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African Journal of International Criminal Justice

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Issue 2, 2023 Expand all abstracts
Article

Access_open Heard or Ignored: African States’ Priorities and the Independent Expert Review of the ICC

Keywords independent expert review, African Union, complementarity, cooperation, United Nations Security Council, prosecutorial discretion, case selection, International Criminal Court, Review Mechanism, Africa-ICC, Assembly of States Parties
Authors Lorraine Smith-van Lin
AbstractAuthor's information

    Nine independent experts were appointed to commence an independent review into troubling reports of inefficiency and internal problems at the International Criminal Court in 2020. Though comprehensive, the review was focused on institutional matters concerning the day-to-day functioning of the Court, but did not address broader geopolitical issues such as the ICC’s role in the international landscape, complementarity, the role of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) and the interplay of peace and justice which were of great significance to African states. Despite the key role played by African states in establishing the ICC, the relationship between the Court and its largest regional bloc began to sour after judges issued warrants against African heads of states and the Prosecutor appeared to disproportionately focus on indicting African defendants. Years before the review was conceptualised, some African States had proposed important reforms to the ICC Statute, among which was a review of the role of the UNSC vis-à-vis the ICC and for regional mechanisms to be recognised by the Court’s complementarity regime. The IER was an opportune moment for these and other African concerns to be addressed but turned out to be a missed opportunity. This article assesses whether the concerns of African states were in fact ignored or dismissed by the IER process at the ICC, or whether the separation of the review process into ‘technical’ and ‘non-technical’ categories for review by the independent experts and working groups of the Assembly of States Parties (ASP) caused critical issues to be sidelined. The article also questions whether African states engaged enough with the review process or whether priorities shifted once the cases against the heads of states collapsed.


Lorraine Smith-van Lin
Lorraine Smith-van Lin is an international human rights lawyer with expertise in international criminal law, international human rights law and victim rights. She is also the founder and Executive Director of Tallawah Justice for Women, a non-profit organisation (NGO) which supports women leaders of survivor and grassroots organisations in Africa and the Caribbean. She has previously served as the Director of the International Bar Association’s Hague Office, as Senior Legal Advisor with Redress, and as a Parish Court Judge in Kingston, Jamaica.
Article

Access_open The ICC Reform Process from the Perspective of African States Parties to the Rome Statute

Better Late Than Never

Keywords International Criminal Court, ICC reform process, Independent expert review process, Africa and the International Criminal Court, Article 53 of the Rome Statute, African concerns about ICC
Authors Charles C. Jalloh
AbstractAuthor's information

    The relationship between African States with the permanent International Criminal Court (ICC) is critical to the continued success of the ICC and the development of international criminal law. One of the main criticisms of the ICC by some African States has centred on the question of how best to sequence peace with justice, or justice with peace, in situations of ongoing conflict such as in Uganda and Sudan. This article examines the history of the peace-justice clashes on the African continent in the context of the 2019 Assembly of States Parties mandated process of ICC reform, considering the ICC Office of the Prosecutor’s (OTP) Policy Paper on the Interests of Justice. Regrettably, despite the long-standing African State Party concern about the peace-justice interface, the September 2020 ICC independent expert report produced for the Assembly of States Parties missed the opportunity to expressly address this important issue. The author submits that, while the OTP appears to have embraced a more nuanced view of the interests of retributive justice and how they relate to the interests of sustainable peace, it may be timely for the formal ICC review process to consider how to bring further clarity to the resolution of this issue in the context of the ongoing ICC reform discussions. Formally giving the OTP some guidance on how to balance the interests of justice considerations after it begins a formal investigation into a situation should help limit some of the criticisms directed towards the ICC as it engages in the challenging task of dispensing justice for victims of atrocity crimes in Africa and other parts of the world.


Charles C. Jalloh
Charles C. Jalloh is Professor of International Law and Richard A. Hausler Chair in Law, University of Miami Law School, USA and Founding Executive Director, Center for International Law and Policy in Africa (CILPA), Freetown, Sierra Leone. He has published widely on issues of international justice in Africa, including The Legal Legacy of the Special Court for Sierra Leone (Cambridge, 2020) and as lead editor The International Criminal Court and Africa (Oxford, 2018). The author is grateful to CILPA and the Africa Regional Office as well as the Justice Initiative of the Open Society Foundations especially Pascal Kambale, Sharon Nakandha and Oumou Dieng for their excellent collaboration. He thanks them for the research grant provided to support the preparation of this independent study. Ashira Vantrees, former legal research officer at CILPA, provided excellent assistance while Clea Strydom, the CILPA project director, assisted with proofreading. Dapo Akande, Oxford University, served as external reviewer. Their inputs, together with those of African civil society participants in the two separate July 2021 workshops where this paper was presented, are gratefully acknowledged. All opinions, errors and omissions are attributable to the author alone. Publisher Note: This paper, which first appeared in the NYU Journal of International Law and Policy, Vol. 55, No. 3 (Spring 2022) under a different title, is being republished as part of a series on the ICC reform process convened by CILPA together with the African Journal of International Criminal Justice. The compilation of two special issues on the ICC reform process geared towards African scholarly audiences warranted the inclusion of this paper. Email: jallohc@gmail.com.