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Document - Georgia: Open Letter to the President of Georgia urging rejection of the impunity agreement with the United States of America on the International Criminal Court.













Public

AI Index: EUR 56/001/2003



President Eduard Shevardnadze

Republic of Georgia

State Chancellery

7 Ingorokva Street

Tbilisi 380034

Georgia

13 May 2003



Open letter to the President of Georgia urging rejection of the impunity agreement with the United States of America on the International Criminal Court



Dear President Shevardnadze,



Amnesty International is dismayed to hear that on 7 May 2003 the Parliament of Georgia was the second parliament in the world to ratify a bilateral impunity agreement with the United States of America (USA). This agreement will oblige Georgia not to surrender to the new International Criminal Court (ICC) United States (US) nationals accused of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes. This agreement violates Georgia’s obligations under international law, including as a signatory to the Rome Statute of the ICC. It goes against the will of the vast majority of the international community to ensure that no one, regardless of nationality or status, can plan and commit these heinous crimes with impunity. Amnesty International is writing to you to urge you not to grant consent to this unlawful impunity agreement.



Amnesty International has been working towards the establishment of the ICC for nearly 10 years, believing that it is an essential mechanism to end impunity for the worst crimes known to humanity. No one should have impunity for these crimes. Amnesty International, together with the majority of the international community, believes that the US government’s concerns that the ICC will be used to bring politically motivated prosecutions against US nationals are wholly unfounded; the substantial safeguards and fair trial guarantees in the Rome Statute would ensure that such a situation would never arise. Amnesty International is confident that the ICC, with 18 of the highest qualified and respected judges in the international community and a highly qualified and experienced Prosecutor, will allay the US government’s concerns and that the US government will in due course change its position.


Amnesty International hopes that you will consider the following legal arguments against impunity agreements which are set out in detail in International Criminal Court: US efforts to obtain impunity for genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes (AI Index: IOR 40/025/2002), published by Amnesty International in August 2002 and available from www.amnesty.org/icc/.

  • Impunity agreements are unlawful because they commit states to violate their legal obligations under international law, including the Rome Statute, to bring those responsible for genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes to justice.

  • Impunity agreements are not permitted by the Rome Statute. US assertions that the agreements are provided for in Article 98 of the Statute are incorrect, as numerous legal analyses, including by Amnesty International, conclude. This article was designed to cover existing Status of Forces Agreements, which determine which state has jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute crimes committed by forces stationed in another country, not agreements designed to give nationals of one state impunity from international justice.

  • Impunity agreements contain no assurance that if US nationals are not surrendered to the ICC they will be brought to justice in the USA or anywhere else. In fact, in some cases the US judicial system would not be able to do so as US criminal law does not include many of the international crimes included in the Rome Statute.


The European Union’s legal experts have also analysed the agreement and have reached the same conclusion: “[e]ntering into US agreements - as presently drafted - would be inconsistent with ICC States Parties' obligations with regard to the ICC Statute and may be inconsistent with other international agreements to which ICC States Parties are Parties.” The European Union further issued guiding principles which Amnesty International analyses in International Criminal Court: The need for the European Union to take more effective steps to prevent members from signing US impunity agreements (AI Index: IOR 40/030/2002), published in October 2002 and available from www.amnesty.org/icc/.


Amnesty International hopes that you will refuse to give consent to this or any other agreement which seeks to undermine the ICC and provide impunity to anyone accused of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes.



Yours sincerely,





Irene Khan

Secretary General




cc: Philippe Kirsch, President of the International Criminal Court

H.R.H. Prince Zeid Ra’ad Zeid Al-Hussein, President of the Assembly of States Parties of the International Criminal Court.











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