Hi AIDP community –
The good folks over at prawfsblawg have invited me to a couple of week stint as a guest blogger, so it’ll be interesting to air some developments in international criminal law in a forum populated (mostly) by non-international law types.
I will also cross post here.
My first post at prawfsblawg was on the question of Peace vs. Justice in Uganda. A slightly abridged version follows below:
In my book Atrocity, Punishment, and International Law (…thanks, Kevin, for the plug over at Opinio Juris) I explore some difficult questions regarding the role of prosecution and punishment as responses to genocide and crimes against humanity. And I question our reliance on liberal legalism - in particular Westernized trials and correctional models that focus on incarceration - as a method to seek justice in the wake of such tragedies.
One interesting case study which keeps on unfolding is Uganda. For the past 20 years, northern Uganda has been subject to a conflict between the Ugandan government and a rebel group called the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA). The LRA campaign has brutalized villages in northern Uganda. Tens of thousands of civilians have been killed and well over one million residents displaced. The LRA has conscripted child soldiers and used sexual violence in its campaigns. Four of its leaders have been indicted by the International Criminal Court (ICC). For at least two years or so, albeit in halting fashion, the LRA has been involved in peace negotiations with the Ugandan government. The ICC indictments have become a sticking point in the discussions. The LRA balks at signing a peace deal so long as the indictments remain open. And, although the Ugandan government initially referred the LRA violence to the ICC, it, too, is hedging regarding the ICC indictments.
What to do? Does the pusuit of justice, as seen through prosecution at the ICC, get in the way of peace? Or is peace impossible without justice?
Two interesting additional facts:
1. Many people who actually live in northern Uganda, for example among the Acholi population, support justice. But for these people justice means traditional community methods of dispute resolution and integration — particularly for child soldiers — that are deeply symbolic, communicative, and restorative. Some community members have implored the ICC not to continue with the indictments.
2.The Ugandan government, although having referred LRA violence to the ICC, was found responsible by the International Court of Justice in 2005 for breaches of international humanitarian law and for unlawful use of force in its own military incursions into a neighboring state, the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
A slightly longer version with comment(s) is accessible through: http://prawfsblawg.blogs.com/prawfsblawg/2007/05/uganda_peace_vs.html#comments







Comment #1
Kelsey512 said,
I do not believe that the pursuit of justice through prosecution at the ICC is the only way that peace can be achieved in Uganda. Prosecution at the ICC is not the only way in which justice can be achieved, nor is it the appropriate way to achieve justice in this case.
I believe that in Uganda, a truth and reconciliation commission following a similar model as the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission would be an effective method of achieving both peace and justice in Uganda. Because the Ugandan conflict was predominantly internal in nature, the impetus for peace and justice should come from within Uganda. Both the government and the LRA targeted citizens of Uganda, so the pursuit of justice must be sought on both sides of the conflict. A truth and reconciliation commission would allow for the condemnation of the atrocities that were committed by both sides. Finally, the high prevalence of conscripted child soldiers creates a situation with very unique needs. The children must be disarmed, rehabilitated, and reintegrated into society. There will be no peace if all of the children who were forced to serve as soldiers are prosecuted for their actions. As in the Special Court for Sierra Leone, whatever model is chosen for Uganda must prosecute only those that are the most responsible for the atrocities, and have a separate program to rehabilitate and reintegrate child soldiers.
As Mr. Drumbl noted, the people of Northern Uganda support justice, but through “traditional community methods of dispute resolution and integration—particularly for child soldiers…and have implored the ICC not to continue with the indictments.” It seems apparent that the people of Northern Uganda wish to initiate the peace process on their own, without the use of westernized trials and correctional models. The people of Uganda obviously wish to begin building a more peaceful society. If a peaceful future can exist for Uganda, it must come from within, not through prosecution at the ICC.
June 18, 2007 at 1:28 pm