Content uploaded by Catherine Gegout
Author content
All content in this area was uploaded by Catherine Gegout on Oct 22, 2019
Content may be subject to copyright.
Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at
https://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=ctwq20
Third World Quarterly
ISSN: 0143-6597 (Print) 1360-2241 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/ctwq20
The International Criminal Court: limits, potential
and conditions for the promotion of justice and
peace
Catherine Gegout
To cite this article: Catherine Gegout (2013) The International Criminal Court: limits, potential
and conditions for the promotion of justice and peace, Third World Quarterly, 34:5, 800-818, DOI:
10.1080/01436597.2013.800737
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/01436597.2013.800737
Copyright © 2013 The Author(s). Published
by Taylor & Francis
Published online: 24 Jun 2013.
Submit your article to this journal
Article views: 39941
View related articles
Citing articles: 9 View citing articles
The International Criminal Court:
limits, potential and conditions for the
promotion of justice and peace
CATHERINE GEGOUT
ABSTRACT The International Criminal Court (ICC) aims to promote not only
justice, but also peace. It has been widely criticised for doing neither, yet it has
to contend with some severe structural and political difficulties: it has limited
resources, it faces institutional restrictions, it is manipulated by states, and it is
criticised for an alleged selectivity in the way it dispenses justice. However, the
ICC could contribute significantly to the promotion of international justice and
peace, and have a major impact on the prevention of crime, since its prosecu-
tions represent a clear threat to highly placed individuals who commit serious
crimes. While this article concentrates on the work of the ICC in Africa, the only
continent where it has issued indictments against suspected criminals, it also
looks at its efforts on other continents. It argues that, in the larger international
context, the contribution of the ICC to international justice and peace depends
on its institutional power and the support it receives from states, on its own
impartial work, and on the way it is perceived by potential criminals and
victims in the world.
The International Criminal Court (ICC, or the Court) was created in 2002. The
aim of the ICC is to put an end to impunity for perpetrators of the most serious
crimes of concern to the international community, and to contribute to the pre-
vention of such crimes. The ICC can prosecute any individual anywhere in the
world, but for suspected criminals who are citizens of a state which has not rati-
fied the ICC Statute, a United Nations Security Council (UNSC) resolution is nec-
essary.
1
In accordance with the principle of jurisdiction ratione temporis
(temporal jurisdiction) the Court can only investigate crimes committed after 1
July 1 2002, when the ICC Statute came into force.
2
Despite the ethical and human rights agenda of the ICC, and its ambition to
punish criminals and prevent crimes, it is not always subscribed to by
Catherine Gegout is in the School of Politics and International Relations, LASS Building, Room C14a,
University of Nottingham, Nottingham NG7 2RD, UK.Email: Catherine.gegout@nottingham.ac.uk
Third World Quarterly, Vol. 34, No. 5, 2013, pp 800–818
ISSN 0143-6597 print/ISSN 1360-2241 online/13/000800-19
Ó2013 The Author(s). Published by Taylor & Francis.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://
creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any
medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The moral rights of the named author(s) have been asserted.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01436597.2013.800737
international organisations, states and people. As of 2013, a majority of states
in the world—122—have ratified the Rome Statute that established the institu-
tion. The ICC has jurisdiction with respect to a particular range of crimes: geno-
cide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and in 2017 it may be able to
investigate the crime of aggression (committed by one state in another state).
3
The ICC Preamble declares that these are serious crimes which threaten the
peace, security and well-being of the world. However, the terms ‘peace’and
‘justice’are not defined in the ICC Preamble, and this leads to different interpre-
tations, as peace and justice for some can mean conditions of war and injustice
for others.
What are in effect the shortcomings of the ICC, and has it made positive con-
tributions to justice and peace? And under which conditions can it provide inter-
national justice and peace? This article shows the limits and problems of the ICC
but also its inherent potential. A number of factors hamper the ICC: it lacks legit-
imacy, and it can be constrained by power politics when it investigates a case
and when an arrest warrant needs implementing. It is very selective in its cases,
and this goes against the principle of universal justice on the ground. Further-
more it has only indicted Africans. For some criminals and victims alike the
Court lacks credibility. The ICC is considered by some researchers and practitio-
ners a potentially counterproductive actor in peace negotiations.
Despite all this, the ICC does have the potential to become a Court that pro-
vides international justice and peace. It is a court with an ethical aim, that is,
the prosecution of criminals, and it is gaining in legitimacy. It could attract
states which want to show their support for the defence of human rights. The
Court sometimes does work independently from state leaders: on its own initia-
tive it is focusing on the actions of regime leaders in Kenya and Ivory Coast.
But the ICC is not only centred on Africa, it has also considered investigating
crimes committed in other regions of the world, such as South America, Asia
and the Middle East. The work of the ICC could create a long-term deterrent
effect, that is, potential criminals could fear the consequences of their acts, espe-
cially once they are no longer in positions of power.
It is also argued here that the contribution of the ICC to justice and peace
depends on its institutional autonomy to indict potential criminals, on the sup-
port it receives from states parties to the ICC, on its own impartial work, and on
the extent to which it is respected by people in the world. The institutional
autonomy of the ICC is conditioned by the goodwill of states parties and non-
party states to the ICC Statute. This autonomy would increase if a majority of, if
not all, states in the world were party to the Statute and systematically respected
its obligations. The credibility of the ICC is linked to its capacity to provide uni-
versal criminal justice without bias. This credibility would increase if the ICC
could: 1) act independently from states; 2) investigate criminals on all conti-
nents, whether state officials or not; 3) have the means to deliver justice in a
fair way and in a short period of time; and 4) where possible, defer prosecutions
at the local level. Finally, the ICC must be considered a legitimate actor by all
those who have reason to fear indictment, by indicted persons and their support-
ers, and by the general population in areas where serious crimes are being
committed.
THE ICC AND THE PROMOTION OF JUSTICE AND PEACE
801
Four contributions are made here to the literature on the International Crimi-
nal Court, on justice and peace, and on theories of policy making. First, I point
out the difficulties the ICC faces in seeking to provide not only justice but also
peace. Second, I use studies of the ICC by lawyers and political scientists, by
those interested in the current impact of the ICC on the ground, in countries
where it already operates, and by those interested in its potential for wider inde-
pendent action. Third, conditions under which the ICC could provide interna-
tional justice and peace are proposed. Fourth, by identifying the limits within
which the ICC operates and its potential, this article hopes to rectify the flawed
perception of the ICC, which is considered by some a Western court manipulated
by the USA and European states, and to open up a debate on the measures
needed to enhance its legitimacy.
The article is organised into three main sections. The first discusses the insti-
tutional limits within which the ICC currently works. The Court has to face a
lack of support from all states in the world, and the absence of systematic coop-
eration by states parties to its Statute. It is an instrument for power politics, and
manipulated by states parties and non-party states to the ICC Statute. Nonethe-
less, its legitimacy is growing, and the ICC is shown to be a political actor which
can set its own agenda.
The second section seeks to evaluate the action of the ICC on the ground. It
analyses the impact of the ICC on local justice, its influence on peace negotia-
tions, and the way it is perceived by perpetrators and victims of crimes. It
shows that the ICC provides important symbolic justice and peace. Even if lead-
ers with a history of violence have continued being violent, despite the threat of
an ICC arrest warrant, the ICC could have a deterrent effect in the long term, as
no state or militia leader wants to be arrested. Some indicted people have chan-
ged their attitude for fear of the ICC. Victims of crime seem to have diverging
views on the utility of the ICC, but they generally welcome its work.
The last and concluding section highlights the difficulties for the ICC to pro-
vide both international justice and peace, and suggests possible practical policies
both it and the international community might implement to provide justice and
durable peace for people. The main proposals are that: 1) the ICC has to be
given the means to deliver justice without bias, that is, without control by states
and with a focus on all individuals and parties responsible for crimes in a con-
flict; 2) an emphasis needs to be laid on strengthening institutions providing
local justice; and 3) officials who work within states which have ratified the ICC
treaty cannot rely solely on the ICC to provide justice: states themselves should
also be focusing their policies on the promotion of long-term economic and
social development for victims of conflict.
Rising legitimacy and autonomy
The contribution of the ICC to furthering the cause of justice and peace is limited
by the fact that some states do not yet accept its legitimacy, by the tendency of
certain states to seek to control and use it as an instrument to reinforce their
own power, and by its own ability to pursue its investigations successfully.
Increasingly, however, the ICC is being recognised as a legitimate international
CATHERINE GEGOUT
802
institution by a growing number of states. It has gained visibility through its
strategy whereby the cases it selects concern all parties to a conflict, and have a
high likelihood of success, that is, the person or persons investigated and prose-
cuted are eventually found guilty of a crime.
Rising legitimacy
Legitimacy means that: 1) most states on all continents (and especially the per-
manent five of the UNSC) are party to the ICC and/or recognise its work as useful
and fair; and 2) most people in both poor and rich regions, and in different
political systems, think its work helps provide international justice and peace.
4
This second point will be analysed in the second section.
As stated by Katherina Coleman, the power of an institution depends on how
many and which states are part of this organisation.
5
An increasing number of
states accept the legitimacy of the ICC, even if some states do not ratify its sta-
tus. Three out of five permanent members of the UNSC are not party to it. How-
ever, the USA, China and Russia seem to be progressively agreeing with its
work, as they did not refuse to refer the case of Sudan in 2005 to the ICC, and
they also agreed to a referral with the case of Libya in 2011.
6
Although Russia
does not always agree to referrals to the ICC, it has made use of the Court, as
Russian officials filed a complaint against Georgia.
7
The absence of the hegemonic state, the USA, from the ICC presents problems
for its legitimacy. Some scholars argue that US ratification is in the interest of
the USA.
8
This it is unlikely at present, as US officials still argue that the ICC
could indict US soldiers for war crimes when they conduct operations abroad
with legitimate uses of force. However, the USA has made progress in terms of
cooperation with the ICC. In the past some countries which had refused to sign
immunity agreements with the USA had seen their aid allocations cut.
9
But
since Barack Obama came to power this is no longer the case. In addition, the
Secretary of State, Hillary Rodham Clinton, has certainly expressed great regret
that the USA is not a signatory to the ICC, and the USA was in fact an observer
at the first review conference of the ICC in June 2010. Further cooperation from
the hegemon was noted when, in 2013, President Obama signed a bill in order
to reward people giving information which could lead to ‘the arrest or convic-
tion in any country, or the transfer to or conviction by an international criminal
tribunal (including a hybrid or mixed tribunal), of any foreign national accused
of war crimes, crimes against humanity, or genocide, as defined under the stat-
ute of such tribunal’.
10
Subsequently, when Bosco Ntaganda, who had been
wanted by the ICC since 2006, voluntarily surrendered himself to the US
Embassy in Kigali in Rwanda in March 2013, the USA transferred him swiftly
to the ICC.
When the ICC treaty was adopted in 1998, seven countries voted against it,
the USA, China, Libya, Iraq, Israel, Qatar and Yemen. Today, a majority of
African states (34 out of 53), most countries in South America and all the states
within the European Union have ratified the treaty. Thirty-one states have
signed but not ratified the ICC Statute, and 40 states are not party to the ICC.
11
THE ICC AND THE PROMOTION OF JUSTICE AND PEACE
803
India, for instance, fears that it acts as a judicial bully.
12
And several states in
the Middle East, Africa and Asia have not acceded to the Statute.
There are signs nonetheless that this situation is changing. For example, fol-
lowing the 2011 spring revolutions in the Middle East and North Africa, Tunisia
has joined the ICC, and both Egypt and Qatar are considering being part of it.
Palestinian leaders too are aware of the Court’s potential to promote justice and
peace. Given that Palestine became a state, when it became a member of
UNESCO in 2011 and a non-member observer state of the United Nations’
General Assembly in 2012, it could either accept the Court’s jurisdiction on an
ad hoc basis, pursuant to Article 12(3), or apply to become a member of the
ICC.
13
The UN Human Rights Council appears to be in favour of Palestine join-
ing the ICC as, referring to the Israeli settlements in the West Bank, it stated that
‘ratification of the statute by Palestine may lead to accountability for gross vio-
lations of human rights law and serious violations of international humanitarian
law and justice for victims’.
14
NGOs and states parties to the ICC also called
upon it to investigate crimes in Ivory Coast after the elections in winter 2010.
In addition, some states, led by Switzerland, the United Nations High Commis-
sioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, and a member of the Commission of
Enquiry on Syria, Carla del Ponte, would like the ICC to investigate crimes com-
mitted by Syrian president Bashar al-Assad since spring 2011.
15
States can be encouraged by other states and by civil society to ratify the
ICC.
16
In July 2011 the ICC and the Commonwealth signed a memorandum of
understanding in order to promote the work of the ICC within the Common-
wealth area. Groups such as the Indian Coalition for the ICC, Chinese academia,
the Indonesian Civil Society for the International Criminal Court and the Malay-
sian Bar Association have been active in their respective states. The Philippines
Coalition for the ICC seems to have been influential in the decision of the Philip-
pines to ratify the ICC treaty in 2011.
17
In the future many states which are
members of the Organisation of the Islamic Community (OIC) and which have
ratified the ICC treaty could encourage other oic members to do so. Similarly, on
the European continent, pressure could be exerted by all EU member states on
those states not party to the ICC but which are members of the Council of Eur-
ope (Armenia, Azerbaijan, Moldova, Russia and Ukraine), and therefore poten-
tial EU members, and especially on Serbia and Turkey, already candidate EU
member states.
18
The ICC instrumentalised by states
The independence of the ICC has always been compromised by external attempts
to exercise control over its operations. States, while acting legally, use the ICC
for political motives, and this can sometimes work against the principles of
international criminal justice. This corresponds to the argument made by the
realist author EH Carr, according to whom law ‘cannot be understood indepen-
dently of the political foundation on which it rests and of the political interests
which it serves’.
19
Power politics have a direct impact on the functioning of the ICC. The role of
the permanent five members of the UN Security Council is crucial when crimes
CATHERINE GEGOUT
804
are committed in states which are not party to the ICC. In such an instance a
UNSC decision is necessary for triggering the ICC’s jurisdiction; the big powers
are likely to be the only states politically capable of carrying out an ICC arrest
warrant; and at any moment the UNSC can decide to delay an ICC investigation or
prosecution (subject to the conditions in Article 16 of the ICC Statute). As a
result, even states within the UNSC which are not party to the ICC Statute (the
USA, China and Russia), can play a major role in ICC investigations: they can
encourage the ICC to act, or prevent the international community from cooperat-
ing with it. In effect, the UNSC used the ICC as a diplomatic instrument to deal
with the crisis in Sudan. Referring the Darfur case to the ICC served the interests
of the international community, which had not managed to reach a common
position on significant sanctions against Sudan.
20
In addition, the USA expected
the UNSC to exercise firm political oversight of the ICC process in connection
with the situation in Darfur.
21
States, incapable of acting by any other means,
use the ICC as they want ‘a way of being seen to act’and this helps ‘assuage
the conscience of the international community’.
22
The ICC can become or be considered a biased actor by states and people.
State leaders who ask the ICC to act against rebels in order to reinforce their
own regime and authority are effectively seeking to turn the ICC into their politi-
cal instrument. They are also contributing to the creation of an unjust interna-
tional legal system, as they want the Court to focus on one side of a conflict.
23
This was the case with Joseph Kabila in the DRC in 2004, Yoweri Museveni in
Uganda in 2004, François Bozizé in the Central African Republic (CAR) in
2005, and with the government in Mali in 2012.
States can hamper the work of the ICC when they decide not to cooperate with
it when it has issued an arrest warrant. If states are hosting someone wanted by
the ICC, they might want to avoid the indicted person divulging information
about crimes committed by their own government, or they may hope to use the
ICC as a threat in negotiations with their opponents. For instance, at the imple-
mentation stage, in contravention of ICC rules, the DRC government has not
been fully cooperative with the ICC. The DRC government referred the situation
in North Eastern Congo to the ICC in 2003, but then did not arrest all those who
had been indicted. Despite the arrest warrant issued against him by the ICC,
Bosco Ntaganda—who handed himself over to the ICC in 2013—was seen in
January 2009 in Goma alongside the Congolese minister of the interior and
other senior Congolese military officers. The government made it clear that
domestic peace was best served by Bosco Ntaganda remaining free.
24
Similarly,
in 2008 the Ugandan government changed policy towards the ICC: the govern-
ment offered the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) the possibility of being tried at
the national level rather than at the ICC. In a more recent example, the Kenyan
government has not been cooperating with the ICC, as the ICC prosecutor, Fatou
Bensouda has said that ‘we still have difficulties with witness intimidation. This
is ongoing...it’s not stopping and I think it will get more serious’.
25
If states are not actually hosting an indicted individual they should, according
to the Statute, help the ICC serve its arrest warrants. France, the USA and the
UK had an ambiguous position towards the ICC in the cases of Sudan, Kenya
and Libya. In November 2008 Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, met
THE ICC AND THE PROMOTION OF JUSTICE AND PEACE
805
Sudanese leader Omar-al Bashir privately in Qatar. Sarkozy was apparently
ready to prevent the ICC from investigating crimes in Sudan in order to reach a
peace agreement on Darfur.
26
Similarly, the UK does not always seem to find
the indictment against Bashir helpful for the peace process.
27
In the Libya case
in 2011 an analyst for the journal Foreign Policy suggested that the UNSC mem-
bers might have considered ‘stopping the ICC process in exchange for the peace-
ful transfer of power’.
28
Still in Libya, the UK encouraged local courts, against
the wishes of the ICC, to deal with the prosecution of Saif Gaddafi. In Kenya in
February 2011 France and the USA seem to have ‘seriously considered’the
African Union’s (AU) requests to defer the ICC’s prosecution of six Kenyan offi-
cials.
29
However, deferral did not happen. Moreover, when Uhuru Kenyatta,
indicted by the ICC, was about to win Kenya’s presidential election in 2013, the
UK merely indicated that ‘officials will avoid any but essential contact with
him’.
30
The US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, Johnnie Car-
son, told Kenyan voters that ‘choices have consequences’; these ‘consequences’
remain to be seen.
31
The lack of full support for the ICC goes particularly against
the spirit of the agreement between the ICC and the EU on cooperation and
assistance signed in 2005.
32
In August 2009 the African Union made it clear that its member states would
not cooperate with the ICC in order to arrest Bashir. Chad was the first country
which has ratified the ICC treaty to welcome Bashir on its territory in July 2010
(and again in 2011 and 2013), Kenya followed suit shortly after in August
2010, Djibouti in May 2011 and Malawi in October 2011.
33
Bashir was also
present in five African states which have not ratified the ICC treaty: Egypt and
Zimbabwe in 2009, Ethiopia in 2010, Eritrea in 2009, 2010 and 2011, and
Libya in 2012.
However, other African states do not want to renege on their international
legal obligations. Botswana and South Africa have said they would arrest Bashir
if he travelled to these states. The Kenyan High Court issued a domestic arrest
warrant against him in 2011. CAR and Libya, which was hosting the Africa–EU
summit in 2010, prevented Bashir from travelling to their countries. Similarly
Malawi cancelled an au summit which was to take place on its own territory in
2012, as it did not want to welcome Bashir. Regarding the Libya crisis, in 2011
Burkina Faso and Niger said that they would not give safe haven to Muammar
Gaddafi.
Some states in the international community, it seems, used the ICC to suit their
own purposes of preserving relations with Sudan and Libya, or giving peace
negotiations a chance: complying with the law is not always the first option for
states. States which fail to implement ICC requests clearly do not consider them
as binding, and as a consequence the legitimacy of the ICC is called into
question.
Political and selective actor
The ICC is a legal body, supposedly concerned with justice, and not politics.
However, the Court can have considerable political impact because it has signif-
icant independent power. The chief prosecutor can initiate an investigation on
CATHERINE GEGOUT
806
the basis of a referral from any state which is party to the ICC, or from the UNSC
acting under Chapter VII of the Charter of the United Nations. In addition, the
prosecutor can initiate investigations proprio motu, on the basis of information
received from individuals or organisations about crimes within the jurisdiction
of the Court. The prosecutor has done this twice since its creation: in Kenya
and in Ivory Coast.
The ICC does not work consistently according to the principles of international
law, and it does not always appear fair. The Court chooses its prosecutions stra-
tegically, following criteria of its own. The ICC has to decide whether it will be
more effective to pursue one case, and see the person indicted, judged and
imprisoned, than to investigate many cases where evidence is limited and suc-
cessful prosecution uncertain. The procedure used by the ICC can sometimes
yield controversial results.
The prosecutor uses the jurisdictional threshold of gravity: only serious
crimes are investigated. But s/he does not follow his/her own threshold consis-
tently. For instance, in the DRC those investigating the crimes of Thomas
Lubanga found evidence of torture, pillage, rape and enslavement, but as this
evidence was insufficient, a decision was made to focus only on child sol-
diers.
34
The ICC focuses on cases where an investigation is feasible.
35
It only works
on crimes in regions which already have systems of local justice, and which are
accessible by ICC investigators with the protection of the government. This
reduces the geographical scope of its investigations. For instance, in the DRC
the ICC was present in Ituri but not in Nyankunde, where people were reluctant
to bury their dead in the hope of an ICC investigation.
36
Also, for the situation
in Darfur, ICC investigators could not obtain visas from the Sudanese govern-
ment, so they had to interview people in refugee camps in Chad.
The Court has targeted some individuals, but neglected others equally well
known for their violence and crimes. For instance, in the DRC the ICC has not
indicted Laurent Nkunda, leader of the rebel group known as the National Con-
gress for the Defence of the People (CNDP) in Eastern Congo. In Kenya the ICC
investigation is not considered fair by everyone, as the ICC prosecutor does not
appear to be investigating the worst offenders, but rather those who are easily
apprehended.
37
When the ICC launches its own investigations without a UNSC referral, it has
in the past avoided investigating people in power and, as a result, it has played
a political role as it took sides in a conflict. In the DRC and Uganda it has only
acted against rebels or members of the opposition, whereas a UN envoy said
that government troops in the DRC might have committed rape and murder in
North Kivu in summer 2010, and Ugandan human rights activists have asked
the ICC to indict both sides of the conflict in Uganda.
38
However, the ICC has
been acting increasingly against state representatives. This is welcomed, as
states can rarely prosecute crimes committed by their own officials.
39
The pros-
ecutor decided to conduct preliminary examinations of the situations in Guinea
in 2009 and Nigeria in 2010, and to use proprio motu powers to investigate
crimes committed by government officials in Kenya in 2007, and in Ivory Coast
in June 2011.
40
Armed groups in favour either of the former President Laurent
THE ICC AND THE PROMOTION OF JUSTICE AND PEACE
807
Gbagbo or the present President Alassane Ouattara would both be investigated
for crimes committed between 2002 and 2010. In November 2011 Laurent
Gbagbo became the first former head of state to appear at the ICC. In 2013 the
prosecutor also made it clear that not only Malian rebels but also officials
would be investigated.
41
Serious criticism has been levelled against the ICC, as it has concentrated on
crimes solely committed in Africa.
42
Arrest warrants against named individuals
have only been issued in the DRC and Uganda (2004), Sudan (2005), CAR
(2007), Kenya (2010), and Libya (2011). However, the ICC has conducted preli-
minary investigations throughout the world: Iraq, Venezuela and Colombia
(2006); Afghanistan (2007); Georgia and Sri Lanka (2008); and Gaza, Honduras
and South Korea (2010). These investigations have not led to any indictments
for various reasons: crimes were insufficient in number, national justice systems
were able to deal with the issue, investigations are ongoing and/or the ICC
cannot legally address some crimes committed in a state non-party to the ICC
Statute.
43
The investigation in Iraq did not get very far: in 2006 the then ICC prosecutor
rejected the idea of investigating the situation there on grounds of ‘gravity’. The
Court, he said, should only investigate the most severe cases of war crimes,
crimes against humanity and genocide.
44
In 2006 the ICC prosecutor analysed
the 2002 crisis in Venezuela, during which supporters and opponents of Hugo
Chavez opposed one another, but subsequently rejected the idea of a formal
investigation. The ICC put a lot of pressure on Colombia for it to make appropri-
ate use of its criminal justice system.
45
As regards Afghanistan, investigations
started in 2007. The ICC prosecutor said both NATO forces, including US person-
nel, and the Taliban would be investigated. The ICC is monitoring the crisis
which took place in Georgia in 2008, and has sent delegations to Georgia and
to Russia. It investigated the use of child soldiers in Sri Lanka in 2008 since,
although this state has not ratified the ICC treaty, it could potentially have juris-
diction over crimes committed by nationals of states parties on its territory.
In 2010 the ICC considered investigating war crimes committed in Gaza in
winter 2009–10. However, the ICC could not indict crimes committed in the Pal-
estinian territories, as these territories did not legally constitute a state.
46
Neither
could Israelis be indicted, as Israel has not signed the ICC treaty, and as the
USA within the UNSC would not endorse a referral of the Gaza issue to the ICC.
As mentioned above, the situation could be different now since Palestine has
been recognised as a state: it could become a state party to the ICC.
2010 also saw preliminary examinations opened on crimes committed during
the 2009 coup in Honduras, when the military ousted President Manuel Zelaya,
and on war crimes committed by North Korean forces in the territory of the
Republic of Korea in 2010. These examinations are ongoing, and welcomed by
some scholars.
47
The ICC can only deliver justice and peace with the support of
states. More states parties to the ICC means more legitimacy, and more states
cooperating with the ICC in order to implement arrest warrants means its work
can be more effective. The ICC can also make sure it delivers fair and unbiased
justice. But, as the following section shows, the way people perceive the ICC is
also crucial for the good conduct of its work.
CATHERINE GEGOUT
808
Significance of the ICC for criminals and victims
I argue in this section that the ICC either has no impact or a positive impact in
terms of providing international justice and peace. First, the ICC does not seem
to have prevented potential criminals from being violent, whether they live in
states parties or non-party states to the ICC, but this could change in the future
given that some potential criminals seem to fear the ICC. Second, the reaction of
individuals indicted by the ICC is indeterminate: some have continued to use
violence, whereas others seem to have contained it. Finally, victims who are
aware of the ICC seem to be generally in favour of it, even if it only provides
symbolic justice.
Prevention of crime in the long term?
The ICC could have a deterrent effect and prevent future atrocities.
48
By indict-
ing heads of government, the ICC marks the end of impunity for leaders who do
not take steps to protect their citizens, or actively do them harm. The ICC there-
fore helps implement the concept of ‘responsibility to protect’agreed upon by
the UN General Assembly in 2005.
49
Its existence could also encourage militia
groups to reduce violence, national courts to act against criminals, and leaders
to change politics within member states.
Former and current heads of state such as Laurent Gbagbo in Ivory Coast
and Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe, who were or are responsible for violence in
their own state, seem to fear the ICC.
50
Whether the ICC is feared or not does not
change the fact that it might in the future be responsible for judging heads of
state such as Paul Kagame in Rwanda or Bashar al-Assad in Syria, either with
a UN Security Council referral or especially following a change of regime in
those states.
However, the work of the ICC is not guaranteed to deter criminals.
51
Heads of
state considered leaders of authoritarian regimes are still in power. Robert
Mugabe has been officially re-elected. In addition, despite the offer of amnesty,
and the use of the threat of the ICC by the Economic Community of West Afri-
can States and the au, Laurent Gbagbo did not step down from power in Ivory
Coast. The fact that the UN issued a report on the abuses, which could amount
to crimes against humanity, did not deter the Syrian leader Assad from commit-
ting further violence in his state.
52
The fact that Mali ratified the ICC treaty in
2000 did not prevent rebels and government troops from committing crimes in
northern Mali in 2012.
The work of the ICC, as well as the work of international courts, could also
have an impact on local and regional courts.
53
For instance, the ICC encouraged
Nigeria to organise trials to judge members of the terrorist group organisation
Boko Haram, and also Kenya to organise domestic trials for war crimes.
54
The
work of the ICC could also be the reason for discussions on the creation by the
au of a regional crime court.
55
Researchers have also shown that international
law can influence politics.
56
In particular, the ICC monitors elections in order to
gather evidence of violence. This was the case in the DRC in 2011.
57
THE ICC AND THE PROMOTION OF JUSTICE AND PEACE
809
Indicted criminals still holding power: impact on peace?
The reaction of individuals indicted by the Court is also unpredictable. On the
one hand, the ICC could have a negative impact on peace. Some indicted persons
have continued their criminal activities. This is the case with both Omar al-
Bashir in Sudan and Muammar Gaddafiin Libya. Indicted rebels have also con-
tinued to commit crimes. An ICC indictment could also encourage further vio-
lence. In addition, an indictment makes peace negotiations impossible, as
potential criminals are no longer legitimate actors and cannot travel abroad with-
out fearing arrest. Many international actors, such as the AU, the Arab League,
the OIC and the Group of 77 (an influential UN bloc of developing nations, which
includes China), are afraid of the consequences in Darfur of the ICC’s investiga-
tion.
58
State leaders themselves could fear the arrest of a rebel leader, if he or
she has knowledge of crimes they supported. This is for instance the case of
Bosco Ntaganda: Rwanda is likely to be worried about his arrest, as he could
confirm the findings of a confidential UN report in October 2012 that Rwanda
and Uganda supported his M23 rebel movement. This arrest could be positive
for justice, but not necessarily for peace.
When an indicted leader is involved in several conflicts, this can obviously
lead to preventing or stalling peace negotiations in other regions. In the Great
Lakes the absence of peace negotiations in Uganda and the indictment of LRA
leaders have led the LRA to commit crimes beyond Uganda, in the DRC, CAR
and Darfur. The ICC’s contribution to peace also depends on the extent to which
its indictments lead to the legitimacy of perpetrators being questioned. This too
is unpredictable: a suspected criminal might continue to receive support despite
an ICC investigation. As with other international tribunals involved in investigat-
ing core international crimes, ICC intervention could cause a nationalist backlash
that would exacerbate peace initiatives.
59
For instance, according to Antonio
Cassese, the first President of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former
Yugoslavia, the warrant against Omar al-Bashir has reinforced his legitimacy in
Sudan and in African and Arab states.
60
Conversely the ICC can have a positive political impact, and can influence the
internal politics of all states: it can change the domestic political balance. Some
experts argue that, by sidelining the LRA in Uganda, the ICC has diminished the
former’s political force.
61
And they believe that violence will be further reduced
when Joseph Kony, who is under an ICC arrest warrant, is apprehended.
62
In
Mali the ICC investigations might reduce violence committed by government
troops.
63
In Sudan the threat of ICC action may also have encouraged some poli-
ticians to distance themselves from the indicted individuals. Some senior mem-
bers of the ruling party in Sudan seem to have ‘seriously questioned’the
wisdom of the regime’s confrontational approach to the international commu-
nity.
64
Similarly the threat of ICC prosecutions might have encouraged defections
from the Libyan and Syrian regimes. Events in Kenya show that the ICC can
have a positive impact on peace: violence in the 2013 elections could have
occurred again, but the ICC might have made leaders reluctant to support or
foster violence, and indirectly contribute to peace in Kenya.
65
CATHERINE GEGOUT
810
When potential criminals, including heads of state, are arrested or hand them-
selves in, such as Laurent and Simone Gbagbo in Ivory Coast, Saif Gaddafior
Abdullah Al-Senussi in Libya, or Bosco Ntaganda in the DRC, it can mark the
end of violence, with the dismantling of groups which supported them, and be a
step forward on the road to peace.
Victims of crimes: symbolic and retributive justice welcomed
The reaction of victims to the work of the ICC is also indeterminate, but overall
it seems positive. On the one hand, victims can disagree with the work of the
ICC, as they feel it provides symbolic justice, it is biased, it does not provide
protection, it does not provide justice as they understand it, and it does not
address their needs. Justice can only be symbolic, given the limited number of
cases investigated by the ICC. Only 30 people have been indicted since 2002.
Victims in a conflict can disagree with the ICC on its choice of person indicted.
For instance, in the DRC the Hemas people, who are from the same ethnic
group as Thomas Lubanga, did not understand why Lubanga was arrested.
66
Victims are often reluctant to testify to the ICC for fear of further attack. Victims
could prefer local justice systems to justice meted out by an international court.
They may be in favour of restorative justice through reconciliation, and not of
retributive justice through punishment. People might view the ICC as a neo-colo-
nial body.
67
Further, some people in conflict areas feel that the ICC is detached
from their daily concerns, and that their welfare and will to live in a peaceful
and secure environment are not taken into consideration.
68
They do not neces-
sarily consider the aims of the ICC a priority, and are generally more concerned
with the struggle against poverty than the fight for justice.
On the other hand, symbolism can be important, retributive justice is valued
by people and the ICC is making an effort to address the concerns of victims.
The ICC brings the idea of justice into local and national politics in the places
where it is known by people. For instance, it was used by domestic actors in
Namibia to advance their claims for reconciliation, and provides hope for vic-
tims of crimes committed in states which are not party to the ICC. In Zimbabwe
the strongest support for the ICC comes from the grassroots level.
69
Activists
involved in the Arab Spring have also invoked the Court.
70
In addition, victims
can prefer retributive to restorative justice. According to a survey with over
2000 respondents, conducted in northern Uganda by the University of Califor-
nia, Berkeley, 66% are in favour of punishment, and 22% in favour of
amnesty.
71
Victims do seem to agree with the ICC. In the July 2009 edition of the New
African several African lawyers and African human rights NGOs spoke out for
the ICC. Victims from Darfur welcomed the work of the ICC.
72
According to the
survey mentioned above, a majority of respondents who had heard of the Court
in Uganda (bearing in mind that 73% had not!) attached high expectations to it,
believing that the ICC would contribute both to peace (91%) and justice (89%).
And in Kenya in 2011 some MPs and most people (73%) were in favour of the
ICC prosecution of their leaders responsible for the 2007 election violence.
73
THE ICC AND THE PROMOTION OF JUSTICE AND PEACE
811
For the ICC to have a lasting positive impact on justice and peace, the needs
of victims must be satisfied. It has set up a Victims and Witnesses Unit to pro-
vide protection, support and other appropriate assistance to witnesses and vic-
tims who appear before the Court.
74
Unfortunately there is no long-term
support, and victims who have left the Court remain at the mercy of criminals
and their supporters. The ICC has also set up a Trust Fund for Victims, and it is
trying to reach out to people in conflict areas who are not direct victims of the
conflict. It has for instance established channels of communication and informa-
tion about its work with university students in Bunia and with military officials
in the DRC. In order to address the concerns of victims, states have to make
sure that global social and economic justice is provided to victims of conflict,
as criminal justice alone is insufficient for justice and peace in the long term.
75
Overcoming the difficulty of providing justice and peace
The ICC has very ambitious aims, as it is not only concerned with establishing
international justice, but also peace. Researchers disagree on the impact a tribu-
nal can have on peace. For some theorists the two aims of justice and peace
can contradict one another and, as a result, in its quest to establish justice, the
ICC does not always serve the cause of peace. First, peace can exist without jus-
tice.
76
Peace is enjoyed in countries such as Mozambique and Namibia, where
reconciliation took place without trials.
77
The ICC, it is thought, should some-
times refrain from acting in an area of conflict, since indicting a rebel is not
necessarily the solution. Second, some commentators argue that peace should
come first, then justice.
78
Third, justice can be a danger for peace. Fiat Justitia
et Pereat Mundus? As long as international justice is done, does it matter if
peace is subverted, and the world perishes? Some researchers demonstrate that
international tribunals do not appear to contribute to peace.
79
In addition, the
circumstances under which the ICC works make peace even more difficult to
achieve. Unlike the Tribunals in Nuremberg and in Tokyo, the ICC does not for
the most part work in times of peace, but in times of conflict. The Court is
inevitably drawn into active conflict situations, and ends up being considered a
biased actor. The ICC can also be criticised for attempting to transpose principles
of liberal democracy to all states, and to impose ‘one-size-fits-all’solutions in
order to provide international justice.
80
But, for other theorists, any attempt at peace building which ignores justice is
doomed to fail. This is exactly why the ICC was created. Negotiations to create
the ICC in 1998 were mainly instigated by lawyers, whose unique aim was to
establish a tribunal at the international level on a permanent basis. For these
theorists justice is the foundation of democracy and democratic institutions, and
of international and local peace negotiations.
81
They offer examples of failed
amnesties: Foday Sankoh in Sierra Leone and Jonas Savimbi in Angola. For
legalists and some liberal theorists justice should be pursued even at the cost of
peace, because justice will lead to removing victims’resentment and banishing
extremism, and thus long-term peace will ensue.
82
I have shown that the contribution of the ICC to international justice and peace
depends on structural and agency factors: its legitimacy among states in the
CATHERINE GEGOUT
812
world, the support it receives from the international community to promote and
implement justice, its independence, and its capacity to render justice and allow
or encourage local and national justice to prevail over international justice. I
argue that the ICC is likely to make a positive contribution to justice and peace.
It is progressively being recognised worldwide as a legitimate institution. The
fact that Tunisia joined the ICC in 2011 following its fight for democracy high-
lights the importance of the international values it promotes. The more states
join the ICC statute, the more power the ICC has, as the prosecutor can investi-
gate crimes on his or her own initiative in these states, and as the ICC can act
independently from states.
The ICC must focus on fairness, local justice and international social justice in
order to improve its legitimacy and work. Even though the ICC faces power poli-
tics constraints when crimes are committed in a state which has not joined the
ICC Statute, the ICC is trying to adopt a fair and impartial approach to delivering
justice by investigating crimes committed all over the world, and by both sides
to a conflict. In order to enhance the remit of the Court, researchers are discuss-
ing the possibility of it indicting companies and their executives, but this would
require an amendment to the Statute.
83
The ICC should be open to discussions with, and respectful of, local justice
systems, state institutions and people who live in conflict areas. This is all the
more important as people must have confidence in their own legal and political
systems. At the 2010 ICC Review conference in Kampala, ICC officials promoted
the concept of ‘positive complementarity’, which is about states assisting one
another, and receiving additional support from the Court itself, as well as from
civil society, to meet Rome Statute obligations. The ICC must avoid being pres-
ent where local systems of justice can operate, and it should encourage local
and national courts to deal with criminal justice.
84
It has done so to a certain
extent in Libya: in 2011 it accepted to defer cases to Libya on condition that its
judges would be involved, but in 2013 it ordered Libya to hand over Gaddafi’s
intelligence chief, Abdullah al-Sanussi.
85
In order to improve the impact of the ICC, its members have a crucial role to
play in supporting the Court to provide international justice. They must create a
safe environment for those victims of crime willing to testify at the ICC, and
protect them from further violence. States should also help the ICC implement its
arrest warrants, and contribute to the ICC’s reparations system for victims of
crime.
86
States parties to the ICC could, for instance, include support for victims
of grave crimes into their programmes on development. More broadly states
must work on promoting justice for all people, independently from the work of
the ICC focused on punishment for particular individuals.
87
Notes
Special thanks go to Olympia Bekou, Devon Curtis, Miwa Hirono, Ben Holland, Adam Morton and
Matthew Rendall, who commented on earlier drafts of this article. I would also like to thank the editor for
his advice. The article was written in the framework of the project on ‘Armed Groups and Postconflict
Peace-building in Africa’funded by the British Academy.
1 Article 12 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.
2 Articles 11 and 24 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.
THE ICC AND THE PROMOTION OF JUSTICE AND PEACE
813
3 International Criminal Court, ‘Resolution RC/Res.6—Aggression amendment’, 11 June 2010, at http://
www.icc-cpi.int/iccdocs/asp_docs/Resolutions/RC-Res.6-ENG.pdf. This amendment will need 30 ratifica-
tions in order to be implemented.
4 IL Claude, ‘Collective legitimation as a function of the United Nations’,International Organization, 20(3),
1966, pp 367–379; C Clapham, ‘Peacekeeping and the peacekept: developing mandates for potential inter-
venors’, in RI Rotberg (ed), Peacekeeping and Peace Enforcement in Africa: Methods of Conflict Preven-
tion, Vol 36, Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press, 2000, pp 34–57; and M Pugh, ‘The world
order politics of regionalization’, in M Pugh & W Pal Singh Sidhu (eds), The United Nations and Regio-
nal Security: Europe and Beyond, Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner/International Peace Academy, 2003,
pp 31–46.
5 KP Coleman, International Organisations and Peace Enforcement: The Politics of International Legiti-
macy, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007, p 283.
6 C Heyder, ‘The UN Security Council’s referral of the crimes in Darfur to the International Criminal Court
in light of US opposition to the Court’,Berkeley Journal of International Law, 24(2), 2006, pp 650–671;
and J Ralph, Defending the Society of States: Why America Opposes the International Criminal Court and
its Vision of World Society, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007.
7 Jurist Document, ‘Russia to File Complaint against Georgia with International Criminal Court’, University
of Pittsburgh, 19 August 2008, at http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2008/08/russia-to-file-complaint-
against.php.
8 L Feinstein & T Lindberg, Means to an End: US Interest in the International Criminal Court, Washington,
DC: Brookings Institution Press, 2009.
9 RC Johansen, ‘The impact of US policy toward the International Criminal Court on the prevention of
genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity’,Human Rights Quarterly, 28(2), 2006, pp 301–331.
10 There is, however, one condition for giving the award: information provided has to be ‘in the national
interests of the United States’. The rewards programme for criminals wanted by international criminal
courts became part of the rewards programme created in 1984. Its initial aim was to reward people who
provided actionable information that would prevent international terrorist attacks or help convict individu-
als involved in terrorist attacks. See United States Congress, ‘S. 2318 (112th): Department of State
Rewards Program Update and Technical Corrections Act of 2012’, 112th Congress, 2011–2013, Text as of
Jan 02, 2013 (Passed Congress/Enrolled Bill), at http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/112/s2318/text/enr;
and White House, ‘Statement by the President on enhanced State Department rewards program’,15
January 2013, at http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/01/15/statement-president-enhanced-
state-department-rewards-program.
11 United Nations, ‘Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court’, at http://treaties.un.org/Pages/ViewDe-
tails.aspx?src=TREATY&mtdsg_no=XVIII-10&chapter=18&lang=en, accessed 25 March 2013.
12 U Ramanathan, ‘India and the ICC’,Journal of International Criminal Justice, 3, 2005, pp 627–634.
13 Palestine faces the following difficulties with regard to the ICC. First, the USA disagrees with Palestine
joining the ICC.The Guardian,‘US warns European governments against supporting Palestinians at UN’,1
October 2012, at http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/oct/01/us-warns-europe-palestinians-un. Second, if
it joins, war crimes committed by both Israeli and Palestinians would be investigated. Finally, it is unclear
whether war crimes investigated would date back to 2002, when the Rome Statute came into force, or
2011 when Palestine became a state.
14 United Nations, ‘Report of the independent international fact-finding mission to investigate the
implications of the Israeli settlements on the civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights of
the Palestinian people throughout the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem’,A/
HRC/22/63, 7 February 2013, at http://unispal.un.org/unispal.nsf/3822b5e39951876a85256b6e0058a478/
0aed277dcbb2bcf585257b0400568621?OpenDocument.
15 ‘UN rights officials urge Syria war crimes charges’,New York Times, 19 February 2013, at http://www.
nytimes.com/2013/02/19/world/middleeast/un-rights-panel-says-violence-in-syria-is-mounting.html?page-
wanted=all&_r=0, accessed 18 February 2013.
16 Even if it is not in a state’s interest to ratify international treaties, a state can do so. See C Reus-Smit (ed),
The Politics of International Law, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004; and BA Simmons & A
Danner, ‘Credible commitments and the International Criminal Court’,International Organization, 64(2),
2010, pp 225–256.
17 R Bhatara Ibnu, ‘The International Criminal Court and the Asia Pacific region’, 4 November 2012, at
http://ijcentral.org/blog/the_international_criminal_court_and_the_asia_pacific_region/.
18 It took a long time for the EU to convince the Czech Republic to become a state party to the ICC. See A
Antoniadis & O Bekou, ‘The European Union and the International Criminal Court: an awkward symbiosis
in interesting times’,International Criminal Law Review, 7(4), 2007, p 645.
19 EH Carr, The Twenty Years’Crisis, 1919–1939, New York: Perennial, 2001, p 166. More generally, realist
authors argue that institutions are unlikely to act independently from states. However, other academics
underline the possible autonomy of action for international institutions.
CATHERINE GEGOUT
814
20 M Mamdani, Saviors and Survivors: Darfur, Politics and the War on Terror, New York: Pantheon, 2009.
21 R Cryer, ‘Sudan, Resolution 1593, and International Criminal Justice’,Leiden Journal of International
Law, 19, 2006, pp 195–222.
22 S Power, ‘Stopping genocide and securing “justice”: learning by doing—international justice, war crimes,
and terrorism: the US record’,Social Research, 2002, pp 1093–1107; F Tulkens & M-A Beernaert, ‘Dans
quelle mesure les juridictions pénales internationales peuvent et/ou doivent-elles prendre en compte le droit
international des droits de l’homme?’,Festschrift für Heike Jung, Baden-Baden: Nomos, 2007, pp 1005–
1020; and G Wigglesworth,‘The end of impunity: lessons from Sierra Leone’, International Affairs, 84(4),
2008, pp 809–827.
23 WW Burke-White, ‘Complementarity in practice: the International Criminal Court as part of a system of
multi-level global governance in the Democratic Republic of Congo’,Leiden Journal of International Law,
18, 2005, pp 557–590; and P Clark, ‘Law, politics and pragmatism: the ICC and case selection in the Dem-
ocratic Republic of Congo and Uganda’, in N Waddell & P Clark (eds), Courting Conflict: Justice, Peace,
and the ICC in Africa, London: Royal African Society, 2008, pp 37–45.
24 ‘Kabila’s position on the arrest of Ntaganda “has not changed”’,Congo Planet, 13 April 2012, at http://
www.congoplanet.com/news/1965/joseph-kabila-position-on-bosco-ntaganda-arrest-has-not-changed.jsp.
25 ‘ICC prosecutor says Kenyatta case will go to trial’, Reuters, 20 March 2013, at http://www.reuters.com/
article/2013/03/20/us-kenya-icc-idUSBRE92J19G20130320. In fact, states are starting to support the newly
elected President of Kenya. For instance, Botswana’s foreign minister has ‘apologised for saying that Ken-
ya’s newly elected president would be banned from the southern African nation if he refuses to co-operate
with the ICC’. See BBC, ‘Botswana apologises to Kenya over Kenyatta ICC warning’, 14 March 2013, at
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-21784867.
26 ‘La rencontre au Qatar des présidents français et soudanais trouble les ONG’,Le Monde, 29 November
2008.
27 ‘Britain failing to make Bashir’s arrest a priority, says ICC’s chief prosecutor’,The Guardian, 24 May
2009.
28 D Bosco, ‘The Libya resolution: prosecution as bargaining chip?’,Foreign Policy, 27 February 2011, at
http://bosco.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2011/02/27/the_libya_resolution_prosecution_as_bargaining_chip.
29 ‘France and US to support AU’s requests to defer ICC prosecution?’,Africa Confidential, 7 February 2011.
30 ‘Kenyatta victory promises trouble for Kenya’, 8 March 2013, The Guardian, at http://www.guardian.co.
uk/world/2013/mar/08/kenya-kenyatta-election-hague.
31 For instance, former US assistant secretary of state for African affairs, Jendayi Frazer, has explained that
the case against Kenyatta is ‘falling apart’. See ‘Examining the fallout from Kenyan presidential election’,
Mwakilishi, 12 March 2013, at http://www.mwakilishi.com/content/articles/2013/03/12/video-examining-
the-fallout-from-kenyan-presidential-election.html.
32 Council of the European Union, ‘Agreement between the International Criminal Court and the European
Union on cooperation and assistance’, n 14298/05, Brussels, 6 December 2005.
33 The ICC informed the UN Security Council of the lack of cooperation between Chad and the Court. See
International Criminal Court, ‘Pre-Trial Chamber II: Situation in Darfur, Sudan’, 26 March 2013, at http://
www.icc-cpi.int/iccdocs/doc/doc1573530.pdf.
34 International Centre for Transitional Justice, ‘ICC investigative strategy under fire’, 27 October 2008, at
http://iwpr.net/report-news/icc-investigative-strategy-under-fire. Thomas Lubanga was the first person to be
convicted and sentenced by the ICC.
35 Of the 18 cases that have come before the ICC at the time of the writing (March 2013), the Court has nev-
ertheless had to drop six cases. One suspect was acquitted: Mathieu Ngudjolo Chui (DRC); four suspects
had their charges dismissed: Callixte Mbarushimana (DRC), Abu Garda (Darfur), Henry Kosgey and
Mohammed Ali. Charges were confirmed and then withdrawn for Francis Muthaura (Kenya).
36 IWPR,‘Bogoro victims finally laid to rest’,ACR, Issue 225, 2009, at http://iwpr.net/report-news/bogoro-vic-
tims-finally-laid-rest.
37 MS Kimenyi, ‘The International Criminal Court: a time of reckoning for Kenya and Africa’, Brookings
Institution, 17 December 2010, at http://www.brookings.edu/opinions/2010/1217_africa_crime_kimenyi.
aspx; and ‘Kenya: ICC warns Ocampo six over hate speech’,Nairobi Star, 8 April 2011, at http://allafrica.
com/stories/printable/201104080858.html.
38 A Branch, ‘Kony Part II: accountability, not awareness’, Al-Jazeera, 7 April 2012, at http://www.aljazeera.
com/indepth/opinion/2012/04/201247943869166.html.
39 KJ Heller, ‘Situational gravity under the Rome statute’, in C Stahn & L van den Herik (eds), Future Per-
spectives on International Criminal Justice, The Hague: tmc Asser Press, 2009, pp 227–253.
40 Neither situation was exactly ‘proprio motu’. In Kenya a referral to the ICC was envisaged in the post-elec-
tion violence report and in Ivory Coast the ICC responded to the declaration made by President Ouattara in
2010 under article 12(3) of the ICC Statute. See Republic of Kenya, ‘Report of the Commission of Inquiry
into Post-election violence (cipev)’, 15 October 2008, p 18, at http://www.communication.go.ke/media.asp?
THE ICC AND THE PROMOTION OF JUSTICE AND PEACE
815
id=739; and International Criminal Court, ‘Letter from the President of Ivory Coast’, 14 December 2010,
at http://www.icc-cpi.int/NR/rdonlyres/498E8FEB-7A72-4005-A209-C14BA374804F/0/ReconCPI.pdf.
41 International Criminal Court, ‘Statement by ICC prosecutor concerning Mali’, 28 January 2013, at http://
www.icc-cpi.int/en_menus/icc/press%20and%20media/press%20releases/news%20and%20highlights/Pages/
otpstatement280113.aspx.
42 Clark, ‘Law, politics and pragmatism’,pp37–45; and Centre for International Governance Innovation,
‘Ramesh Thakur: ICC’s competing ethics of conviction, responsibility’,Daily Yomiuri, 31 July 2008, at
http://www.cigionline.org/articles/2008/07/iccs-competing-ethics-conviction-responsibility.
43 International Criminal Court, ‘Report on Preliminary Examination Activities 2012’, November 2012, at
http://www.icc-cpi.int/NR/rdonlyres/C433C462-7C4E-4358-8A72-8D99FD00E8CD/285209/
OTP2012ReportonPreliminaryExaminations22Nov2012.pdf.
44 International Criminal Court, ‘Letter from the Prosecutor, The Hague’, 9 February 2006, p 9, at http://
www2.icc-cpi.int/NR/rdonlyres/F596D08D-D810-43A2-99BB-B899B9C5BCD2/277422/OTP_let-
ter_to_senders_re_Iraq_9_February_2006.pdf.
45 A Guaqueta, ‘The way back in: reintegrating illegal armed groups in Colombia then and now’, in M Ber-
dal & D Ucko (eds), Reintegrating Armed Groups After Conflict: Politics, Violence and Transition, Abing-
don: Routledge, 2009, p 31.
46 See International Criminal Court, ‘Declarations Art 12 (3)’, at http://www.icc-cpi.int/Menus/ICC/Structure
+of+the+Court/Registry/Declarations.htm; and International Criminal Court, ‘Situation in Palestine’,3
April 2012, at http://icc-cpi.int/NR/rdonlyres/C6162BBF-FEB9-4FAF-AFA9-836106D2694A/284387/Situa-
tioninPalestine030412ENG.pdf.
47 M Mutua. ‘Savages, victims and saviors: the metaphor of human rights’,Harvard International Law Jour-
nal, 42, 2001, pp 201–242; and R Nagy, ‘Transitional justice as global project: critical reflections’,Third
World Quarterly, 29(2), 2008, pp 275–289.
48 D Wippman, ‘Atrocities, deterrence, and the limits of international justice’,Fodham International Law
Journal, 23(2), 1999, pp 473–488; P Akhavan, ‘Beyond impunity: can international criminal justice pre-
vent future atrocities?’,American Journal of International Law, 95(7), 2001, pp 7–31; T Nardin, ‘Interna-
tional political theory and the question of justice’,International Affairs, 82, 2006, pp 449–465; K Sikkink
& C Booth Walling, ‘The justice cascade and the impact of human rights trials in Latin America’,Journal
of Peace Research, 44(4), 2007, pp 427–445; and L Vinjamuri, ‘Deterrence, democracy, and the pursuit of
international justice’,Ethics and International Affairs, 24(2), 2010, pp 191–211.
49 United Nations, ‘General Assembly of the UN, Paragraph 139 of the World Summit Outcome Document’,
2005, at http://www.responsibilitytoprotect.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=398.
50 ‘Erzbischof Tutu: Südafrika sollte Mugabe mit Gewalt drohen’,Die Welt, 27 December 2008; and ‘Côte
d’Ivoire: pourquoi Gbagbo résiste’,Afrique en Ligne, 14 December 2010, at http://www.afriquejet.com/afri-
que-de-l%27ouest/cote-d%27ivoire/cote-d%27ivoire:-pourquoi-gbagbo-resiste-2010121464078.html.
51 A De Waal & GH Stanton, ‘Should President Omar al-Bashir of Sudan be charged and arrested by the
International Criminal Court?’,Genocide Studies and Prevention, 4(3), 2009, pp 329–353; LP Francis &
JG Francis, ‘International criminal courts, the rule of law, and the prevention of harm: building justice in
times of injustice’, in L May & Z Hoskins (eds), International Criminal Law and Philosophy, Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2010, pp 58–74.
52 ‘Syria: UN lists names of Assad officials who could face ICC prosecution’,The Guardian, 18 August 2011.
53 Some researchers argue that the best way for justice is to empower local courts. See WW Burke-White,
‘Proactive complementarity: the International Criminal Court and national courts in the Rome system of
international justice’,Harvard International Law Journal, 49, 2008, pp 53-108; and MC Bassiouni, ‘Per-
spectives on international criminal justice’,Virginia Journal of International Law, 50(2), 2010, p 318.
54 D Kaye, ‘Who’s afraid of the International Criminal Court?’,Foreign Affairs, May–June 2011, p 3.
55 ‘Africa: leaders’summit to discuss regional war crimes court’,The Star, 23 January 2013, at http://allafri-
ca.com/stories/201301231408.html?viewall=1.
56 BA Simmons, Mobilizing for Human Rights: International Law in Domestic Politics, Cambridge: Cam-
bridge University Press, 2009; and K Sikkink, The Justice Cascade: How Human Rights Prosecutions are
Changing World Politics, New York: Norton, 2011.
57 ‘ICC monitoring pre-election violence in DR Congo’,Congo Planet, 11 November 2011, at http://www.con-
goplanet.com/news/1904/international-criminal-court-monitoring-election-violence-in-dr-congo.jsp.
58 ‘Darfur War Crimes Indictment Threatens to Split International Community’,The Guardian, 16 February
2009, at http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/feb/16/sudan-war-crimes-split-international-community’
59 G Bass, Stay the Hand of Vengeance, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2000, p 285.
60 ‘Darfur, Bashir e gli Stati Uniti’,La Repubblica, 6 March 2009.
61 M Ssenyonjo, ‘The International Criminal Court and the Lord’s Resistance Army leaders: prosecution or
amnesty?’,Netherlands International Law Review, 54(1), 2007, pp 51–80.
CATHERINE GEGOUT
816
62 ‘Uganda: Kony will eventually face trial, says ICC prosecutor’, Irin News, 7 July 2006, at http://www.irin-
news.org/Report.aspx?Reportld=59585; and T Allen, Trial Justice: The International Criminal Court and
the Lord’s Resistance Army, New York: Zed Books, 2006.
63 M Kersten, ‘The ICC might not deter Mali’s rebels—but it might deter the government’,ij Central Blog, 4 Feb-
ruary 2013, at http://ijcentral.org/blog/the_ICC_might_not_deter_malis_rebels_but_it_might_deter_the_gov-
ernment/.
64 N Grono & C Flintoff, quoted in ‘Credibility of International Criminal Court is on line over Sudan presi-
dent’,Guardian Blog, 20 February 2009, at http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/blog/2009/feb/20/sudan.
65 Despite concerns at the possibility of renewed violence in the 2013 elections, the Kenyan government took
the following measures against violence: the adoption of a new constitution to redistribute political power;
the training of police and civil society to identify and monitor hate speech; and the education of the Ken-
yan population on the newly established electoral process. See, ‘Kenya: ensure violence-free polls’, Human
Rights Watch, 7 February 2013, at http://www.hrw.org/news/2013/02/07/kenya-ensure-violence-free-polls;
and ICRtoP, ‘All eyes on upcoming elections as Kenya works to prevent the recurrence of atrocities’,28
February 2013, at http://icrtopblog.org/category/international-criminal-court/.
66 Interview with an official, Kampala, 13 February 2011.
67 M Wrong, ‘Indictee for president!’,International Herald Tribune, 11 March 2013, at http://latitude.blogs.
nytimes.com/2013/03/11/being-prosecuted-by-the-i-c-c-helped-uhuru-kenyattas-chances-in-kenyas-election/.
68 P Clark & N Waddell, ‘Dilemmas of justice’,Prospect Magazine, 134, 2007, at http://www.prospect-maga-
zine.co.uk/article_details.php?id=9524; and M Glasius, ‘We ourselves, we are part of the functioning’,Afri-
can Affairs, 108(430), 2009, pp 49–67.
69 S Hoehn, ‘International justice and reconciliation in Namibia’,African Affairs, 109(436), 2010, pp 471–
488; ICC Observers Project, ‘ICC Observers Project exclusive interview with Phil Clark and David Ander-
son’, in Oxford Transitional Justice Research, Debating International Justice in Africa, 2010, p 191, at
http://www.fljs.org/uploads/documents/Justice_in_Africa.pdf.
70 ‘Arab uprisings point up flaws in global court’, 7 July 2012, at http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/08/world/
middleeast/arab-spring-reveals-international-court-flaws.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1&pagewanted=all.
71 International Center for Transitional Justice & Human Rights Center, ‘Forgotten voices: a population-based
survey on attitudes about peace and justice in northern Uganda’, University of California, Berkeley, 2005,
at http://ictj.org/sites/default/files/ICTJ-HRC-Uganda-Voices-2005-English.pdf.
72 IWPR,‘Women in Darfur look to ICC’,ACR, Issue 55, 2006, at http://iwpr.net/report-news/women-darfur-
look-icc; and iwpr, ‘icc talks to Darfur refugees in Chad’,ACR, Issue 260, 2010, at http://iwpr.net/report-
news/acr-issue-260.
73 ‘The ICC and Africa’,The Economist, 17 February 2011, at http://www.economist.com/node/18176088?
story_id=18176088.
74 International Criminal Court, ‘Report of the Bureau on the strategic planning process of the International
Criminal Court’, 6 November 2012, pp 3–4, at http://www.icc-cpi.int/iccdocs/asp_docs/ASP11/ICC-ASP-
11-30-ENG.pdf.
75 SC Agbakwa, ‘A path least taken: economic and social rights and the prospects of conflict prevention and
peace building in Africa’,Journal of African Law, 47(1), 2003, pp 38–64; Bassiouni, ‘Perspectives on
international criminal justice’, p 322; and JN Clark, ‘Peace, justice and the International Criminal Court:
limitations and possibilities’,Journal of International Criminal Justice, 9(3), 2011, p 537.
76 D Curtis, ‘The contested politics of peacebuilding in Africa’, in D Curtis & G Dzinesa (eds), Peacebuild-
ing, Power and Politics in Africa, Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press, 2012, pp 1–28; and B Holland,
‘Vattel on morally non-discriminatory peace’, in D Tabachnick & T Koivukoski, The Question of Peace in
Political Philosophy, Ontario: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, forthcoming 2014.
77 L Vinjamuri & J Snyder, ‘Advocacy and scholarship in the study of international war crime tribunals and
transitional justice’,Annual Review of Political Science, 7, 2004, pp 352–356; MR Amstutz, The Healing
of Nations: The Promise and Limits of Political Forgiveness, Oxford: Rowman and Littlefield, 2005; H
Cobban, ‘International courts’,Foreign Policy, 153, 2006, pp 22–28; R Dowden, ‘ICC in the dock’,Pros-
pect Magazine, 134, 2007, at http://www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/article_details.php?id=9269; and Interna-
tional Crisis Group, The Role of International Justice in Preventing and Resolving Deadly Conflict.
78 L Hovil & JR Quinn, ‘Peace first, justice later: traditional justice in northern Uganda’,Refugee Law Pro-
ject Working Paper, 17, Kampala, 2005, at www.refugeelawproject.org/resources/papers/workingpapers/
RLP.WP17.pdf.
79 JD Meernik, A Nichols & KL King, ‘The impact of international tribunals and domestic trials on peace
and human rights after civil war’,International Studies Perspectives, 11(4), 2010, pp 309–334.
80 Nagy, ‘Transitional justice as global project’, p 275. For further criticism of the promotion of liberal
democracy by Western democracies throughout the world, see R Paris, ‘International peacebuilding and
the “mission civilisatrice”’,Review of International Studies, 28(4), 2002, pp 637–656; D Chandler, Empire
in Denial: The Politics of Statebuilding, London: Pluto Press, 2006; M Pugh, ‘Corruption and the political
economy of liberal peace’, paper prepared for the International Studies Association annual convention, San
THE ICC AND THE PROMOTION OF JUSTICE AND PEACE
817
Francisco, 2008; and KM Clarke, Fictions of Justice: The International Criminal Court and the Challenge
of Legal Pluralism in Sub-Saharan Africa, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.
81 J Mayerfeld, ‘The democratic legacy of the International Criminal Court’,Fletcher Forum of World
Affairs, 28(2), 2004, at http://faculty.washington.edu/jasonm/mayerfelda.pdf; and Vinjamuri & Snyder,
‘Advocacy and scholarship in the study of international war crime tribunals and transitional justice’.
82 K Chiedu Moghalu, ‘Reconciling fractured societies: an African perspective on the role of judicial prose-
cutions’, in R Thakur & P Malcontent (eds), From Sovereign Impunity to International Accountability: The
Search for Justice in a World of States, Tokyo: United Nations University, 2004, pp 197–223; D Arm-
strong, T Farrell & H Lambert, International Law and International Relations, Cambridge University Press,
2007, p 95; and W Schabas, Unimaginable Atrocities, Justice, Politics, and Rights at the War Crimes Tri-
bunals, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012.
83 See, for instance, S Joseph, Corporations and Transnational Humans Rights Litigation, Oxford: Hart Pub-
lishing, 2004; D Leader, ‘Business and human rights—time to hold companies to account’,International
Criminal Law Review, 8, 2008, pp 447–462; and R Bismuth, ‘Mapping a responsibility of corporations for
violations of international humanitarian law: sailing between international and domestic legal orders’,Den-
ver Journal of Law and Policy, 38(2), 2010, pp 203–226.
84 O Fiss, ‘Within reach of the state: prosecuting atrocities in Africa’,Human Rights Quarterly, 31(1), 2009,
pp 59–69.
85 ‘International court: Libya can try Gadhafi’s son’,The Guardian, 22 November 2011, at http://www.guard-
ian.co.uk/world/feedarticle/9960502; and ‘ICC orders Libya to hand over Gadhafi’s former spy chief’, cnn,
7 February 2013, at http://edition.cnn.com/2013/02/07/world/africa/libya-ICC-spy-chief.
86 Freeman even regrets the absence of penalties for states which fail to cooperate with the ICC. M Freeman,
Necessary Evils: Amnesties and the Search for Justice, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010.
87 This holistic view of justice is known as ‘transitional justice’. See L Arbour, ‘Economic and social justice
for societies in transition’,New York University Journal of International Law and Politics, 40(1), 2007,
pp 1–27.
Notes on Contributor
Catherine Gegout is Lecturer in International Relations at the University of
Nottingham. She received her PhD in Social and Political Science from the
European University Institute in Florence, in 2004, after completing her MA in
European Political and Administrative Studies at the College of Europe, Bruges.
She has published European Foreign and Security Policy: States, Power,
Institutions and the American Hegemon (2010).
CATHERINE GEGOUT
818