Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 September 2010
1 At 272.
2 Prosecutor v Akayesu ICTR-96-4-T, trial chamber judgment (2 September 1998), para 702.
3 See in particular: de Waal, A and Salam, AHA “Islamism, state power and jihad in Sudan” in de Waal, A (ed) Islamism and Its Enemies in the Horn of Africa (2004, Hurst and Company) 71;Google Scholar and Gallab, AAThe First Islamic Republic, Development and Disintegration of Islamism in the Sudan (2008, Ashgate).Google Scholar
4 2005 World Summit outcome, UN doc A/60/L.1, 15 September 2005, para 139.
5 The terms saviours and victims have been employed in an influential article by Mutua, MW “Savages, victims, and saviors: The metaphor of human rights” (2001) 42 Harvard International Law Journal 201.Google Scholar
6 At 275.
7 See in this context the website of the International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty, responsible for the 2001 report on RtP: <http://www.iciss.ca/menu-en.asp> (last accessed 28 August 2009).
8 Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights “Making peace our own: Victims' perceptions of accountability, reconciliation and transitional justice in northern Uganda” (research study, August 2007); and P Pham, P Vinck, E Stover, A Moss, M Wierda and R Bailey “When the war ends” (a population-based survey on attitudes about peace, justice and social reconstruction in northern Uganda: Human Rights Center, University of California Berkeley; Payson Center for International Development, Tulane University; and International Center for Transitional Justice, December 2007).
9 At 281.
10 At 224.
11 At 273.
12 However, see the remarkable report published by the Mbeki panel and the recommendations contained in it: “Darfur: The quest for peace, justice and reconciliation” (report of the AU High Level Panel on Darfur, 29 October 2009): PSC/AHG/2 (CCVII).
13 At 16.