Wednesday, February 17, 1999, Morning Session
Elements of Crime
courtesy of
Lawyers Committee of Human Rights
The US introduced its proposal, emphasizing that the format of the proposal
would make negotiations easy. They attempted to reflect the current state
of international law and make the law relevant to criminal litigators. The
paper includes 4 documents, but is meant as one proposal. The first section
includes general comments covering the relationship between the elements
and general principles of international law. The second section is
terminology. The terms defined in the second section apply to the proposal,
including all three of the addendums. Sections 3, 4 and 5 discuss the
elements of crimes relating to Articles 6, 7 and 8 of the Rome Statute
respectively. Section 6 discusses inchoate offenses, explaining the
principles of criminality regarding Articles 25 and 28 of the Statute. The
US pointed out that øinchoate does not modify the nature of the crime, but
it does raise the question of those accused in the event as well as the
question of time. There is no connotation as to the gravity of an inchoate
offense. Finally, the US stated its goals as being to provide a basis for
efficient negotiations while staying faithful to the Rome Statute,
principles of law and criminal law.
Switzerland introduced its joint proposal with Hungary, which refers
specifically to Article 8.2(a) of the Rome Statute. Their purpose is to
rehearse constituent elements and to give a clearer indication to the
judges that have to apply the principles in the Statute. Their basis was
the ICRC non-paper.
Spain introduced its proposal, which will be made available on Thursday.
The paper addresses Articles 6, 7 and 8 of the Rome Statute. It is an
analytical document rather than a formal proposal, an outline intended to
put forward all constituents elements of each crime and to be used as a
guide to the delegates. They have not developed all of the elements of
every crime and think that thought needs to be given to which elements
should be included in the final text. It might not be necessary to repeat
elements found in every crime. Also, the paper tries to avoid extensive
explanations of crimes that may limit the court s power to prosecute crimes
under the Rome Statute. In developing the paper, Spain bore in mind the
general principles of criminal law as found in Articles 22 and 23, but
according the mandate they were not being asked to develop a separate
document on those elements. Part 2 of the paper addresses concepts and
legal techniques to be used as elements of Articles 6, 7 and 8. These
concepts and techniques are penal laws in various countries.
Belgium, together with Finland, South Africa, Costa Rica, Hungary and
Switzerland stated that they will introduce ICRC s non-paper as an official
UN document.
ICRC discussed the paper to be introduced as a UN document. The paper is
meant to be a guide, not a proposal. It examines case law and treaty law as
it stands so far relating to the crimes found in the Rome Statute. In terms
of methodology, the ICRC used cases starting from WWI to the ICTR and ICTY.
As of now, because it is so thorough, the paper is incomplete and only
covers Article 8 (a). By the next Prepcom, the paper will cover all of
Article 8. The paper also references treaty law and the Geneva conventions.
In terms of case law, only those cases that describe elements of the
relevant crimes in some way were included. The ICRC also said it is
introducing a second informal paper describing intent and knowledge as it
refers to civil and common law. Also, it will discuss offenses regarding
prisoners of war, because it is not obvious in the Statute which crime
these fit into. The paper is expected to be ready by Wednesday afternoon.
The Chairperson requested governments start discussion with Article 6. Then
discussion will move to Article 8 because there are papers on Article 8.
Since the same approach should be used for all the crimes, governments
should also state any comments on the structure.
Egypt took the floor and emphasized that the Elements must not amend the
Rome Statute. The Egyptian delegation stated it has serious reservations
regarding the US proposal because the definitions presented in Section 2
are not established in international law and don t reflect what is in the
Rome Statute. In terms of the elements of genocide, the US paper draws no
distinction between those who give orders, those who execute them and the
middle men. The US paper must concentrate on evidence to prove the crime,
and emphasize crime responsibility.
Japan also spoke of the importance of keeping with the Rome Statute. They
saw no major conceptual discrepancies between the Statute and the US
proposal, and were comfortable with all the papers presented. They thought
the US paper should be used as a rolling text for the working group because
it is the only comprehensive document. The definitions in the US proposal
are useful and necessary. Finally, they said the comments throughout the US
proposal should be adopted with the paper.
Syria spoke extensively, agreeing with Egypt's position and reiterating the
importance that no paper conflict with the Rome Statute. They thought the
elements of crimes would be threatened by excluding parts of the Statute or
by restricting the judges. The US paper contradicts itself in several ways,
starting when it states that the Elements described do not change the
definition of any offense. In fact, the Syrian delegation stated, the
definition of the term "Attack directed against any civilian population" is
not in the Statute and the definition of "Lawful justification or excuse"
contradicts the Statute. Also, the section on "Genocide by killing" does
not reflect the Statute. Syria went on to discuss Article 8, saying that
the US interpretation of moves to transfer populations cancel out the
Geneva protocol of 1979, the 4th Geneva convention and the Rome Statute.
Since Article 8 gives a wider interpretation of the concept, what basis can
the US find in the Rome Statute? Finally, Syria found problems with the
definition of "legal pretext".
France spoke regarding the general structure of the documents. They stated
that the US proposal is the most complete and that it follows the Rome
Statute closely. Section 1 reaffirms the structural links between the Rome
Statute and elements of crimes. However, the elements should not modify the
Rome Statute. France was grateful for the US comments in each section, and
thought it might be useful to add laws from the ICTY and ICTR. Concerning
jurisprudence, France thought the Swiss/Hungarian document gave food for
thought. Referring to Part 6 of the US proposal, inchoate offenses, the
French delegation stated that the point is not to re-open discussion on the
general principles of law. That discussion was completed in Rome and
Article 30 resulted from the negotiations. Regarding the Swiss/Hungarian
proposal, France was concerned about including the concept of omission. Any
reference to that concept was removed during the Rome discussion on the
general principles of law and the references in Articles 25 and 28 were
removed before the final vote.
South Africa spoke on behalf of SADC, saying that the US paper contains
unnecessary detail and leaves little room for the court to maneuver. In
fact, the elements of crimes should be more a commentary and not a
prescriptive document. The US document is more than mere guidelines for the
court, and in fact defines the minimal requirements for a guilty
conviction, and the terminology section purports to amend the Statute.
Finally, the US paper contradicts some concepts in humanitarian law and
limits the scope of jurisdiction.
Spain spoke again on its forthcoming paper, saying that they have tried to
mention 15 possible elements, including the aspect, property, active
subject, passive subject, intentional element, subject element, negative
element, unlawfulness, degrees of execution, forms of crimes manifested,
participation, circumstances of responsibility and others. In terms of
genocide, six of the elements deserve special attention including legal
property to be protected (ie, the legal right to existence), national
ethnic, ethnic, racial, or religious groups (special consideration needed
to make a further distinction in other social groups), that destroying
wholly or partly of a group is an intentional crime, the definition of
killing and serious bodily harm, attended circumstances of how this crime
is related to the other crimes and how it is opposed to other war crimes
that are listed and finally, the associations, conspiracy and provocation
that may be relevant. Concluding, Spain acknowledged that the US proposal
gave a different type of approach, but that their approach would be
incomplete without addressing the issues in Spain s paper. Spain would be
interested in developing a unified text.
Mexico stated that it is very important not to change or distort the
elements of crime as they were approved in the Rome Statute.
Cuba said that Article 6 reflects the 1952 Convention on Genocide and that
they do not want to redefine the Rome Statute. They do not understand
øinterpreting the Statute to mean øredefining it. The US proposal
redefines what was defined in Rome. The Spanish proposal has merit in that
it incorporates the human right to existence. Cuba said they would rather
become involved in the review of the elements that the court would need to
employ the rules defined in Rome rather than re-definition.
Canada spoke next, saying the US paper is acceptable except for the final
elements, which were not adding to the efforts of the Working Group. The
Canadian concern was that the US paper is inconsistent with the Statute.
They think it would be unwise to open up a discussion that was covered in
the 1948 Genocide Convention and the Rome Statute. The fourth element of
each of the US elements of genocide is that the act occurred øin conscious
furtherance of a widespread or systematic policy or practice aimed at
destroying such group . This is not necessary and would re-open a
discussion on the definition of genocide, which would be unwise and
inconsistent with the mandate of the prepcom.
Colombia stated that it would like to address the subjective elements of
the crime and the internal elements that the US proposal was especially
interested in. Colombia was happy to see in Spain s document the active
subject of the crime. Rome should be used as a departing point. The
question of a øplan should be discussed as a special category, a type of
plan, as discussion proceeds on Article 6. Also, Colombia questioned why
talk about økilling when a single person is dead. This might be simply
homicide. The intention to kill a group starts with homicide. Finally,
Colombia thought there should be no reference to age in the US proposal
section regarding øGenocide by transferring children . Currently, the
proposal says øunder the age of fifteen.
New Zealand agreed with Canada s point regarding the substantive problem
with the US proposal (the øwidespread element). They did not yet offer a
position on the Spanish paper, but thought it would be good to inject
elements from the paper. They did not commit to any of the US definitions.
Benin commented on the US paper, saying it disagrees and agrees with
France. They agree that provisions on the liability of military leaders are
very pertinent. However, they are confused by the US element of
solicitation, aiding and abetting and incitement in the inchoate offenses.
These, practically speaking, wouldn t be inchoate but complicity. The
inchoate section is a question of the perpetrator; the principal actor is
different from the main author.
Greece reminded the group that in Rome, it did not want a section on
elements of crime. They said that the elements must not conflict with the
Statute. They found the US proposal confusing sometimes because the first
and second paragraphs repeated the Statute and the third, the "widespread"
element, was a clear deviation from the Rome Statute.
Cameroon said they were not here to re-write the Rome Statute. They said
there is no longer a need for general elements of crimes to be spelled out,
because those are in the Rome Statute. Instead, they want specifics.
Omission, as France said, should be left out. Other elements, such as
øserious negligence don t need to be described as elements, but their
consequences can be described. The judges can figure out the seriousness of
the crime. There are questions about the terminology (such as øaiding and
abetting ). In each crime, there should be a psychological element as well
as a physical element defined.
Norway stated that its national legal tradition doesn t have elements of
crimes and they didn t support the idea in Rome. However, the stated
objective of the elements of crimes is to enhance the understanding of the
Statute while remaining consistent with it. In their view, the US paper is
a useful basis for discussion. On the øwidespread element, Norway agrees
with Canada.
Italy wanted to ensure that the elements of crimes remained consistent with
the Rome Statute. They supported the New Zealand idea of moving directly to
a discussion of elements of crimes and putting off a discussion of the
definitions. At least some of the Spanish elements should be able to be
combined with the US proposal. Regarding the øwidespread element, Italy
agreed with Canada, Norway, Greece and New Zealand.
Sweden emphasized that it wanted to keep to Article 9 of the Statute. They
associated themselves with the South African statement, and would caution
against using unnecessary detail. They would prefer the elements of crime
to be a commentary instead of prescriptive, which would keep with Article
9. Sweden agreed with New Zealand that they could leave aside the question
of definitions for the moment. They agreed with France that they were not
here to re-open the Statute regarding general principles of law, especially
as that applies to the last part of the US paper and general articles in
the Rome Statute on the mental element. Regarding the US elements of
genocide, Sweden found the first and second elements unobjectionable but
unnecessary. They agreed with Canada on the øwidespread element. Also,
regarding the US elements on øgenocide by harming , Sweden thought they
should use the word øbodily instead of øphysical , not because of any
substantive difference but because it was in keeping with the Rome Statute.
In the section on øgenocide by preventing births , Sweden stated that the
effect of preventing births is a necessary prerequisite. Finally, Sweden
agreed with Colombia on the issue of age in the section on øgenocide by
transferring children, asking if fifteen is a desirable age limit and
pointing out that the Convention on the Rights of the Child says eighteen.
China spoke next, saying that it is important not to deviate from the Rome
Statute. In this regard, China agreed with France and Switzerland that
especially those questions that were solved in Rome shouldn t be re-opened.
The definition of crimes in the Rome Statute is not very accurate, and the
elements of crimes should mainly reflect the accuracy of criminal law. The
elements should be clear about what is a crime and what is not and should
not leave ambiguities up to the judges. The Chinese delegation said the US
proposal is comprehensive and it should be used as a basis for further
work. As for genocide, China accepted the framework put forth in the US
proposal and said the first element was important as it differed the crime
of genocide from other crimes. As for the øwidespread element, China
recognized that it was a new concept here but had not yet formed a position
on the matter.
Belgium reminded the group that it, too, was against the idea of having
elements of crime during the negotiations in Rome. They shared France s
view that the US proposal departs from the Prepcom mandate. South Africa
aptly pointed out that the elements of crimes should not enter into
dangerous or pointless details. In terms of genocide, Belgium agrees with
Canada about the øwidespread element. Also, the US item 6 (c) (genocide by
inflicting conditions of life) was new as far as they saw it. The idea in
US proposal 6 (d) under preventing births, the term øby force was a new
idea and constrictive. Finally, Belgium agreed with Colombia and Sweden
regarding the age limits, and cited the Convention on the Rights of the
Child.
Israel also said they did not want to go beyond the Rome Statute. They
found the terminology section very useful and said it is important to
define the elements of crimes. In terms of genocide, the Rome consensus
comes from the definition in the 1948 Genocide Convention. However, the
Rome consensus was that in this context there should be reference to
elements contained in Article 30. There was no point in repeating the Rome
Statute. Regarding the øwidespread element, Israel said they could not see
genocide being committed without it being widespread or systematic. It was
implied in the definition and consistent with the Rome Statute.
Austria disagreed with the terminology set out in the US proposal, and
agreed with New Zealand to set the question of terminology aside. Austria
agreed with Canada regarding the øwidespread element, and stated they
didn t think the working group should add new criteria to the definition of
genocide.