In the decades after attaining independence from its colonial masters, Rwanda’s two
principal ethnic groups, the Hutus and the Tutsis, suffered worsening tensions which
often resulted in the perpetration of atrocities. Peace agreements brokered by the
international community did not ease these ethnic tensions. In April 1994, the ethnic
crisis took a different dimension following the assassination of the Presidents of Rwanda
and Burundi. A full-blown genocide was committed by the Hutus who targeted their
Tutsi and Hutu-moderates victims because of their ethnic identity and tolerant political
views respectively. In a hundred days, about a million Tutsis and Hutu-moderates were
massacred. Gross violations of human rights had been committed. The planning,
preparation and execution of these atrocities were done by almost everyone within the
Hutu majority: the leadership (both civilian and military), business men, the clergy,
artists, professors, journalists, militias, the commoners, and other civil society actors.
The Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) under the leadership of General Paul Kagame
overthrew the Rwandan Armed Forces (RAF) and brought the genocide to an end. In an
effort to build a government of national unity, the Government of Rwanda under the
leadership of President Paul Kagame requested the United Nations Security Council to
establish a tribunal for the trial of persons who bear responsibility for the atrocities
committed in Rwanda. In response to this request, the United Nations Security Council
passed Resolution 955 (8 November 1994) creating the second United Nations’ ad hoc
international criminal tribunal, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR).
Annexed to Resolution 955 was the Statute of the ICTR.
The Statute gave the Tribunal jurisdiction over three crimes: genocide, crimes
against humanity and violations of Article 3 common to the Geneva Conventions and of
Additional Protocol II. Amongst other things, it also defined on which individuals it
would impose criminal responsibility.
The definition of genocide and the punishable acts as contained in the Statute of
the ICTR (Article 2) were simply imported from the United Nations’ Convention on the
Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, 1948 (Article III). One of these
punishable acts is direct and public incitement to commit genocide (Article 2(3)(c) of the
Statute of the ICTR). As seen in Article 6(1) of the Statute of the ICTR, there are five
different modes of participation that would lead to the imposition of criminal
responsibility: planning, instigating, ordering, committing or otherwise aiding and
abetting. Instigation is one of these modes of participation.
An examination of the jurisprudence of both the Trial and Appeal Chambers of
the ICTR reveals that there is an overlap between direct and public incitement to commit
genocide under Article 2(3)(c) and instigation as a mode of participation under Article
6(1).
The Trial and Appeal Chambers have contributed enormously to the development
of the jurisprudence of direct and public incitement to commit genocide under Article
2(3)(c). Now settled as an inchoate crime in international criminal law, criminal
responsibility is imposed irrespective of whether the direct and public incitement
successfully results in the commission of genocide.
On the other hand, instigation is one of the modes of participation which would
lead to the imposition of criminal responsibility. Participation under Article 6(1) is not
limited to any particular crime, but extends to all the crimes over which the ICTR has
jurisdiction – genocide, crimes against humanity and violations of Article 3 common to
the Geneva Conventions and of Additional Protocol II. The jurisprudence of the Trial and
Appeal Chambers on Article 6(1) states that criminal responsibility can only be imposed
where it is proved that the accused’s mode of participation substantially contributed to
the commission of the crime. Therefore, instigation, which is one of the modes of
participation, must be shown to have substantially contributed to the commission of the
crime for criminal responsibility to be imposed.
In my opinion, this requirement of substantial contribution for the imposition of
criminal responsibility is wrong. It emanates from a poor understanding of Article 6(1)
and the construction of the words therein. It is a judicial invention which does not square
with established principles of criminal responsibility in general and inchoate crimes in
particular.
This thesis critiques the jurisprudence of the ICTR on instigation as a mode of
participation under Article 6(1). Instigation is a recognised mode of participation in
international crimes. Under the common law system, it is also an inchoate crime.
International instruments and the jurisprudence of the Trial and Appeal Chambers have
recognised the inchoate nature of incitement. However, in the construction of Article 6(1)
wherein instigation features as a mode of participation, the Trial and Appeal Chambers
erred. I illustrate in this thesis that a correct construction and understanding of Article
6(1) shows its inchoate and bifurcated character: first, any of the modes of participation
must lead to any of the stages of any of the crimes (planning, preparation or execution).
These modes of participation are not limited to any particular crime. Therefore, if
instigation leads to the planning or preparation of any of the crimes, that renders it
inchoate (which is understood to mean a criminal activity that is incomplete, still at its
initial stage). Second, the imposition of criminal responsibility is bifurcated. In other
words, it must go through two stages: first, there must be a mode of participation, and
second, it must lead to any of the stages of the crimes. Third, the substantial contribution
requirement does not square with a strict construction of Article 6(1). In articulating the
different stages that a mode of participation must lead to, it states ‘planning, preparation
or execution’ of any of the crimes. The use of a disjunctive word ‘or’ rather than a
conjunctive word ‘and’ suggests that any of the modes of participation that leads to any
of these stages (planning, preparation or execution) of any of these crimes (genocide,
crimes against humanity, violations of Article 3 common to the Geneva Conventions and
of Additional Protocol II) would suffice. Therefore, to require that there must be a
substantial contribution to commission of a crime before criminal responsibility can be
imposed under Article 6(1) is a clear limitation to the last stage of the crime, which is
execution (or commission).
As evidenced by the cases tried at the Tribunal, Article 2(3)(c) which addresses
the inchoate crime of direct and public incitement to commit genocide and Article 6(1)
which deals with the imposition of criminal responsibility, do overlap. In other words,
incitement that qualifies as direct and public incitement to commit genocide under Article
2(3)(c) may as well qualify as instigation to any of the crimes over which the ICTR has
jurisdiction under Article 6(1). From the delivery of its first judgment in the case of The
Prosecutor v Jean-Paul Akayesu,1 the Trial Chambers did not recognise the confluence
1 Judgment, Case No. ICTR-96-4. T. Ch. I, 2 September 1998.
between these two Articles. However, in the case of The Prosecutor v Callixte
Kalimanzira,2 the Trial Chambers made this observation, and outlined a set of guidelines
on how to resolve cases of overlap. Though a colossal step in fixing this problem, the
guidelines are faulted because they repeat the same mistakes made by previous Trial
Chambers: first, they limit instigation only to genocide even under Article 6(1); second,
they still hold that criminal responsibility can be imposed under Article 6(1) only when it
is proved that the mode of participation substantially contributed to the commission of
the crime.
While it resonates with conventional wisdom today that incitement, synonymous
with instigation, is limited to the crime of genocide, this thesis critiques the jurisprudence
of both the Trial and Appeal Chambers of the ICTR and argues that instigation is a mode
of participation in crimes against humanity following a strict construction of Article 6(1).
Furthermore, incitement that qualifies as ‘direct and public incitement’ to commit
genocide under Article 2(3)(c) may also qualify as instigation to commit genocide,
crimes against humanity, or both under Article 6(1). Third, ‘direct and public incitement’
to commit genocide under Article 2(3)(c) is limited to the crime of genocide, and must
fulfil the caveats of ‘direct’ and ‘public’. Meanwhile, instigation under Article 6(1) does
not need to meet any requirement as long as it leads to the ‘planning, preparation or
execution’ of any of the crimes over which the ICTR has jurisdiction.
The poor construction of Article 6(1) has resulted in huge controversies about
instigation as a mode of participation in crimes over which the ICTR has jurisdiction
under Article 6(1). More specifically, instigation, which is one of the modes, overlaps
with the wording of Article 2(3)(c) which deals with the inchoate crime of direct and
public incitement to commit genocide. The substantial contribution requirement is a
judicial invention which does not align squarely with established principles of criminal
responsibility for inchoate crimes. It is the unfortunate outcome of a poor construction of
Article 6(1) and has orchestrated a confused understanding of instigation as a mode of
participation. It has blurred and obfuscated instigation as a mode of participation in
crimes against humanity; stagnated the evolution of the jurisprudence on instigation to
2 Judgment, Case No. ICTR-05-88-T, T. Ch. III, 22 June 2009.
commit crimes against humanity; and above all, propelled international criminal law on
an ambitious and controversial mission from which it must retreat
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:wits/oai:wiredspace.wits.ac.za:10539/12623 |
Date | 04 April 2013 |
Creators | Agbor, Avitas A |
Source Sets | South African National ETD Portal |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
Format | application/pdf, application/pdf |
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