5. Other United Nations procedures
5.1 International Criminal Courts
In 1948, the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide anticipated the existence
of an international penal tribunal (Article VI) as well as
jurisdiction for the International Court of Justice in disputes between states parties (Article IX). However, it was
not until July 1998, in Rome, that the UN Diplomatic
Conference of Plenipotentiaries on the Establishment of
an International Criminal Court adopted a statute of a
permanent International Criminal Court (ICC). The
Rome statute entered into force on 1 July 2002 creating
the ICC with jurisdiction over genocide, crimes against
humanity and war crimes, taking place on or after that
date. The statute envisages that the ICC will also have
jurisdiction over the crime of aggression, once states parties have agreed a definition. The ICC is an independent
international institution established by treaty, but has
formed ties to the UN. Victims, or civil society organizations representing them, can bring evidence of crimes to
the office of the Prosecutor at the ICC to encourage the
start of proceedings. Victims can also participate in the
proceedings, and have a right to reparation.
National laws are expected to provide for extradition,
prosecution and punishment when the international
community has criminalized certain behaviour. When the
national response to such crimes is totally inadequate, as
in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia, the UN Security
Council (SC) has, in the past, established International
Criminal Tribunals (ICTs – based in Arusha and The
Hague, respectively). The SRs with mandates for Rwanda
and for the former Yugoslavia have strongly supported
the two ICTs and have collaborated in the collection of
evidence, testimonies and other relevant information.
The SC could create other ad hoc international tribunals
(for example in respect of states which are not party to
the ICC statute), or help in the establishment of mixed
tribunals combining elements of national and international law (as in the recent case of Sierra Leone).
Crimes against humanity (falling under the jurisdiction of all these tribunals) have often been targeted
against specific ethnic or religious groups, and genocide
and persecution in particular are crimes that relate to the
physical protection of minorities as a group. As such, the
establishment of the ICC should have a positive impact in
the drive for increased respect for minority rights.
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For more information on the ICC, see: http://
www.icc-cpi.int/php/index.php. For information relating
to the ICT for Rwanda, see: http://www.ictr.org and for
the ICT for the former Yugoslavia, see: http://
www.un.org/icty.
5.2 Good offices
The UN Secretary-General, the UN High Commissioner
for Human Rights and Directors-General of UN specialized agencies can undertake ‘good offices’ for the sake of
minority groups in distress. Good office actions are
undertaken confidentially, that is by way of quiet diplomacy, and the UN will not publish the results, although
the parties may choose to do so. All it takes is a letter to
one of the officials with a detailed and well-prepared factual account, identification of the human rights standards
being violated, elaboration of the urgency involved, and
an explanation of the unavailability or unsuitability of
existing international monitoring procedures.
Good offices are advantageous in terms of speed, with
action following within days or weeks, and in terms of
their effect, because many countries are likely to respond
positively to quiet diplomacy rather than suffer the public
embarrassment associated with other monitoring procedures. One UN contribution in this context is in bringing
the parties together, that is the government and, for example, the minority group. This role may or may not involve
active UN participation in the contacts between the parties. It may be assumed that good office actions related to
minority rights take place from time to time.
5.3 Research
Within the UN, various bodies in the field of human
rights work prepare research reports which frequently
contribute to policy-making activities. Foremost among
these are the research rapporteurs and working groups
established by the Sub-Commission (not to be confused
with the SRs, and working groups of the Commission
and their investigative functions). The research rapporteurs and the working groups are made up of experts
drawn from the membership of the Sub-Commission.
Similar think-tank services are provided by the UN secretariat, which may on its own initiative or at the request of
other UN bodies present reports or surveys on a variety of
human rights issues.
MINORITY RIGHTS: A GUIDE TO UNITED NATIONS PROCEDURES AND INSTITUTIONS