Showing posts with label Genocide crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Genocide crime. Show all posts

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Genocide Conference in South Africa Tackles Questions of Education

Youk Chhang, a leading Cambodian genocide researcher, shows a copy of the Cambodian version of a Khmer Rouge history textbook to teachers in Takeo province.

He urged all nations suffering from the memory of genocide to take their own initiatives to include genocide studies in their curricula.

13 September 2012
Men Kimeng, VOA Khmer

WASHINGTON DC - Chhang Youk, director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia, is in Cape Town, South Africa, for a UN-sponsored forum on the teaching of genocide in schools. He urged all nations suffering from the memory of genocide to take their own initiatives to include genocide studies in their curricula.

“We ought to remember that we have to begin doing these things ourselves,” Chhang Youk told VOA Khmer from Cape Town. “No one can do it better, or understand the issue better than us.”

The Unesco-sponsored forum, “Why Teach About Genocide - the Example of the Holocaust,” is meant to further discussions on how to design educational programs that teach about genocide and atrocities. Cambodia is a leading country in the research of genocide and has recently begun distributing teaching materials on the subject.

Monday, October 04, 2010

Justice for genocide should have no expiry date

Victims of genocide should be able to receive justice irrespective of time passed or who they were. (Photo: Andrew Meares)

October 1, 2010
Colin Tatz
The Age (Australia)


After World War II, the Germans gave us their new term for reparation payments to be made to Holocaust survivors — wiedergutmachung. At first, the English translation, making good again, sounded profound and exotic — until I realised that dead husbands, wives, parents, children and the half-alive survivors can't be restored in the way the term suggests.

So what kind of justice is there for victims of genocide? In the long road towards some moral standard, one that includes the victims as part of the atrocity, an admission of responsibility by the perpetrator is a start, if not the start. The Germans readily admitted their role in killing 30 million people, including 6 million Jews, 3.5 million Poles, 8.2 Russian civilians, 5.7 million Russian prisoners of war, 5.9 million Ukrainians and 500,000 Gypsies. The next milestone is criminal trial of both the architects and the mechanics of mass murder in the pursuit of both punishment and a sense of retribution. Most people know a little something about the Nuremberg Trials of the 22 leading Nazis; few know that since then, more than 110,000 domestic trials have taken place in both Germany and Austria, albeit with low conviction rates. They continue, without an expiry date, as this is written.

But justice, of any kind, appears to exist only for "worthy" victims: very few prosecutions were for crimes against Gypsies (Romany people) for example. And it took just over a century for Germany to admit that it committed genocide against the native Nama and Herero peoples of what was once German South-West Africa (now Namibia). The crime was admitted in 2006, but with the rider that no reparations would be paid.

Advertisement: Story continues belowAdmission of responsibility, trial, apology, restitution, reparations, reconciliation (of sorts) enable a pathway to that dearly beloved cliche of our time — "moving on". (Moving on is just fine, provided one knows what it is one is moving on from.) Restitution can involve giving back the giveable and restoring the restorable (like the thousands of Nazi-looted art pieces). Reparations means money for civil wrongs, however tokenistic, when physical restitution isn't possible. The Germans have paid reparations money to Israel and to individuals, but the sum for each surviving slave labourer has averaged about $10,000. Romany people got nothing, not even a "token nothing". Their requests to the German government were deemed "unreasonable" and "slanderous" and in 1980 the Mayor of Darmstadt refused their participation in a ceremony commemorating the liberation of the Bergen-Belsen camp because it "insulted the memory of the Holocaust".

A decade ago, Roy Brooks edited an acutely titled volume, When Sorry Isn't Enough. A singular omission was an Australian entry among the dozens of cases of apology and reparations for the victims of human injustice from around the world.

The Australian path has been lamentable. In 1992, prime minister Paul Keating's Redfern speech about our treatment of indigenous Australians admitted the murders, dispossessions, the alcohol, diseases, the removal of children, the smashing of traditional life and their exclusion from society and its benefits. This was one kind of balm for the victim people. The Howardites saw this moral inculpation as a slide towards costly economic reparations, refusing to admit or to apologise for just that specific reason. The Ruddites apologised in 2008, with some reluctant and even truculent bipartisan support — but everyone was happy enough that the rider to the apology was that there will be no reparations. And so only Tasmanian Aborigines, who received a state apology in 1997, now have a state-initiated $5 million fund to disburse to the surviving stolen generations.

The ultimate negation is, of course, the Turkish denial of its genocidal campaigns against Armenians, Pontian Greeks and Christian Assyrians between 1915 and 1922. There is no admission, no accountability, no responsibility, no apology, no restitution, no reparation and no justice. There is only a paranoid denialism and the counter-claim that more Turks than Armenians died in a "civil war": Turks were simply and only defending themselves against a traitorous and fifth-columnist minority who were aiding their enemies. Turkey is totally dedicated, at home and abroad, to having every hint or mention of an Armenian genocide contradicted, countered, explained, justified, mitigated, rationalised, relativised, removed or trivialised. The entire apparatus of the Turkish state is tuned to denial, with officers appointed abroad for that purpose.

In September this year, Turkey allowed Armenians to conduct a religious service in a former major church at Akhtamar on an island in Lake Van, one they turned into a museum. In what was intended as a public relations exercise, the Turks banned the erection of a cross on the dome for this momentary revisiting of some grim history. And for as long as Turkey denies that anyone died at their hands, and refuses to release any death records, descendants of the dead can't claim the millions in insurance policies taken out by parents and grandparents with American and French companies.

Rwanda, Burundi, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Bosnia-Herzegovina and Indonesia have acknowledged, in their way, that "something happened" in their domains this past century. For the perpetrators, admission, even apology, is usually about a regret, however fleeting, passing or superficial, that they were once the sort of people, or the sort of nation, that they now wish they had not been at those points in time. But Turkey will neither concede such blots on their escutcheon nor admit their homicidal treatment of Christians over a very long time. Their victims have died twice: physically in the killing fields and then obliterated from the history books.

Colin Tatz is a visiting fellow at the Australian National University and a director of the Australian Institute for Holocaust and Genocide Studies. He was part of a panel yesterday, Genocide: Does justice have an expiry date, at the Jewish Museum of Australia in Melbourne.

Tuesday, June 08, 2010

Uganda: From Rome to Kampala in Search of International Justice

6 June 2010
Gabby Mgaya
AllAfrica.com



Dar Es Salaam — IT all started in Rome eight years ago when the Statute of the International Court of Justice (ICC) came into force, which marked the entity's establishment.

Eight years later last week, a meeting to review the statute is taking place in the Ugandan Capital Kampala, with the most nagging issue on the agenda being a proposal to give the International Criminal Court in The Hague the power to prosecute the crime of aggression.

The court has come a long way since then, with the intervening period proving an intense period of institution building, legislating, investing and reaching out to affected communities.

It is not a secret that the world has experienced - and continues to experience - worst atrocities against innocent people in form of civil wars, systematic murder, wars of aggression, genocide, use of certain weapons that are gaseous or poisonous and human rights abuse.

The world both recalls and follows with compelling awe, past and continuing civil wars in Liberia, Sierra Leone, Nigeria, Southern Sudan, Darfur, Somalia and Democratic Republic of the Congo and Burundi. The civil war in Rwanda reached its climax with the genocide in 1993 in which more than 1 million lives were lost.

That is Africa. Worldwide, the world recalls with horror the wanton killings of innocent citizens in the former Yugoslavia, Cambodia, Palestine, Afghanistan and Iraq and several other places.

Perhaps the most disappointing thing in this entire sad situation is the fact that most such crimes have gone unpunished. Its perpetrators continue to roam the streets and country sides whereas their appropriate place should have been behind bars.

Even the choice of Uganda as the venue for this important conference is in the view of many observes an appropriate and a symbolic one. Uganda has got some of the world's excellent international conference facilities in Africa.

But the east African country has also had its share of massive human right abuses going back to the days of reign of Dictator Idi Amin Dada. To date, parts of Northern Uganda are experience one of the most devastating civil wars perpetrated by the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), which is an ICC's major concern. The court seeks to arrest LRA's leader Joseph Kony.

Amidst tight security, more than 100 nations, contingents of human-rights groups and lawyers from around the globe, began meeting on Monday to tackle a myriad of issues that could fundamentally expand the power of international law.

The ultimate recommendation expected is to open the door to criminal accusations against powerful political and military leaders for attacks the court deems unlawful. These could range from full-scale invasions to pre-emptive strikes.

The court, the world's first permanent criminal court, already has a mandate to prosecute three groups of grave crimes: genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes.

The massive turn-out at the Kampala conference is testimony to the importance nations, pressure groups and NGOS, human rights groups and lawyers from all over the globe attach to the crimes of war and impunity.

Tanzania is being represented by a delegation led by President Jakaya Kikwete who joined other prominent leaders including United Nations Secretary General Ban ki-Moon and ex-UN Chief Kofi Annan. It is interesting to note that the meeting is also being graced by a number of war victims.

Tanzanians know the dire consequences of civil wars and genocide in neighbouring countries that has manufactured thousands of refugees who moved in to save their dear lives.

The fact that Tanzania hosts the International Rwanda Tribunal that has been trying genocide suspects is both a sign of international acceptance of the country as an island of peace in the troubled Great Lakes Region and its quest to see that justice is done to the victims of the genocide in its partner East African Community (EAC) member state. It is also meant to deter any future such action.

There are many expectations on the ICC treaty review meeting in Kampala. It is hoped that it would ensure that genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes no longer go unpunished.

There have been significant achievements. By March 2010, Bangladesh had ratified the Rome Statute. Uganda and Burkina Faso has enacted complementarily and cooperation of legislation. Other countries have also responding to the call to implement, ratify and enact ICC legislation before the Kampala conference.

Monday, June 02, 2008

U.N. must try Burmese leaders for genocide

Burma's ruling generals - including Than Shwe, Maung Aye and Thura Shwe Mann [Reuters]

Sunday, June 1, 2008
JOEL BRINKLEY
Posted by the San Francisco Chronicle (California, USA)


Almost 30 years ago, my editor dispatched me to Cambodia to cover the fall of the Khmer Rouge regime and the resulting refugee holocaust. The images of babies with swollen bellies and only a few days left to live, emaciated and lethargic adults dying from typhoid, cholera or worse have hung with me to this day.

Now, three decades later, the United Nations and the Cambodian government are staging a genocide tribunal for several surviving Khmer Rouge leaders. Nearly 2 million Cambodians died during the Khmer Rouge reign - most of them from disease and starvation.

One country away, in Burma, more than 1 million survivors of Cyclone Nargis have now gone without food, medicine, clean water or sanitation services for more than four weeks. Though Burma's military dictators won't allow anyone to see, babies' bellies are beginning to swell, and listless adults are slipping away, victims of cholera, dysentery or worse. Tens of thousands are likely to die - most of them from disease and starvation.

The fault for all of this lies squarely on Gen. Than Shwe's shoulders. It's past time that the United Nations started planning a genocide tribunal for Shwe, the Burmese leader, and his fellow thugs. The case is clear, the verdict already known.

In Cambodia, prosecutors are digging through musty, incomplete records and relying on testimony from feeble, octogenarian witnesses. In Burma, all the evidence prosecutors would need is in the newspapers and on TV. Put together, it displays a callous disregard for human life so stunning that it would probably embarrass Kim Jung Il, Robert Mugabe - perhaps even Omar al-Bashir, the president of Sudan.

Here's the dossier: On May 20, Shwe promised Ban Ki-moon, the U.N. secretary-general, he would finally allow aid workers to deliver food and medicine to cyclone victims - three weeks after the storm.

The next day, Shwe ordered his troops to sweep through the Irrawaddy Delta and evict cyclone victims from the few buildings that remained standing so they could be used as polling places. Then soldiers pushed and prodded hungry and sick Burmese to vote in a sham referendum intended to extend Shwe's time in office - and sometimes filled in their ballots for them.

Last Sunday, soldiers ordered cyclone victims to dismantle makeshift shelters they had put up near main roads to escape the floodwaters. The soldiers said they were unsightly.

Meanwhile, the International Red Cross reported that rivers and ponds in the delta remained clotted with corpses. On Tuesday, UNICEF noted that Burmese children were drinking from these fetid ponds. They had no other source of water. Even before the storm, Save the Children said it had identified 30,000 malnourished children in the affected areas. Many of them, the group said a few days ago, "may already be dying for lack of food."

In Rangoon, meanwhile, when Ban proposed a donors conference for reconstruction aid, Shwe's government suddenly perked up and said Burma would be delighted to host it. Save our people, no; give us money - sure!

Representatives from more than 50 countries attended the conference last Sunday. Gen. Thein Sein, the Burmese prime minister, told them he would happily take their money. As for finally allowing aid workers in, he said, "we will consider allowing them in if they wish to engage in rehabilitation and reconstruction work."

The government's relief operations have come to an end, he insisted. Burma is shifting its focus to rebuilding and reconstruction. So much for Shwe's promise to Ban. So much for 100,000 sick and dying people. Last week, Burma admitted about 40 more aid workers - while throwing up onerous restrictions on their work.

For weeks, Shwe had refused even to take Ban's phone calls. Finally, Ban decided simply to show up. So the military set up a Potemkin refugee camp complete with crisp green tents and shiny new cookware. When Sein took Ban there a week later, reporters noticed that cooking oil jars remained sealed and store labels were still affixed to the frying pans.

The New York Times reported that soldiers had used dynamite to rid the streams of unsightly corpses in the areas Ban visited.

Now, a month after the storm, the United Nations estimates that fewer than half of the sick and starving cyclone victims have received even the first dollop of aid, while the generals insist that it's time to give up on the victims and start putting up new buildings.

If the world were a just place, then the first building project would be a prison to hold Shwe and his fellow thugs - after their genocide trial.

Joel Brinkley is a professor of journalism at Stanford University and a former foreign policy correspondent for the New York Times. E-mail him at brinkley@foreign-matters.com. Contact us at insight@sfchronicle.com.