Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 January 2014
This article investigates the difficult issues that have been raised in relation to witness tampering before international criminal courts. This is a significant problem for international criminal courts and tribunals, but has not yet been the subject of a great deal of comment. The article begins by setting out the difficulties that the courts and tribunals have encountered, through a discussion of their judgments on this point. It then turns to the black-letter law that the courts and tribunals have adopted to attempt to counter witness tampering. However, a description of the law alone cannot give a full picture of the difficulties that witness tampering, and protecting witnesses from it, present to international criminal courts and tribunals. These are explained, in part, through the fact that international criminal courts and tribunals operate in the absence of an effective international enforcement mechanism. This, and the conflict/post-conflict context against which those bodies tend to operate, is discussed, in part through the lens of the complementarity paradox identified by Paulo Benvenuti. The article concludes that although lessons can be learned from domestic approaches, the main limitation is the absence of any enforcement power at the international level, and that it is unlikely that one is likely to be created soon.
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13 Ibid., para. 27.
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17 Ibid., paras. 40, 49.
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23 Ibid., para. 41.
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30 ‘Tribunal Condemns Attempts to Interfere with Judicial Process’, STL press release, 11 April 2013; ‘STL Appoints Investigator to Probe Unauthorised Disclosures’, STL press release, 2 July 2013.
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35 See, e.g., B. Momanyi and S. Jennings, ‘Kenya Witnesses Face Harassment’, International Justice – ICC, ACR Issue 350, 5 June 2013, www.iwpr.net/report-news/kenya-witnesses-face-harassment.
36 Prosecutor v. Walter Osapisi Barasa, Warrant of Arrest for Walter Osapisi Barasa, ICC 01/09-01/13, 2 August 2013.
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39 Rule 71(N) ICTR RPE.
40 Rule 71 (O)(iii)(iv) ICTR RPE.
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42 Prosecutor v. Delalić, Mucić, Delić and Landžo, Judgement, Case No. IT-96-21-T, 16 November 1998, para. 50. It is notable that these measures are similar to those suggested in Article 25 of the 200 UN Convention on Transnational Organized Crime, on which see D. McLean, Transnational Organized Crime: A Commentary on the UN Convention and Its Protocols (2007) 266–9.
43 See generally W. Schabas, The International Criminal Court: A Commentary on the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (2011), 824–7.
44 See, e.g., ibid., at 855–6.
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49 Ibid., para. 155.
50 I am grateful to Sarah Nouwen for this point.
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52 See supra note 25 and accompanying text.
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57 Lubanga supra note 31.
58 Similar considerations apply in the context of Sudan, where co-operation by the Sudanese authorities has been negligible since warrants of arrest were issued against government officials. See, e.g., Cryer, R., ‘Darfur: Complementarity as the Drafters Intended?’, in Stahn, C. and el Zeidy, M. (eds.), The International Criminal Court and Complementarity: From Theory to Practice (2011), at 1097Google Scholar.
59 On which see Schabas, supra note 43, at 982.
60 On the nature of such offences see N. Boister, An Introduction to Transnational Criminal Law (2012), Chapter 1.