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Editorial Note: The
following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may
also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology.
Comments are in parentheses. |
Suspected war criminals safe in Britain
Russia Today, December 17, 2008, 9:26
Lawyers and campaigners say legal loopholes make the UK a safe haven
for thousands suspected of war crimes, crimes against humanity and
genocide, and are pushing for a change in the law. Most recent Home
Office figures reveal that since 2004 more than 1,800 individuals in the
UK have been investigated for those types of crime.
Under the
International Criminal Court Act those suspected of genocide and other
crimes against humanity can be prosecuted in the UK only for acts
committed after 2001.
And those suspected of acts of genocide in
Rwanda in 1994, for example, fall outside its scope.
Without a
change in the law, many will remain immune from prosecution as the
suspects cannot be deported or prosecuted in British courts.
“I
have little doubt that there are some fugitives in the UK who are here
because they like living here and because they believe it is a safe
haven for them from their war crimes. And I do not believe that we
should be providing such a safe haven,” says Alex Carlile, Liberal
Democrat peer and the government’s independent reviewer of terrorism
laws.
The release of the figures coincides with an ongoing case
at the High Court where four Rwandans, suspected of helping to
coordinate the genocide, are fighting extradition to Rwanda.
“When they came here they changed their own names, for example Dr
Vincent Bajinya changed to Dr Vincent Browne,” Rwanda’s Ambassador to
the UK Claver Gatete says. “So they thought they could get away with it,
and being in Europe they thought they could keep appealing if anything
happens, and they will never be extradited to Rwanda.”
The men
were arrested only after a special agreement was signed between Britain
and Rwanda allowing them to be extradited.
The four are now
waiting for a remand hearing. But members of the Action Group for Peace
and Justice in Rwanda believe that although they should be tried, it
should be anywhere but in Rwanda where they would never get a fair
trial.
“Historically the UK has been a place where people seek
asylum. That’s not a bad thing as they are often seeking asylum from
oppressive regimes,” says John Jones, Doughty Street Chambers barrister.
“But if you have a human rights law and an asylum law, you can’t have
people being sent back to where they will be prosecuted.”
John
Jones is specialising in war crimes and extradition. And despite the
current problem with the law, he says it’s highly unlikely there will be
any changes any time soon.
“It takes a great deal of
parliamentary will to push through something as big as a new war crimes
act,” Jones says. “And of course the fear is that the UK would become a
sort of forum for all war crimes trials as Belgium nearly became - that
they’ll come to the UK and they‘ll all start their proceedings here. And
that’s what the parliament wants to avoid and the tax payers want to
avoid - to become the world’s policeman.”
Experts say, the
Rwandan case is a test. If it does appear that the four can’t be tried
in the UK but won’t be extradited - they will enjoy total impunity.
And the question is how many suspects living in Britain will thus
manage to avoid justice in their home countries.
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