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International-UN-NGOs
International Court Begins First Trial
2009-01-26
Geez, you guys sure you're ready?
PARIS -- More than six years after openings its doors, the International Criminal Court in The Hague began its first trial Monday, as Thomas Lubanga, a former Congolese warlord, took his seat in the dock, facing a crowded court and public gallery.
So...have they been "on the clock" for the last six years? My guess? Most definitely...
Lubanga has nothing to worry about. Like Milosevic he'll live a long and happy life in a prison hotel suite at The Hague, and die peacefully in his sleep before a verdict is rendered ...
Mr. Lubanga, 48, once the leader of a powerful and violent militia, is accused of war crimes, including commandeering children under the age of 15 and sending them into war to maim and kill. He pleaded not guilty to the crimes, which prosecutors said occurred in 2002-2003 during ethnic fighting in the Ituri region of Eastern Congo.

Supporters of the court have hailed the long-awaited trial as a momentous step for the tribunal, created to try large-scale human rights violations, while critics contend it has been too long in coming. Mr. Lubanga was brought to the Hague almost three years ago. Now, both sides see the trial as a test case that will be closely watched by lawyers and human rights activists. Turf wars within the court, bitter legal squabbles and irritation among the trial judges had almost torpedoed the case. Last July, as the trial was about to start, judges put a halt to the proceedings, citing legal and strategic errors by the prosecution, and said Mr. Lubanga should be set free, though he was ultimately kept in custody. The judges said the prosecution's handling of evidence amounted to "wholesale and serious abuse" and ruled that at that point a fair trial was not possible.
Yeah, sounds about right for something that starts with "International"..
Now that the judges have given their green light and errors have been redressed, Mr. Lubanga will be tried by three international judges -- from Britain, Costa Rica and Bolivia -- in a process that is expected to go on until the end of this year.
Harrrrumph harrrumph harrrrumph...
Prosecutors will start their case by calling on more than 30 witnesses, nine of them young men and women who were themselves former child soldiers.
See ya in two years with the verdict. If he don't die in the meantime...
Posted by:tu3031

#6  tu and DarthVader, while it sounds like an easy cheap shot to claim that there's the perverse incentive here of court staff and counsel being paid by the hour/week/month/year, I'll bet it's true.

Someone in a position to know WRT an African tribunal (prob. Rwanda, can't remember) said that this perverse incentive was clearly at work, as the court would grant delays and etc. on the slightest pretext and in response to almost any request.

Of course the Iraqi tribunal has not been without its blemishes - but they get the facts on the table, the defendants have complete free reign to argue their case (if any), and the court has shown as much regard for the nuances of individual defenses as it has for the undeniably huge pressure on it to produce guilty verdicts.

So what is the current management in DC gonna do about the ICC? I'd guess they'll keep it at arms' length, if only because the fear of being "soft" or careless with our military is (rightfully) acute.
Posted by: Verlaine   2009-01-26 21:37  

#5  A Lawless Global Court
By John Rosenthal
How the International Criminal Court undermines the U.N. system

Posted by: anonymous5089   2009-01-26 15:18  

#4  Probably handled under 'Diplomatic Immunity' Clem. Isn't that how U.N. parking in New York works?
Posted by: CrazyFool   2009-01-26 14:27  

#3  I don't believe the International Court verdicts include the death penalty. An hotel suite is about the stiffest sentence they will render.
Posted by: ThealingBorgia 122   2009-01-26 13:59  

#2  True! plus the locals make good money on car parking for the one million plus visitors annually who visit the hague!
wonder if court attendees can get out of paying parking fines if their meters run out? seeing as how they dont know how to keep within schedule, i bet theyll be handing out a few time violations to some activists?
Posted by: Clem Thrainter8407   2009-01-26 13:40  

#1  My guess is the trial will take almost a decade and these bozos are paid for by the hour.

What a racket.
Posted by: DarthVader   2009-01-26 12:41  

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