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International Crimes Court
by Trichur Ganesh
25 July 2003 03:01 UTC
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I find these human rights controversies and contradictions  worth reading.  Ganesh.

   Date: Wed, 23 Jul 2003 17:01:52 EDT
   From: Otello365@aol.com
Subject: International Criminal Court

GEORGETOWN, Guyana -- Guyana has agreed to exempt American soldiers from
prosecution in the International Criminal Court (ICC), in the face of a
possible cut in military aid from the US.

The United States earlier this month suspended US$48 million in aid to
dozens of countries, including six Caribbean nations, which had failed to
meet a July 1 deadline to sign the treaty exempting Americans from
prosecution in the court.

However, Guyana, along with Jamaica, Grenada and Haiti, which have signed
the treaty, but have yet to ratify it, apparently bowed under pressure and
promised that the exemption agreement would be signed later this year.

"I need the military co-operation with the United States to continue,"
President Bharrat Jagdeo said.

In the past two years, the former British colony has received about 30
heavy duty military trucks, light field equipment and four coast guard
vessels under a US military assistance programme.

Much of the country's borders are under patrolled, Jagdeo said, noting the
vulnerability of Guyana's vast rainforests to Colombian rebels.

American soldiers sometimes use Guyana as a refueling point, or on regular
training exchanges. Under the exemption agreement, US soldiers in Guyana
would not be extradited to the court for prosecution.

US President George W Bush's administration fiercely opposes the new court,
fearing politically motivated indictments.

The United States, on the eve of the recently held Caribbean Community
(Caricom) conference in Jamaica, announced the cut in military aid to
countries which had failed to sign the exemption agreement for Americans.
Among them were the Caribbean nations of Trinidad and Tobago, Barbados,
Antigua, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Dominica and Belize. Some of the
countries say the military aid cut will lead to more drugs and contraband
reaching the United States.

However, Caricom failed to arrived on a common position on the issue, and
instead said it recognised that some member states may wish to negotiate
bilateral non-surrender agreements with the US if they are advised by their
legal authorities that any agreement which they entered was consistent with
their obligation under the Rome Statute.

The Community was, however, flayed by Trinidad and Tobago, which accused
some states of "political somersaults". In fact, Trinidad's foreign
minister, Knowlson Gift, who had made it clear that his country's position
on the court was non-negotiable, accused some states of giving him a
"capitulation shocker" by changing their stance on entering into
arrangements with the US to exempt its nationals from the ICC's
jurisdiction. He did not name any of the countries.

Barbados and St Vincent and the Grenadines also reaffirmed their support
for the ICC, during the Caricom summit in Jamaica.

The ICC, based in The Hague, Netherlands, has received nearly 500
complaints from 66 countries since it came into existence on July 1, 2002.
Under its mandate, it can investigate war crimes, crimes against humanity
and genocide, but only if they are committed in the territory or by
citizens of the countries that ratified the 1998 Rome treaty.




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