. Accordingly, charges of rape and sexual slavery as war crimes should be added by amending the charges confirmed against Yekatom, pursuant to Article 61(9) of the Statute.
11. In the view of the Prosecutor, these additional charges are ‘fully substantiated and more fully reflect [Yekatom’s] alleged culpability’; in light of the ‘seriousness and importance’ of these charges, the ‘proposed amendment is in the interests of justice’.
12. The Prosecutor submits that ‘the requested amendment is timely, justified, and entails no unfair prejudice to’ Yekatom because: (i) ‘no trial date has as yet been set and … an actual trial is unlikely to commence soon’; (ii) the additional charges, being ‘predicated on sufficient evidence’, are ‘adequately substantiated’ and feature ‘among the Rome Statute’s most serious’, which renders them ‘important to the Court’s duty to establish the truth and to ensure the Trial Chamber’s “full consideration of the relevant issues”’; (iii) the Prosecutor ‘acted with reasonable diligence in pursuing the investigation and the [a]dditional [c]harges’, including with regard to the gathering of the relevant evidence; and (iv) the ‘amendment of charges … would not unfairly prejudice’ Yekatom, nor would the Prosecutor ‘gain any tactical advantage’, since the defence would ‘have ample opportunity to prepare’ and there would be ‘no clear impact on the expeditious conduct of a prospective trial’.
13. Should the Request be granted, the Prosecutor also ‘requests that the Chamber schedule a date for the confirmation hearing on the [a]dditional [c]harges for as soon as practicable’. Further particulars of the Prosecutor’s argument are indicated below.
Common Legal Representatives of the Former Child Soldiers and Common Legal Representatives of the Victims of Other Crimes (CLRV)
14. In the view of the CLRV, the Request should be granted in its entirety, based inter alia on the following submissions: (i) it is in the interest of the victims that the proposed charges are added in order for them to have effective ‘access to justice, recognition of their victimisation and eventually the possibility to claim reparations’; (ii) the prosecution only received credible information on conflict-related sexual violence in mid-July 2019, which did not provide sufficient time for it to gather and integrate the evidence into the Document Containing the Charges (DCC); (iii) this timing required investigation ‘necessary to establish the truth … of grave crimes’ beyond the submission of the DCC and the issuance of the Decision on the Confirmation of Charges; (iv) this investigation faced ‘practical and logistical constraints’ which explained the timing of the current request; (v) adding new charges of limited scope at this juncture ‘would not negatively impact the fairness and expeditiousness of the proceedings’, given that ‘the date of the commencement of the trial is yet to be set’; (vi) concerns about the lack of charges related to gender-based crimes had already been expressed by the CLRV in their 9 July 2019 submissions; (vii) the Chamber must assess and balance the rights of victims, which include consideration of the full extent of their victimisation, as well as those of the accused; and (viii) it is not satisfactory to have a speedy trial ‘if said trial fails to uncover the truth about the responsibility of those involved’.
Determination of the Chamber
15. The Trial Chamber must consider the criminal responsibility of the accused based on the facts confirmed in the Pre-Trial Chamber’s Decision on the Confirmation of Charges.Footnote 391 The Decision on the Confirmation of Charges therefore sets the factual boundaries for each trial and the accused cannot be convicted for acts that fall outside of those particularised in that decision.
16. Article 61(9) of the Statute provides for the possibility of amending the charges after the issuance of the Decision on the Confirmation of Charges and before the start of trial. It states, in part: ‘After the charges are confirmed and before the trial has begun, the Prosecutor may, with the permission of the Pre-Trial Chamber and after notice to the accused, amend the charges. If the Prosecutor seeks to add additional charges or to substitute more serious charges, a hearing under this article to confirm those charges must be held.’ The phrase ‘before the trial has begun’ refers to ‘the true opening of the trial when the opening statements, if any, are made prior to the calling of witnesses’.Footnote 392
17. The drafters of the Statute, in adding Article 61(9), reflected the procedures to amend an indictment in the International Criminal Tribunals for the Former Yugoslavia and Rwanda (ICTY and ICTR, respectively), crafted to fit the differing procedure of the ICC.Footnote 393
18. This Court has previously determined that the Prosecutor may request permission to amend the charges up until the actual commencement of the trial, provided that a request to this effect is properly ‘supported and justified’.Footnote 394 This is not an unfettered right, as the Court must also consider whether granting such a request would ‘negatively affect other competing interests, such as the fairness and expeditiousness of the proceedings, which would result in causing prejudice to the rights of the accused’.Footnote 395
19. The prosecution’s request to add entirely new and separate charges not already reflected in the Decision on the Confirmation of Charges raises issues of first instance. This Court has considered requests under Article 61(9) to amend and extend existing charges,Footnote 396 and this prior jurisprudence provides guidance. Additionally, other international criminal tribunals have considered requests for the addition of new charges under rules that bear some similarity to Article 61(9);Footnote 397 even though the procedures of those tribunals differ from the Confirmation of Charges procedures of the ICC, their jurisprudence may also be instructive.
20. These sources lead to the conclusion that the relevant factors are, when considering an Article 61(9) request for the addition of new charges:
1. The importance of the additional allegations to a complete understanding of the prosecution’s case and a full consideration of the relevant issues;Footnote 398
2. The reasonable diligence of the prosecution in bringing the additional charges, including the reasonableness of continuing investigations after the Decision on the Confirmation of Charges and whether the request is supported and justified;Footnote 399 and
3. Whether the adjudication of the additional charges would cause undue prejudice to the rights of the accused.Footnote 400
21. These factors will be considered in turn.
Importance of the Additional Allegations to a Complete Understanding of the Prosecution’s Case and a Full Consideration of the Relevant Issues
22. The Prosecutor submits that permitting the requested amendment to add charges against Yekatom of rape and sexual slavery as war crimes would lead to a more complete understanding of the case against the accused: ‘The Additional Charges are important to the Court’s duty to establish the truth and to ensure the Trial Chamber’s “full consideration of the relevant issues”.’Footnote 401
23. The Appeals Chamber has recognised that ‘[t]he duty to establish the truth is not limited to the time before the confirmation hearing. Therefore, the Prosecutor must be allowed to continue his investigation beyond the confirmation hearing, if this is necessary in order to establish the truth’.Footnote 402 The Appeals Chamber identified when such situations may be necessary: when a failure to do so would ‘deprive the Court of significant and relevant evidence … particularly in situations where the ongoing nature of the conflict results in more compelling evidence becoming available for the first time after the confirmation hearing’.Footnote 403
24. This Court has also recognised that the ICC’s ‘Statute and the Rules accord a special status to sexual violence crimes, crimes against children, and the victims thereof’ and that ‘[d]uring the drafting process of the Rome Statute, the especially grave nature and consequences of sexual violence crimes … were recognised’.Footnote 404 In the Ntaganda case, Trial Chamber VI observed, citing the ICTY trial chamber in Kunarac et al., that ‘rape is one of the worst sufferings a human being can inflict upon another’.Footnote 405 Citing Mucić et al., Trial Chamber VI also considered ‘[t]he rape of any person to be a despicable act which strikes at the very core of human dignity and physical integrity’.Footnote 406 Trial Chamber VI concluded that rape and sexual slavery as crimes against humanity and war crimes are grave crimes, ultimately sentencing Ntaganda to seventeen and fourteen years’ imprisonment respectively.Footnote 407 Other international criminal tribunals have come to the same conclusion, with Trial Chamber II of the Special Court for Sierra Leone categorising these acts as ‘of the utmost gravity’.Footnote 408
25. The Prosecutor is requesting the addition of charges for the war crimes of rape and sexual slavery. These are the only proposed charges of conflict-related sexual violence against the accused. The victims, in particular, have an interest in the full consideration of the responsibility of the accused and the extent of victimisation.
26. Given the gravity of the proposed additional charges, they may provide ‘significant and relevant evidence’ as well as context for the previously confirmed charges. Therefore the requirement to demonstrate the importance of the additional allegations to a complete understanding of the prosecution’s case and a full consideration of the relevant issues has been met.
Reasonable Diligence of the Prosecution in Bringing the Additional Charges, including the Reasonableness of Continuing Investigations after the Confirmation of Charges and whether the Request Is Supported and Justified
27. The ‘underlying rationale [of Article 61(9)] is that continued investigation should be related only to such essential pieces of evidence which were not known or available to the Office of the Prosecutor prior to the confirmation hearing or could not have been collected for any other reason, except at the later stage’.Footnote 409 The reasons for such an investigation must be properly justified.Footnote 410
28. In June 2019, the prosecution indicated that it was ‘continu[ing] to investigate the commission of sexual and gender based crimes … and may seek the confirmation of such charges, should the evidence obtained satisfy the requisite threshold’.Footnote 411 It received relevant information relating to sexual violence in mid-July 2019.Footnote 412 The DCC was due on 19 August 2019. In order to incorporate this information into the DCC, the prosecution would have needed to organise and undertake missions (involving travel arrangements for all participants, including the witnesses), assess any risks to the witnesses based on the evidence provided and their personal circumstances before disclosure could take place, and translate the statements into French for the purposes of the Rules of Procedure and Evidence and Rules of the Court in order to rely on them as evidence at the confirmation hearing – all within one month.Footnote 413 There was therefore not sufficient time.Footnote 414 Additionally, the prosecution had earlier sought and obtained a delay in the Confirmation of Charges hearingFootnote 415 and it was not feasible to request a further delay.
29. The prosecution sought to interview two victims. The prosecution alleges that the first individual, a victim of rape and sexual slavery, was deprived of her liberty while with the Anti-Balaka, told that she ‘had to do anything they ordered [her] to do’, and was raped under threat of death by an intermittently armed direct perpetrator.Footnote 416 The prosecution alleges that a second individual, another victim of rape and sexual slavery, was threatened by the direct perpetrator and deprived of her liberty.Footnote 417
30. The prosecution indicates that the first individual was screened in late August 2019, and interviewed within three weeks, in September 2019, once the presence of a psychosocial expert was ensured.Footnote 418 The prosecution indicates that it faced considerable difficulties initially in contacting the second individual.Footnote 419 The date for her first interview was rescheduled to late November 2019 due to the unavailability of a psychosocial expert.Footnote 420 The prosecution conducted a second interview in January 2020 to obtain ‘additional details and clarifications in order to determine whether to seek the amendment of charges’.Footnote 421 The prosecution submits that witness-related work was hampered by the considerable budget restraints in place at the Court during the last quarter of 2019, which permitted only a single investigative team to conduct field work in the Central African Republic.Footnote 422 The prosecution viewed the evidence of the first and second individuals as interconnected,Footnote 423 which is why it secured evidence from both before proceeding to an internal evidence review, which concluded on 27 March 2020, and the filing of its motion to add additional charges on 31 March 2020.Footnote 424
31. The time period between the prosecution’s initial receipt of relevant information on sexual violence and issuance of the request to amend the charges was 8.5 months. Within this time period, the prosecution only had the evidence for both charges in hand as of January 2020.Footnote 425
32. This delayed surfacing of the evidence on conflict-related sexual violence, and the difficulties in securing such evidence and putting into place protective measures for victims, are not unusual. There are inherent challenges to collecting credible evidence of conflict-related sexual violence which have an impact upon the speed at which such evidence can be uncovered, considered, and integrated into prosecution cases.Footnote 426 Survivors may be reluctant to reveal their victimisation to investigators because they face threats to their security and well-being or societal, cultural, and other barriers such as stigmatisation and ostracism.Footnote 427 Survivors may be in a precarious position, affiliated with or living in a community with those who perpetrated the sexual violence against them. Survivors may be dealing with trauma, fatigue, health conditions, insufficient support mechanisms within their families and communities for survivors of sexual violence, and lack of access to meaningful victim protection.Footnote 428 They may therefore need to be interviewed more than once in order to build trust and secure further details.Footnote 429 Investigators may not have access to survivors or to secure private locations in which to interview survivors.Footnote 430 All of these difficulties can lead to the delayed reporting of sexual violence, as well as delays once evidence of sexual violence initially comes to light. Investigators and prosecutors have responsibilities for carrying out investigation of conflict-related sexual violence in a measured, careful manner to avoid harming victims, which takes time.Footnote 431
33. Indeed, in Al-Hassan the Pre-Trial Chamber indicated that the prosecution cannot be reproached for decisions that belong solely to the witnesses, such as their hesitance to cooperate and to give evidence.Footnote 432
34. Given the prosecution’s explanation of the reasons for the timing of the investigation of the alleged incidents of sexual violence, and considering the inherent difficulties in investigating conflict-related sexual violence, the Chamber finds that it was reasonable for the prosecution to continue investigating after the Decision on the Confirmation of Charges, and that the timeline indicates that the prosecution was reasonably diligent in bringing its motion to amend the charges.
Whether the Adjudication of the Additional Charges Would Cause Undue Prejudice to the Rights of the Accused
35. In considering whether the adjudication of the additional proposed charges would cause undue prejudice to the rights of the accused, this Chamber must consider: the ability of the accused to prepare a timely defence to the additional charges, and any delay the additional charges may cause to the proceedings, including to the duration of pre-trial custody.Footnote 433 These two considerations are interrelated: the granting of a request under Article 61(9) will naturally cause some disruption and delay as the defence would need to: review the information disclosed by the prosecution, conduct its own investigation, potentially adjust its strategy; and respond to the charges in an additional Confirmation of Charges hearing. It is therefore important to consider the potential extent of such a delay and whether it would amount to undue delay.
36. In Al Hassan, the Pre-Trial Chamber agreed to modify the existing charges of sexual slavery, rape, persecution, outrages on personal dignity, and other inhumane acts (forced marriage) in order to include additional facts on ten charges involving twelve victims.Footnote 434 The Chamber indicated that these additions were not so significant that they would delay the start of the trial and, although they would impact on the way the defence prepared for trial, this relatively small impact was outweighed by the necessary search for the truth by the prosecution.Footnote 435 The current case involves two new charges involving two victims, and is thus comparable.
37. In Ruto and Sang, the Pre-Trial Chamber stated that an amendment done well in advance of the scheduled trial respected ‘the fairness of the proceedings, their expeditiousness and respect for the rights of the accused to receive a proper trial’.Footnote 436 The current case is also comparable, as the trial date has not been scheduled and is likely to be affected by the ongoing COVID-19 restrictions. Thus, a grant of the requested amendment sufficiently in advance of the trial can preserve the accused’s rights.
38. In Ngaïssona, this Chamber found that granting the requested amendment would not satisfy the accused’s fair trial rights. That decision can be distinguished from the current case because, in Ngaïssona, this Chamber found that the prosecution’s request to amend the charges to include a charge of rape was aimed at ‘reintroduc[ing] non-confirmed charges for which evidence was lacking pursuant to a supplemental investigation’.Footnote 437 In contrast, the current case considers entirely new charges with new evidence justified by different reasons.
39. In the view of this Chamber, the extent of any delay is likely to be minimal for two reasons. First, the proposed charges are limited both in scope and time, and are connected to existing charges. The prosecution has already completed its investigation and therefore only the defence would be required to undertake an additional investigation. This additional investigation would be narrow in focus. Second, the proceedings in this case are at an early stage. No trial date has been set and the trial is unlikely to happen in the near future due to COVID-19-related restrictions.Footnote 438 Indeed, in this situation, the prosecution would be exercising its recourse to Article 61(9) ‘under circumstances and conditions which would not impact the … trial’.Footnote 439
40. Even if the trial date is likely to be set in the near future, a short delay would not be undue. For example, in the ICTY, a delay of seven months was not considered undue and was deemed to still afford the accused a fair trial, even though the trial date had already been set.Footnote 440
41. Additionally, the effects of any delay could be substantially mitigated through the disclosure of witness statements to the defence as ‘attorneys-eyes-only’, to allow the defence immediate access to the evidence while still protecting the security of the witnesses.Footnote 441 Additionally or alternatively, witness statements could be disclosed to the accused and the CLRV in the form of extracts or excerpts, to the extent the security situation allows. In addition, any delays caused by such an amendment could also be mitigated by subtracting time in custody from the sentence in the event of a conviction, in accordance with Article 78(2) of the Statute.
42. In sum, any potential delay would not be undue and could be mitigated.
43. In light of the above, and after careful consideration of the rights of the accused, the Chamber finds that any potential disruption and delay caused to the defence by the granting of the prosecution’s Article 61(9) request may be counterbalanced by these mitigating steps: (1) disclosure of relevant prosecution witness statements to the defence as ‘attorneys-eyes-only’ within five days of the release of this decision; (2) disclosure of witness statements to the accused and the CLRV in the form of key extracts or excerpts, to the extent the security situation allows, within ten days; and (3) subtracting time in custody from the sentence in the event of a conviction, in accordance with Article 78(2).
44. In conclusion, this Chamber finds that the three factors identified in paragraph 20 above have been fulfilled.
For These Reasons, the Chamber Hereby
GRANTS the Request.
Done in both English and French, the English version being authoritative.
Judge Valerie Oosterveld