The Kuala Lumpur War Crimes Tribunal  will be hearing the second  charge of Crime of Torture and War Crimes  against former U.S. President  George W. Bush and his associates namely  Richard Cheney, former U.S.  Vice President, Donald Rumsfeld, former  Defence Secretary, Alberto  Gonzales, then Counsel toPresident Bush,  David Addington, then General  Counsel to the Vice-President, William  Haynes II, then General Counsel  to Secretary of Defense, Jay Bybee,  then Assistant Attorney General, and  John Choon Yoo, former Deputy  Assistant Attorney-General. The charge  reads as follows:
The Accused persons had committed the  Crime of Torture and War  Crimes, in that: The Accused persons had  wilfully participated in the  formulation of executive orders and  directives to exclude the  applicability of all international  conventions and laws, namely the  Convention against Torture 1984,  Geneva Convention III 1949, Universal  Declaration of Human Rights and  the United Nations Charter in relation  to the war launched by the U.S.  and others in Afghanistan (in 2001) and  in Iraq (in March 2003);  Additionally, and/or on the basis and in  furtherance thereof, the  Accused persons authorised, or connived in, the  commission of acts of  torture and cruel, degrading and inhuman  treatment against victims in  violation of international law, treaties  and conventions including the  Convention against Torture 1984 and the  Geneva Conventions, including  Geneva Convention III 1949.
The Kuala Lumpur War Crimes Commission  (KLWCC) following the due  process of the law is bringing this charge  against the accused. In 2009,  the Commission, having received  complaints from torture victims from  Guantanamo and Iraq, proceeded to  conduct a painstaking and an in-depth  investigation for close to two  years. Two charges on war crimes were  drawn and filed against the  accused persons.
The Kuala Lumpur War Crimes Tribunal  had heard the first charge in  November 2011 against the two accused,  former U.S. President George W.  Bush and former British Prime Minister  Anthony L. Blair who were after a  4-day trial found guilty of Crimes  Against Peace. These two former  heads of state violated the United  Nations Charter and international law  when they planned, prepared and  invaded the sovereign state Iraq on 19  March 2003 without just cause.
At the first hearing in November 2011,  the Tribunal had permitted the  prosecution’s application to hear only  the first charge. The second  charge will now be heard at the second  Tribunal hearing from 7 – 12 May  2012.
The Kuala Lumpur War Crimes Tribunal is  constituted of eminent  persons with legal qualifications. The judges  of the Tribunal, which is  headed by retired Malaysian Federal Court  judge Tan Sri Dato Lamin bin  Haji Mohd Yunus, who also served as an ad  litem judge at the  International Criminal Tribunal for the former  Republic of Yugoslavia,  include other notable names such as Mr Alfred  Lambremont Webre, a Yale  graduate, who authored several books on  politics, Tunku Sofiah Jewa,  practising lawyer and author of numerous  publications on International  Law, Prof Salleh Buang, former Federal  Counsel in the Attorney-General  Chambers and retired Court of Appeal  judge Datuk Mohd Sa’ari Yusof.
Point to note is that victims of  torture will also be called give  evidence before the Tribunal. The  cries of these victims have thus far  gone unheeded by the international  community. The fundamental human  right to be heard has been denied to  them. These witnesses will testify  on the torture they had endured  during their incarceration. The accused  will have a right to  cross-examine them as in any open court hearing.
The Tribunal will adjudicate and  evaluate the evidence presented as in  any court of law. The judges of  the Tribunal must be satisfied that the  charges are proven beyond  reasonable doubt and deliver a reasoned  judgement.
In the event the tribunal convicts any  of the accused, the only sanction  is that the name of the guilty person  will be entered in the  Commission’s Register of War Criminals and  publicised worldwide. The  tribunal is a tribunal of conscience and a  peoples’ initiative.
The prosecution for the trial will be  lead by Prof Gurdial Singh Nijar,  prominent law professor and author of  several law publications and Prof  Francis Boyle, leading American  professor, practitioner and advocate of  international law, and assisted  by a team of lawyers.
The trial will be a public hearing held  in an open court on 7-12 May  2012 at the premises of the Kuala Lumpur  Foundation to Criminalise War  (KLFCW) at 88, Jalan Perdana, Kuala  Lumpur. The hearing is open to  members of the public. 
rockyKCD  - Prosiding Tribunal jenayah Perang Kuala Lumpur akan berlangsung dari 7  hingga 12 Mei 2012 di bangunan Yayasan Al-Bukhary, sebelah Muzium  Kesenian Islam dan Masjid Negara dari pagi hingga petang. Sesiapa yang  berminat, dijemput hadir.
 

 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment