The Appeals Chamber of the Special Court for Sierra Leone recently ruled that forced marriage is a new category of crime against humanity, reversing the Trial Chamber’s determination that forced marriage was not distinct from the previously recognized crimes against humanity of rape, forced prostitution, and sexual slavery.
“What had occurred here with forced marriage was something very serious and very specific, and wasn’t fully recognized,” Stephen Rapp, the chief prosecutor at the Special Court for Sierra Leone, told the Christian Science Monitor last week. “It was part of a widespread attack against civilians. Women were being taken as wives without consent, either consent by them … or by family members.” See http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0610/p06s01-woaf.html
The court’s first rulings on the charges, brought against three members of the notorious Revolutionary United Front, are expected in July. The decision paves the way for similar charges in northern Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, where rights groups have documented the use of bush wives in ongoing conflicts.
In arguing the case for recognizing forced marriage as a new category of crime against humanity, the Prosecutor of the Special Court for Sierra Leone utilized a memorandum prepared by the Case Western Reserve University School of Law War Crimes Research Office, which I direct. The memo was subsequently published as Michael P. Scharf and Suzanne Matler, Forced Marriage: Exploring the Viability of the Special Court for Sierra Leone’s New Crime Against Humanity, Volume 3 of the Africa Legal Aid Special Book Series: “African Perspectives on International Criminal Justice” (2005), the text of which is available at: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=824291 .







Comment #1
cms118 said,
While international law has made great strides over the past few decades, the serious issue of crimes against women has been largely overlooked by the international law community. This has prompted recent criticism from those who would like the international courts to take a more aggressive stance toward crimes against women. The recent decision of the Special Court of Sierra Leone’s decision to recognize forced marriage as a crime against humanity may be a much needed step in a positive direction for a category of crimes that have experienced some setbacks of late; however, this is dependent on the international community showing a commitment to enforcing this new crime and other crimes where women are victims.
The recent decision might stymie some of the recent criticism of international courts prompted by the ICC’s decision to drop the sexual violence charges in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) case. While the decision to drop these charges was based on problems ensuring witness safety, it has sparked an outcry from human rights groups who feel sexual violence has a lesser place in the hierarchy of punishable crimes. Rape, sexual slavery, and forced marriage have been all too common occurrences in the recent conflicts in the DRC, Uganda, and Sierra Leone, and the international legal community needs to step up and aggressively investigate, support, and prosecute these cases. Otherwise, the message to all women around the world is that despite their inclusion, international courts do not really view these horrendous crimes as grave enough to rise to a level that deserves serious effort.
Now, that the Appeals Chamber of the Special Court for Sierra Leone has reversed the Trial Chamber and included forced marriage on the list of recognized crimes against humanity, the trend might be turning. On the other hand, being on the list of recognized war crimes does not necessarily mean that future courts will choose to prosecute those who commit these crimes. Just as the ICC chose not to prosecute sexual violence charges in the DRC trials, future courts may also choose not to develop cases and prosecute these crimes. No matter how many crimes are recognized, unless violations are aggressively investigated and pursued, there is really no difference.
In the end, what is really needed is a fundamental change in the way international courts view sexual violence and crimes against women. These crimes need to be given the same weight as other crimes against humanity and the cases need to be actively investigated, developed and tried. Only then, can these courts serve as a deterrent to future crimes of this nature. Only then can woman all over the globe feel that justice extends to them.
July 10, 2008 at 2:19 am