News

Electing the Third Prosecutor for the ICC: What Lessons can be Drawn? 

BY: ISABELLE JEFFERIES, JUNIOR RESEARCH ASSOCIATE, PILPG-NL

The International Criminal Court (the ICC, the Court) has encountered many challenges since its inception in 2002, from outspoken criticism of major states, to frustration among stakeholders regarding the quality of its investigations and prosecutions, which they argue are inefficient and ineffective.  

For the Court’s defenders, the election of its third Prosecutor presents an opportunity to strengthen the system created by the Rome Statute.  Yet, the task of nominating and electing a suitable candidate has proven complex.  This post provides an overview of the election process and assesses some of its criticisms.

The Central Role of the Court’s Prosecutor

The Prosecutor heads the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP), one of four organs of the ICC.  Under article 42(1) of the Rome Statute, the OTP is responsible for identifying, examining, investigating, and prosecuting crimes falling within the jurisdiction of the Court, namely genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and aggression.  Under article 15(1) of the Rome Statute, the Prosecutor may initiate investigations proprio motu, or in other words, on his or her own initiative.  As well as having broad powers, the Prosecutor is elected for a term of nine years.  

The Prosecutor is a central actor in the system created by the Rome Statute and has a crucial role in improving the ICC’s work.  In fact, the Prosecutor determines the strategies and priorities of the examinations, investigations, and prosecutions conducted by the OTP.  Therefore, it has the means to enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of the Court’s performance. 

Selecting the Court’s Third Prosecutor and the Importance of Consensus 

The Assembly of States Parties (ASP), composed of representatives of states that ratified and acceded to the Rome Statute, is the Court’s legislator.  It convenes on a yearly basis to discuss and take decisions on important issues relating to the Court’s functioning.  Notably, it is responsible for electing the Prosecutor.  In doing so, members of the ASP are to make every effort to elect a candidate by consensus.  The ASP was successful in selecting the Court’s first and second Prosecutor by consensus, in 2003 and 2011 respectively.  In the absence of consensus, the procedure set out in Article 42(2) of the Rome Statute is followed: the voting is done by secret ballot, and the candidate who receives a majority of votes wins the election.  Yet, for the Prosecutor to succeed in improving the functioning of the Court, by conducting efficient and effective examinations, investigations, and prosecutions, fragmented support is not enough.  It is essential that he or she has the approval of all members of the ASP, so the OTP can exercise its mandate freely.  In fact, a Prosecutor that is supported by all state parties will be more resilient to efforts to derail its mandate.

The next Prosecutor was supposed to have been elected during the nineteenth ASP session, which took place in December 2020.  Two bodies were established in April 2019 to facilitate the election process, and to ensure that the most suitable candidate was selected in a structured and transparent manner: the Committee on the Election of the Prosecutor (Committee), and the Panel of Experts (Experts).  Broadly speaking, their mandate, carried out from July 2019 to June 2020, was to assess applications, establish and interview a longlist of candidates, and provide a shortlist of candidates to state parties, from which they would choose a consensus candidate.  Their aim was to guarantee an election based on merit, and free from the political interference of states.  However, in spite of these efforts made towards the facilitation of the election process, states were unable to agree on any of the candidates provided in the Committee’s shortlist. 

Creating the Shortlist of Candidates: Innovative Process

The vacancy for the position of Prosecutor was published in August 2019.  Applicants applied to the Committee directly, and their identity was kept confidential until later in the process, thus preventing undue interference from states.  The Committee received 144 applications, but only 84 were submitted with all the information requested.

In February 2020, members of the Committee met to review the applications, having regard to the criteria set out in the Rome Statute and the vacancy announcement.  Article 42(3) of the Rome Statute requires that the Prosecutor possess the following attributes: (a) a high moral character, (b) high competence and extensive practical experience in the prosecution or trial of criminal cases, and (c) excellent knowledge or fluency in English and/or French.  The vacancy set out an extensive range of further requirements such as strategic awareness, leadership skills, and financial competencies.  The role of the Experts was to assist the Committee in its mandate and represents a novelty from the election of previous prosecutors.  

The Committee agreed on a longlist of 16 candidates who moved on to the next stage of the process: competency-based interviews.  Along with the interviews, the Committee carried out a vetting process of the candidates, which also constitutes a real innovation compared to previous elections.  Candidates were subject to reference checks, criminal record checks, as well as social media checks.  The Independent Expert Review, commissioned at the 18th session of the ASP, made some Findings concerning the working culture of the ICC.  In particular, it determined that the OTP suffers from distrust and a culture of fear, with many reported accounts of workplace bullying (Findings 62-71).  As a result, the vetting process was aimed at corroborating the high moral character of candidates, and ensuring that they would not allow or contribute to such workplace harassment during their mandate.  

A shortlist of four candidates, deemed to be the most highly qualified, was created by the Committee after the interviews and the vetting.  The identities of those shortlisted are as follows: Morris A. Anyah from Nigeria, Fergal Gaynor from Ireland, Susan Okalany from Uganda, and Richard Roy from Canada.  Their identities were revealed to the ASP in June 2020, along with a report containing an assessment of each candidate, highlighting their respective strengths and weaknesses.  The mandate of the Committee and the Experts came to an end, and the ASP’s consultation process, where public hearings are held in order to identify the consensus candidate, began.

Response to the Shortlisted Candidates

Despite the extensive process undertaken to create the shortlist, Kenya rejected the candidates contained therein on the basis that they lacked the requisite managerial experience in large international institutions and state diplomacy experience.  Kenya also claimed that the shortlist appeared “skewed” in favor of a particular candidate.  In fact, there is a custom of regional rotation for the Prosecutor, so as Mrs. Bensouda is currently from the Gambia, Mr. Anyah from Nigeria, and Mrs. Okalany from Uganda cannot be elected.  Moreover, the Rome Statute precludes, under Article 42(2), the Prosecutor from being of the same nationality as the Deputy Prosecutor.  On this basis, Mr. Roy cannot be elected as the current Deputy Prosecutor, James Steward, is also Canadian.  Therefore, this leaves one candidate: Mr. Gaynor from Ireland.

Upon hearing the response of certain states, several civil society organizations were quick to discourage states from nominating new candidates, calling on them to stand by the process they had established and to select one of the shortlisted candidates.  Their concern was that allowing new nominees at the eleventh hour would enable them to escape the level of due diligence and scrutiny applied to those shortlisted by the Committee.  However, although states are discouraged from doing so, they can nominate new candidates.  

With no prospect of consensus in sight, the nomination period was extended in September, and again in October, providing additional time for the conclusion of the consultation period.  Ultimately, in November 2020, the consultation process was opened up to the candidates who had made the Committee’s longlist, and who were still interested in being considered for the position.  Five additional candidates were thus added to the consultation process, namely Carlos Castresana Fernandez from Spain, Karim A. A. Khan from the United Kingdom, Francesco Lo Voi from Italy, Robert Petit from Canada, and Brigitte Raynaud from France.  The nomination period was extended once more until December 13, 2020, then again until December 18, 2020.  However, during the 19th session of the ASP, there was still no discernable consensus candidate, so the consultation period was once again extended until January 18, 2021.  In fact, the assembly decided to defer the election until early 2021.

Assessment and Implication: Concluding Thoughts

Although the election process for the Court’s Prosecutor improved from previous elections, in particular by creating the Panel of Experts to assist the Committee and by including a vetting process of candidates, critics still view the process as flawed.  Ultimately, the process did not produce a consensus candidate, which puts its effectiveness into question.  

A solution to the present issue may be to limit the Committee’s role in the selection process by maintaining a longlist of candidates rather than creating a shortlist.  

Previously, the Committee narrowed down 86 candidates to 16 candidates in the shortlist. Limiting the Committee’s role in the selection process might prevent the uncertainties and the extensions that have marked this election, by allowing States to retain more control over the selection of a suitable candidate. Furthermore, it could be useful for the Committee to be mandated to carry out a full vetting process of candidates, in order to ensure the improvement of the working environment of the OTP.

December 2020

Monthly News Updates: Southern Cameroons – December 2020

By: Kristoffer Burck, Junior Research Associate, PILPG-NL

THIS POST COLLECTS UPDATES FROM THE PAST MONTH CONCERNING RELEVANT DEVELOPMENTS IN SOUTHERN CAMEROONS. THE INFORMATION IS DRAWN FROM LOCAL AND INTERNATIONAL ONLINE SOURCES.

VIOLENCE IN ANGLOPHONE REGIONS

Abductions | Separatists Abduct Four Local Chiefs

Two different armed separatist groups kidnapped four local chiefs on December 12 and December 13, 2020. One local ruler was abducted on the 12th December in the anglophone North West region and the three others were kidnapped on the 13th December in the anglophone South West region. [December 13th, 2020]

Abductions  | Separatists Release Three Chiefs, One Dies in Captivity

On December 16, 2020, armed separatists in the North West region released one local chief from captivity, who was abducted on December 13. Two other local chiefs from the South West region, who were kidnapped on December 13, were also released the next day. The fourth kidnapped local chief died in the custody of armed separatists. The kidnappers claim that he died due to a preexisting medical condition. [December 16th, 2020]

Clashes with Soldiers | Repeated Killings of Civilians by Military Forces

Throughout December, several sources reported arbitrary killings of civilians by soldiers in the anglophone North West and South West regions. These instances included deadly beatings of an individual on December 13th, the arrest and killing of two civilian brothers on the same day, the abduction of three and ensuing shooting of one individual on December 20th, and the killing of five villagers during a military operation against separatists on December 23rd. While the military justified some of their acts alleging that the victims had affiliations with armed separatist groups, local sources maintained that the victims had no such connections in all cases. [December 23rd, 2020]

Clashes with Soldiers | Soldiers Accused of Burning Several Civilian Houses

Besides the above-mentioned killing of five civilians, Cameroonian soldiers are accused of burning down 20 - 25 civilian houses during a military operation. The operation failed to reach its objective of capturing a separatist commander and instead resulted in the arrest of several civilians and the displacement of hundreds of villagers from their homes. [December 23rd, 2020]

Clashes with Soldiers | Three Members of Security Forces Stand Trial for Ngarbuh Massacre

The trial of three members of the security forces, two soldiers, and one gendarme, for their involvement in the Ngarbuh massacre in February 2020, began on December 17, 2020. According to Human Rights Watch, security forces killed 21 civilians, including 13 children, and subsequently looted and burned their houses. At first, the government denied any wrongdoing but later agreed to set up a commission of inquiry. This commission concluded that five of the killed individuals were armed fighters and 13 civilians were accidentally killed in the crossfire. Human Rights Watch criticized these findings of the commission, on which the trial is based, as only “going after low-ranking soldiers” and excluding those higher up in the chain of command. [December 14th, 2020]

REGIONAL ELECTIONS 

Election Results| Ruling Party Wins Regional Elections in a Landslide

The ruling CPDM party of President Biya won nine out of ten regions in regional elections, held on December 6, 2020. Out of the 14 participating parties, only four managed to secure any seats in the regional councils. The two main opposition parties boycotted the elections out of concerns of fraud, reports of corruption, and what they called an unfair system. Only local chiefs and traditional rulers were allowed to vote. The regional elections this year were held for the first time after they were promised in 1996 as an effort to address regional grievances. [December 10th, 2020]

Election Interference | Separatists Impose Lockdown during Regional Elections

Armed anglophone separatists aimed to disrupt the regional election process in the two anglophone regions. They declared a four-day lockdown spanning over the election weekend and demanding that electors do not attend polling places. There were sparse instances of isolated violence at some polling places, including the killing of one traditional ruler, while the situation remained relatively calm throughout the country. [December 6th, 2020]

Election Interference | Government Offers “Financial Gesture” to Traditional Rulers

The central government offered “financial support” to traditional chiefs, who are the sole electors, only a few days before the regional elections. The support notably is offered from government funds while they show strong affiliation with the ruling party of President Biya, the CPDM. Opposition figures described the offer as a bribe and political manipulation. [December 2nd, 2020]

HUMAN RIGHTS IN CAMEROON

Opposition | Opposition Leader Fee to Leave His Own House Again

Police officers, who kept Maurice Kamto, the leader of the main opposition party, under de facto house arrest for months left their post on December 8, 2020. This ends the de facto detention of Kamto. The government has not issued any statements related to the initial practice of keeping Kamto in de facto captivity, any possible legal charges against the leader, or why the house arrest ended. [December 9th, 2020]

December 2020

Monthly News Updates: Domestic Prosecution of International Crimes - December 2020

By: Alexandrah Bakker, Junior Research Associate, PILPG-NL 

The following post highlights developments from around the world relating to the prosecution of international crimes before domestic jurisdictions.  This month, states have not only continued to arrest and try defendants but have also taken steps to repair the harms caused by international crimes.

EUROPE

Bosnia and Herzegovina | Bosnian prosecutors charge former Bosnian Serb fighters with crimes against humanity

The Bosnian state prosecution charged two former Bosnian Serb fighters, Borislav Pjano and Spomenko Novovic, with crimes against humanity for their participation in an attack on Bosniak civilians in Foča in 1992. [December 30, 2020]

The Netherlands | Dutch Ministry of Defence asks prosecutors to investigate possible war crimes by Dutch armed forces in Afghanistan

The Dutch Ministry of Defence asked prosecutors to investigate whether Dutch armed forces committed war crimes in Afghanistan in 2007, following an interview with a veteran who reported that he was ordered to fire at civilians. [December 23, 2020]

The Netherlands | Relatives of Srebrenica victims can file claims for compensation from the Dutch government starting March 2021

Relatives of Srebrenica victims will be able to file claims for compensation from the Dutch state from March 2021 until March 2023.  The claims will be handled by an independent commission-based in Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina.  This is the product of a decision of the Dutch Supreme Court, which held that the Dutch state is partially responsible for the deaths of several hundreds of victims in Srebrenica in 1995. [December 22, 2020]

Germany | German prosecutors charge a Syrian doctor with murder and torture as crimes against humanity

German prosecutors charged Alaa M., a Syrian doctor living in Germany, with murder and torture as crimes against humanity.  The charges relate to crimes committed during the time Alaa M. was working at a military prison in Homs, Syria in 2011 and 2012. [December 21, 2020]

Croatia | Croatian Supreme Court increases sentences of former Serb paramilitaries who killed Croatian civilians in 1991 

The Croatian Supreme Court increased the sentences of Dusan Zarkovic, Bogdan Jednak, and Dusan Martic, former Serb paramilitaries, from 10 to 15 years’ imprisonment.  The Supreme Court thereby upheld the decision of the Zagreb County Court, which convicted the men in absentia of war crimes for the killing of three Croatian civilians in 1991. [December 17, 2020] 

The Netherlands | The Netherlands will begin implementing a voluntary compensation scheme in Iraq 

The Dutch Ministry of Defence announced that it will begin the implementation of a voluntary compensation scheme in Hawija, Iraq, following the 2015 bombing of an alleged ISIS bomb factory which resulted in the deaths of a number of civilians.  The scheme aims to repair the city’s electricity network, improve employment opportunities and infrastructure, and clear rubble. [December 15, 2020] 

Azerbaijan | Prosecutors announce the arrest of four members of Azerbaijan’s armed forces suspected of war crimes

The Prosecutor General’s Office of Azerbaijan announced that four members of Azerbaijan’s armed forces were arrested on suspicion of war crimes.  Prosecutors accused the suspects of defiling bodies, inhumanely treating enemy combatants, and defacing gravestones during the conflict with Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh region. [December 14, 2020] 

Switzerland | Trial opens in the case against Alieu Kosiah, a former Liberian rebel commander

The first phase of the trial against former Liberian rebel commander Alieu Kosiah took place in Bellinzona, Switzerland, between December 3, 2020, and December 11, 2020.  The charges against Kosiah include the recruitment and use of child soldiers, forced transportation, looting, cruel treatment of civilians, attempted murder, murder, desecration of a corpse, and rape. [December 11, 2020] 

Bosnia and Herzegovina | The Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina convicts two men of crimes against humanity for the rape of a woman during the war in Foča

The Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina convicted two men of crimes against humanity for raping a woman during the war in Foča in 1992.  The Court sentenced each defendant to eight years’ imprisonment and ordered them to pay the victim nearly €19,000 in compensation. [December 3, 2020] 

Hungary | Metropolitan Court of Budapest sentences Syrian national for crimes against humanity

The Metropolitan Court of Budapest sentenced a Syrian national to life imprisonment for crimes against humanity and terrorism, in a trial brought on the basis of universal jurisdiction. [December 3, 2020] 

AFRICA

Ethiopia | Ethiopian Federal Court pardons former state officials previously convicted of genocide

The Ethiopian Federal Court pardoned Addis Tedla and Berhanu Bayeh, who had been senior officials of Ethiopia’s Derg military leadership.  The pair, who had been convicted of genocide and sentenced to death in absentia, have been sheltering in the Italian embassy in Addis Ababa for 29 years. [December 25, 2020]

Central African Republic | Constitutional Court invalidates presidential candidacy over international crimes allegations

The Central African Republic’s Constitutional Court invalidated the candidacy of former president François Bozizé.  The Court based its decision on the requirement that candidates be “of good character.”  The Court considered that this requirement was not satisfied because Bozizé is subject to an international arrest warrant and United Nations sanctions. [December 3, 2020]

AUSTRALIA

Australia | Australian government appoints special investigator in war crimes inquiry

The Australian government announced that Justice Mark Weinberg will serve as a special investigator in the inquiry into war crimes committed by Australian armed forces in Afghanistan, following the conclusion of the administrative inquiry into the same crimes in November.  Weinberg will examine the evidence unearthed in this inquiry and, where appropriate, refer cases to the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions. [December 16, 2020]

THE AMERICAS

The United States of America | Gambian “Jungler” appears in a preliminary hearing before a US District Court in Colorado over torture allegations 

Michael Sang Correa, a Gambian national believed to have been part of the Jammeh-led government militia faces allegations of torture and conspiracy to commit torture for acts that took place in 2006 in a District Court in Colorado. So far, the Covid-19 pandemic has created significant delays in this trial. [December 4, 2020]

December 2020

Monthly News Updates: Human Rights Mechanisms - December 2020

By: Shaya Javadinia, Junior Research Associate, PILPG-NL 

The following post summarizes and highlights some of the updates on the work of regional and international human rights mechanisms around the world in the month of December.  

EUROPE 

European Court of Human Rights | New Judgements and Decision Published

In December, the ECtHR published several judgments and decisions.  Gestur Jónsson and Ragnar Halldór Hall v. Iceland concerned two lawyers who were fined, in their absence, by the Icelandic district court for contempt of court.  The ECtHR declared the application inadmissible due to its incompatibility with the subject-matter jurisdiction of the Court.  [December 22, 2020]

In M.L. v. Norway, Norwegian authorities removed a mother’s parental authority and authorized the adoption of her daughter.  The ECtHR found a violation of the applicant’s right to respect for private and family life as enshrined in article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).  [December 22, 2020]

In Usmanov v. Russia, the applicant’s Russian citizenship was revoked and he was expelled to Tajikistan.  The Court found a violation of the applicant’s right to respect for private and family life as the Russian authorities failed to sufficiently balance the interests at stake. [December 22, 2020]

Selahattin Demirtaş v. Turkey (number 2) concerned the arrest and pre-trial detention of Mr. Selahattin Demirtaş, who was a co-chair of a left-wing pro-Kurdish political party known as the People’s Democratic Party (HDP).  The Court found violations of several Convention rights, such as the right to freedom of expression (article 10 ECHR) and the right to liberty and security (article 5 ECHR).  Following the delivery of this judgment on December 22, 2020, the Court’s website was subject to a large-scale cyberattack. [December 22, 2020]

In M.M. v. Switzerland, the Court noted that the interference by the Swiss authorities with the applicant’s right to respect for private and family life was justified, and thus found no violation of article 8 of the ECHR. [December 8, 2020]

European Court of Human Rights | Interim Measures in the Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict

On December 3, Azerbaijan requested that the Court suspend the interim measure proceedings concerning the alleged captives of the conflict, and to lift the interim measures ordered on September 29 in respect of Azerbaijan.  On December 15, a Chamber of seven judges examined this request and decided to continue with the interim measure proceedings under Rule 39 of the Rules of Court, thus refusing to lift the interim measures indicated on September 29.  The Court based this decision on the circumstances that do not provide a basis for suspending or discontinuing the examination of interim measure requests pertaining to the alleged captives. [December 16, 2020]

European Court of Human Rights | Lithuania’s Request for an Advisory Opinion from the Court

The Supreme Administrative Court of Lithuania sought an advisory opinion from the ECtHR on an impeachment law that is currently being examined by domestic proceedings concerning a former member of the Lithuanian parliament.  The Central Electoral Commission refused to register her as a candidate for the elections in 2020, as she had previously been impeached. The Supreme Administrative Court asked the ECtHR for guidance on the applicable criteria in assessing the compatibility of national impeachment legislation with the right to free elections (as per article 3 of Protocol number 1 of the ECHR). [December 11, 2020] 

European Court of Human Rights | The Court declares application regarding the handling of the COVID 19 health crisis inadmissible 

In Le Mailloux v. France, the applicant complained about measures taken by the French Government aimed at preventing the spread of COVID-19 amongst the French population.  The Court declared the case inadmissible, as the applicant was unable to show that he was personally affected by the measures.  The Court reiterated that it only accepts applications in which the applicant is able to reasonably and convincingly prove that they were personally affected by the alleged violation. [December 3, 2020] 

 

AFRICA 

African Commission on Human and People’s Rights | Abduction of over 300 Students at Kankara in Katsina State, Nigeria 

On December 11, over 100 gunmen attacked an all-boys Government Science Secondary School and abducted over 300 students in Kankara, Nigeria.  The Boko Haram terrorist group has claimed responsibility for this event.  The Commission expressed its solidarity with those affected by the attack and urged the Nigerian government to continue its effort in ensuring the release of the abducted students and to carry out investigations into the attack. [December 16, 2020] 

African Commission on Human and People’s Rights | Forced Evictions of Burundian Refugees by the Tanzanian Authorities

The Commission expressed concern about the human rights violations committed by the Tanzanian authorities against Burundian refugees.  Various reports of the Special Rapporteur have indicated, among others, intimidation and enforced disappearances of this group.  The Commission reminded Tanzania of its obligations under the African Union Refugees Convention and called on the authorities to put an end to the expulsion and refoulement of Burundian refugees. [December 16, 2020] 

African Commission on Human and People’s Rights | Letter of Urgent Appeal to the Federal Republic of Nigeria

The Commission, together with several Special Rapporteurs working on the human rights situation in Africa, have jointly submitted a letter of urgent appeal to the president of Nigeria.  In this letter, they address the reprisals by the Nigerian authorities and non-state actors against the organizers and supporters of the #EndSARS protests. [December 1, 2020] 

African Court on Human and People’s Rights | Democratic Republic of the Congo ratifies the Protocol on the establishment of the African Court on Human and People’s Rights

On December 8,  the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) deposited its instrument of ratification of the Protocol to the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights on the establishment of the African Court on Human and People’s Rights.  The president of the Court, Hon Justice Sylvain Oré, used this opportunity to encourage other Member States of the African Union to follow the example of the DRC and ratify this protocol.  The Court views the ratification of the Protocol as a “step to safeguard human rights”. [December 11, 2020] 

THE AMERICAS 

Inter-American Commission on Human Rights | Referral of Cases to the Inter-American Court of Human Rights

In December 2020, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (the Commission) referred two cases to the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACtHR).  The Colombian case concerns the violence, intimidation, harassment, and threats against members of the José Alvear Restrepo Collective Lawyers Corporation (CAJAR). [December 28 and 17, 2020]

The Brazilian case deals with the impunity of those responsible for the death of Gabriel Sales Pimenta, who was a defender of the rights of rural workers, and the state responsibility arising thereof. [December 28 and 17, 2020] 

Inter-American Commission on Human Rights | Publications

In December 2020, the Commission published several practical guidelines and reports.  For instance, the report on the Compendium on Labor and Trade Union Rights, the report on “Due Process in Procedures to Determine Refugee and Stateless Person Status and Grant Complementary Protection”, and the Practical Guide on Access to the Right to Education for Children and Adolescents during the COVID-19 Pandemic. [December 30, 18, and 16, 2020]

Inter-American Commission on Human Rights | The Commission conducts a working visit to Mexico

Upon invitation by Mexico, the Commission will conduct a virtual working visit to Mexico to gather information on human mobility in the country.  The working visit also aims to collect information on migrants and people in need of international protection.  Mexican authorities, civil society organizations, and international human rights organizations will assist the Commission in its mandate. [December 11, 2020]

Inter-American Commission on Human Rights | The Commission grants precautionary measures in favor of women on death row in the United States of America

On December 11,  the Commission granted precautionary measures in favor of Christa Pike, who has been held in solitary confinement on death row for 23 years in Tennessee, in the United States.  Based on the information it had received on the condition of Ms. Pike’s confinement, the Commission concluded that there was a serious and urgent risk of irreparable harm to her rights to life and personal integrity. [December 17, 2020]  

On December 1, the Commission granted precautionary measures in favor of Lisa Montgomery who has been held on death row in Texas, in the United States.  Ms. Montgomery suffers from a mental illness, so it was argued that she should not be executed on these grounds.  The applicants also claimed that Ms. Montgomery’s right to due process in avoiding the death penalty had been breached, as she had not been adequately represented.  Moreover, the conditions of her confinement were allegedly incompatible with international human rights standards.  Considering the seriousness and urgency of the situation, as well as the risk of irreparable harm to Ms. Montgomery’s right to life, the Commission requested that the United States adopt necessary measures to improve the conditions of her confinement and to refrain from carrying out the death penalty until the Commission has reached a decision on the merits of the petition. [December 2, 2020]

Inter-American Court of Human Rights | New Judgements Delivered 

In December 2020, the IACtHR delivered several judgments.  In Olivares Muñoz et al. v. Venezuela, the Court held that Venezuela is internationally responsible for the deaths and injuries of inmates in jail, as a result of an operation conducted by members of the National Guard. [December 17, 2020] 

In Mota Abarullo et al. v. Venezuela, the Court also held that Venezuela is responsible for the violation of the right to life, the right to humane treatment, and the right of the child as a result of a fire in which five young people were killed in state custody. [December 11, 2020]

In Martínez Esquivia v. Colombia, the Court found that Colombia is responsible for the arbitrary dismissal of the applicant from her position as Deputy Prosecutor. [December 14, 2020]

UN MECHANISMS 

Human Rights Council (The Working Group on discrimination against women and girls) | Argentina applauded on the decision to legalize abortion

On December 30,  the Argentinian Senate adopted a bill in which it legalized abortions up to the 14th week of pregnancy.  The UN human rights experts welcomed this decision as a major step towards fulfilling international human rights obligations on eliminating discrimination against women and granting them the autonomy to make decisions about their health. [December 31, 2020]

The Human Rights Committee | The Netherlands violated a child’s right to acquire a nationality

In its first case on the right of a child to acquire a nationality, the Human Rights Committee found the Netherlands to be in violation of a child’s right by registering the child’s nationality as ‘unknown’, thus denying him sufficient protection.  Denny, the child in question, was born in 2010 to a 21-year-old Chinese national who was trafficked to the Netherlands from China and forced into prostitution at the age of 15.  Due to complications with the mother’s own citizenship, she was unable to provide proof of Denny’s nationality.  Moreover, Denny could not be registered as a ‘stateless child’ in the Netherlands, as his mom was unable to prove that Denny was without a nationality.  As a result, he was unable to receive the international legal protection that is provided to stateless children.  The Committee noted that states have a duty to ensure that stateless children are not left without protection within their jurisdiction and requested that the Netherlands review its decision regarding Denny’s registration as a stateless child, as well as its general procedure on statelessness determination. [December 29, 2020]

The Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities | Inclusion of people with disabilities in the COVID 19 “building back better” process

The Committee has called on states to increase their cooperation with people suffering with disabilities and their representative organizations in their response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The UN experts highlighted the fragile state of support systems currently in place for the protection of people with disabilities and reiterated the need to include all members of society in COVID-19 response plans. [December 3, 2020]

The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam – A Quest to Reconcile Economic Development with the Right to Water 

By: Kristoffer Burck, Junior Research Associate, PILPG-NL

The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) is a dam project in Northern Ethiopia along the Blue Nile, and is set to become the largest hydropower plant in the African continent.  With its current construction date set at 2023, the dam promises to bring industrialization and development to Ethiopians.  But despite the opportunity the dam may represent for Ethiopians, it has been met with objections from others.  In fact, Sudanese and Egyptian politicians, whose populations are highly dependent on the freshwater supply of the Nile, warn that the dam constitutes a threat to their national security.  Since July 2020, when  Ethiopia began  to partially fill up the reservoirs of the dam, the relationships between the states have soured.  The disagreements concern the applicability of colonial treaties, the  balancing of the right to economic development with the right to water, and ways to facilitate effective regional cooperation. 

Colonial Baggage

According to some Egyptian politicians, the legal situation of the Nile is quite straightforward: the “Nile Waters Agreement” of 1929 guarantees a large share of the Nile´s water to the Egyptian population, and gives the government a right to veto construction projects of riparian states.  But, the problem with this agreement is that it was not concluded with the upstream states, but with Great Britain, who had colonized most of the riparian upstream states, including Sudan.  In 1959, a newly independent Sudan renegotiated the agreement with Egypt, with the result that the water resources were re-allocated between these two states.  The former Eastern African colonies located upstream the Nile (Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda), argue that they are not bound to these colonial treaties under the tabula rasa theory. The controversial theory is codified in article 16 of the Vienna Convention on the Succession of States in Respect of Treaties and holds that newly independent states are not automatically bound by colonial treaties.  For Ethiopians the argument is even clearer: they were not a party to any of the applicable agreements and are therefore not bound by them. 

The Right to Economic Development

The difficulties in interpreting colonial treaties is not the only field of contention.  The GERD project potentially has a considerable impact on human rights of the populations of Ethiopia, Egypt and Sudan.  More specifically in Ethiopia, the project could positively impact the right to economic development, recognized as a human right in Article 22(1) of the African Charter on Human and Peoples´ Rights. While the Ethiopian economy has steadily grown over the past years, its successful development is still held back by endemic power cuts.  A hydroelectric dam could provide a reliable source of energy, not only for Ethiopia but also for bordering countries, struggling with the same situation.  A majority of the Ethiopian (diaspora) population has shown high hopes for the project, and a large portion of the GERD was funded through popular bonds.  As a result, the dam could provide a pathway for Ethiopia to attain their right to development, to industrialize large parts of their economy, and create jobs that could possibly lift millions out of poverty. 

The Right to Water

However, concerns about the dam project by Egypt and Sudan are based on arguments of human rights too.  The “Human Right to Water” has been recognized in several international human rights agreements and receives particular attention in Goal 6 of the Sustainable Development Goals.  In theory, filling the GERD reservoir would require a full annual flow of the Blue Nile.  The Egyptian agricultural sector and the population rely heavily on the steady flow of the Nile.  Consequently, a sudden substantial drop in Nile water supply would be disastrous.  Egypt therefore argues that the GERD project would interfere with their right to water is to be seen as an issue of national security. In addition to the right to water, strong fluctuations of water flow could furthermore be damaging to Sudanese and Egyptian hydroelectric dams. This could impair their respective electricity stability and thereby threaten Sudanese and Egyptian rights to economic development. 

Conclusion 

Regional negotiations, such as the Cooperative Framework Agreement (CFA) of the Nile Basin Initiative, have failed to reach a solution.  Specifically, the definition of “water security” in Article 14 of the CFA caused contention.  Arguing based on their “historical rights”, stemming from the colonial treaties, Sudan and Egypt refused to sign the agreement.  After mediation attempts by intermediaries, such as the United States and the African Union (AU), and the rejection of an Ethiopian proposal for a preliminary agreement, Ethiopia started to fill the GERD´s reservoirs without an agreement in July 2020. While the situation might appear to be in a deadlock, an agreement could be beneficial to all states involved.  A recent study, published in October 2020 by Nature Communications, shows that the Dam could benefit Sudan and Ethiopia, without negatively impacting Egypt. However, especially in the case of a prolonged drought, coordination between all states is crucial.  The speed of filling the reservoirs would have to be adjusted to periodical rainfall and water flows would need to be communicated openly.  The study suggests that a minimum annual release of water from the GERD could actually increase water safety for Sudanese and Egyptian populations, also in cases of drought. A harmonized schedule for filling and releasing water could therefore ultimately balance the rights to water and the rights to economic development.   Since the release of the study, trilateral talks continued and yielded some positive results in regard to coordinating the filling process.  Nevertheless, Sudanese officials boycotted the latest round of negotiations in November 2020, demanding a stronger involvement of mediators.  

A cooperative agreement could offer a path to reconcile Ethiopia’s desire to economic development with Egypt’s and Sudan’s rights to water safety.  Yet, such a commitment requires trust and mutual assurances.  In light of the volatile situation in the region, all parties involved would be best served by agreeing on procedural issues and continuing negotiations on the technical specifications of filling and releasing water from the dam in good faith.