This article examines the role that command responsibility currently plays in the case law of the International Criminal Tribunal for the formerYugoslavia (ICTY) and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR). The ad hoc tribunals rely in principle on a broad concept of command responsibility ^ which can be applied to all superiors, including political and civilian ones. However, in practice, accused persons have only rarely been successfully charged under this form of liability. Indeed, recent case law has gradually adopted a rigorous approach with respect to the legal require- ments of command responsibility. This has made it more difficult to establish crim- inal liability of superiors who have not directly participated in the commission of international offences. The ad hoc tribunals have expressed an explicit preference for forms of ‘direct’ liability where the accused can be convicted both under ‘direct’ and command responsibility. While the ICTY and ICTR have progressively interpreted other international legal concepts to deal effectively with collective crimes com- mitted by leaders of organized groups, they seem to have confined command respon- sibility to international crimes perpetrated in typical military-like contexts.
Finding a Proper Role for Command Responsibility
BONAFÈ, Beatrice Ilaria
2007-01-01
Abstract
This article examines the role that command responsibility currently plays in the case law of the International Criminal Tribunal for the formerYugoslavia (ICTY) and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR). The ad hoc tribunals rely in principle on a broad concept of command responsibility ^ which can be applied to all superiors, including political and civilian ones. However, in practice, accused persons have only rarely been successfully charged under this form of liability. Indeed, recent case law has gradually adopted a rigorous approach with respect to the legal require- ments of command responsibility. This has made it more difficult to establish crim- inal liability of superiors who have not directly participated in the commission of international offences. The ad hoc tribunals have expressed an explicit preference for forms of ‘direct’ liability where the accused can be convicted both under ‘direct’ and command responsibility. While the ICTY and ICTR have progressively interpreted other international legal concepts to deal effectively with collective crimes com- mitted by leaders of organized groups, they seem to have confined command respon- sibility to international crimes perpetrated in typical military-like contexts.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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