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ICC Prosecutor Announces
that Team Will Visit Cote
d'Ivoire On January 28, 2005, the International
Criminal Court's (ICC) chief Prosecutor, Luis Moreno Ocampo, announced that an ICC team will visit the Ivory
Coast. The team's mission will be to determine whether there is
sufficient evidence to open a formal investigation into alleged war crimes
that occurred during the civil war there. Ocampo
stated that the government of the Ivory Coast "simply accepted our
jurisdiction to investigate in the country." The Ivory Coast has
not ratified the Rome Statute - the treaty that created the ICC - but under
Article 12 of that treaty, the Prosecutor may initiate an investigation if
the country on whose territory the alleged crimes occurred accepts the
jurisdiction of the Court. The Prosecutor further
indicated that the Ivory Coast government had sought the ICC's help in bringing to
justice rebels who started the civil war in that country. However,
since only
"situations" can be referred to the ICC,
the Prosecutor will consider the actions of all individuals in groups
involved in the conflict. This is potentially significant because a secret
UN report on human rights violations in the Ivory Coast is rumored to have named
95 people on both sides of the conflict who are suspected of serious human
rights violations. Some have suggested that
Simone Gbagbo, the wife of President Laurent Gbagbo, is on the list for her
alleged role in
organizing state-sponsored death squads. The Prosecutor will evaluate
all of the available evidence against both rebels and government figures in
deciding whether to launch a formal investigation. If the
Prosecutor opens a formal investigation into the Ivory Coast, it could be
either the third, fourth or fifth
investigation initiated by the ICC. The ICC currently has two ongoing
investigations into the
situations in
Uganda and the
Democratic Republic of
the Congo, both of which asked the ICC to step in. In
addition, the Prosecutor recently announced that his office is evaluating
the situation in the
Central African Republic to determine whether to open a formal
investigation there. There have also been calls for the Security Council to refer
the situation in the Darfur region of Sudan to the ICC.
Updated February 18, 2005
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