![]() Firstly, the court had only indicted and tried a small number of offenders, many suspects of war crimes continue to be at liberty. The level of support for the Tribunal varies among different region’s ethnic groups, but overall the majority of the population is staying sceptical for many reasons. They claimed that since the court was established by the international community and not on the request of the national level, it stayed distant and irrelevant, unable to bring justice and peace into the region. Besides, its level of achievement had been critiqued by legal scholars and Balkan countries. However, the Tribunal had not functioned entirely as envisioned, its work had been undertaken well beyond the initial timeframe and it only finished the mandate by the end of December 2017, after when the national courts in the former Yugoslavia and the Mechanism for International Criminal Tribunals (MICT) took over and will complete the resting cases. By the end of the ICTY’s mandate, there were no more fugitives among those indicted, 154 proceedings out of total 161 cases were concluded and 4,650 witnesses were heard before the court. For the first time in the history of law, rape was recognised as an instrument of terror and became an object of prosecution. Senior political or military status could not exclude those individuals from the trial. The Tribunal individualised the guilt and protected entire communities from being labelled as “collectively responsible”. The evidence and witnesses’ testimonies were the basis upon which the prosecution presented the case and determined the guilt or innocence of the accused. ICTY’s guideline was to stay fair and impartial in its judgements not to take sides in the conflict and not to create an artificial balance between different ethnic groups. As an ad hoc court, the Tribunal had a dual aim: to give justice to human beings who experienced and witnessed tremendous crimes within the conflict and to eradicate impunity for those who planned, instigated and executed the annihilation of thousands of lives. ![]() ![]() The Tribunal was created in the midst of war and the resolution proclaimed that it would “contribute to the restoration and maintenance of peace” and ensure that violations “are halted and effectively redressed”. The International Criminal Tribunal for Former Yugoslavia (ICTY), as the first war crime tribunal after the Nuremberg and Tokyo tribunals following the WWII, was created by the UNSC Resolution 827 in May 1993 to prosecute persons responsible for serious violations of international humanitarian law committed in the territory of former Yugoslavia beginning in 1999. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
March 2023
Categories |