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Sunday, June 16, 2013
 For Colombia's military, a new era of reduced civilian human rights
prosecutions<http://cts.vresp.com/c/?JusttheFacts/0b81dfbddc/36ddb1edf4/68d19f0158/utm_content=cort.greene%40gmail.com&utm_source=VerticalResponse&utm_medium=Email&utm_term=For%20Colombia%26%2339%3Bs%20military%2C%20a%20new%20era%20of%20reduced%20civilian%20human%20rights%20prosecutions&utm_campaign=%5BBlog%5D%20For%20Colombia%27s%20military%2C%20a%20new%20era%20of%20reduced%20civilian%20human%20rights%20prosecutions>

 <http://cts.vresp.com/c/?JusttheFacts/0b81dfbddc/36ddb1edf4/711b2a1659>

A very contentious debate is nearly over. Last Wednesday, Colombia’s Senate
approved 
legislation<http://cts.vresp.com/c/?JusttheFacts/0b81dfbddc/36ddb1edf4/a643491a81>
 that will allow the country’s military to try its own personnel in many
more cases of human rights abuse. On Monday, Colombia’s House of
Representatives is expected to do the same.

This is a triumph for Colombia’s 280,000-strong armed forces, which have
been ever more vocally demanding that the civilian justice system have less
jurisdiction over them. But it is a setback for human rights.

Since about 1997, Colombia’s civilian courts had steadily been gaining
authority to investigate and judge military personnel believed to have
committed crimes against the population. While Colombia’s civilian
prosecutors and judges are no models of speed and efficiency, they proved
far more likely to hold abusive soldiers accountable than the military’s
own justice system, which proved exceedingly lenient in such cases. By the
2000s, civilian courts were handing down historic verdicts, especially in
cases of paramilitary killings that benefited from military acquiescence or
support. In the past few years, as soldiers stood accused of killing as
many as 
4,716<http://cts.vresp.com/c/?JusttheFacts/0b81dfbddc/36ddb1edf4/cbd8210041/cod=16&cat=11>
 citizens – many of them so-called “false positives,” innocent people
falsely presented as armed-group members killed in combat – civilian courts
convicted a few hundred more, mostly low ranking, military personnel.

That momentum has now stalled. Military demands for “judicial security,”
championed by a government that needed military support for its peace talks
with guerrillas, have led to legislation that is likely to send many more
abuse cases to military courts.

The new law “runs counter to the standards of international human rights
law, and many of its provisions run openly contrary to that body of law
that regulates, among other issues, the use of force and the administration
of justice in any state,” notes a stern seven-page statement
[PDF<http://cts.vresp.com/c/?JusttheFacts/0b81dfbddc/36ddb1edf4/3bd46ecde4>]
issued last week by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights’ field office
in Colombia.

“This bill’s provisions seriously disagree with the state’s other
international commitments, especially those regarding the duty to respect
international humanitarian law,” contends the Colombian Commission of
Jurists 
[PDF<http://cts.vresp.com/c/?JusttheFacts/0b81dfbddc/36ddb1edf4/22f5407463>].
“So many such obligations will be transgressed if this bill is approved,
that it is no exaggeration to say that since the 1991 Constitution went
into effect, this is one of the legislative initiatives that has most
threatened the applicability of fundamental rights in Colombia.”

The bill about to receive final passage is “implementing” legislation. It
follows a constitutional amendment that Colombia’s Congress
passed<http://cts.vresp.com/c/?JusttheFacts/0b81dfbddc/36ddb1edf4/9ffff99299>
 late last year. The earlier provision gave the military justice system
“exclusive jurisdiction” over all military abuses “related to the
conflict,” with the exception of a list of seven crimes: crimes against
humanity, genocide, forced disappearances, extrajudicial executions, sexual
violence, torture, and forced displacement. These crimes will continue to
go directly to the civilian court system. Others, like assault, illegal
surveillance, or homicide that does not meet the definition of
“extrajudicial execution,” will go to military justice.

The current bill adds further guidelines explaining how the military courts
will deal with violations of international humanitarian law (rules of war);
defining the crime of “extrajudicial execution,” which doesn’t exist in
Colombia’s penal code; and explaining how disputes between civilian and
military jurisdiction will be resolved.

In response to outcry from Colombian and international human rights
advocates, Colombia’s Congress has made important improvements to the
bill’s language. But serious problems remain.

*Why does Colombia need to create the charge of “extrajudicial execution”?
Why shouldn’t “homicides” go to the civilian court system?*

The hundreds of military personnel accused of committing “false positive”
murders are currently facing charges of “homicide,” “aggravated homicide,”
or “homicide of a protected person.” All of these crimes, the UN High
Commissioner’s Office notes
[PDF<http://cts.vresp.com/c/?JusttheFacts/0b81dfbddc/36ddb1edf4/0173f96d7f>],
“are under the exclusive competence of the [civilian] judicial branch.
These must be investigated by the [civilian] Prosecutor-General’s Office [*
Fiscalía*] and judged by autonomous and independent judges.”

But Article 43 of the legislation codifies a new type of crime,
“extrajudicial execution,” in line with the constitutional amendment. It’s
not clear why this is needed.

The reason, many experts fear, is that making “extrajudicial execution” a
brand-new crime is a gambit to move the ongoing “false positives” cases out
of the civilian courts, putting justice out of reach for thousands of
victims and their families.

The UN High Commissioner’s office
explains<http://cts.vresp.com/c/?JusttheFacts/0b81dfbddc/36ddb1edf4/7bf0a877ad/cod=36&cat=91>
:

 “The Office remains deeply concerned about a series of issues related to
the bill and reminds Colombians that if this law is adopted, it could lead
to cases of ‘false positives’ that are currently being investigated under
the [civilian] criminal system being transferred for investigation and
judgment by Defense Ministry authorities, instead of being investigated by
an independent judicial authority, as they should. Colombian authorities
have assured that the bill does not permit such transfers. In this sense,
they have argued that the definitions of the crimes of extrajudicial
execution and crimes against humanity are applicable to the ‘false
positives’ cases and, as a result, these cases can only be considered by
civilian justice. However, what is certain is that constitutional
principles covering criminal law, like the principle of non-retroactivity,
imply that provisions in the bill are inapplicable in practice and that, in
the end, they will not impede ‘false positives’ cases from being tried by
military authorities.”

 In other words, because “extrajudicial executions” will only become a
crime in 2013, military personnel accused of “false positives” might not be
tried in civilian courts for committing this crime in previous years. Their
defense lawyers will argue that they are being unjustly tried in civilian
courts for a crime that did not exist when they committed it. If this
argument prospers, “false positives” may go to the military courts, where
guilty verdicts are far less likely, as cases of homicide. “Homicide” is
not one of the seven categories of crime that the new law would send to the
civilian justice system.

Investigative journalist Juanita León, director of the *La Silla
Vacía* website,
doubts that this will happen. She
reports<http://cts.vresp.com/c/?JusttheFacts/0b81dfbddc/36ddb1edf4/24b509a4dc>
 that “false positive” cases may actually remain in the civilian system –
though time will tell. “Senators of different parties,” she writes, “told *La
Silla* that it is very improbable that these crimes might leave civilian
justice and pass to the military system.”

 “To avoid having this happen in the constitutional reform, senators
inserted a paragraph that explicitly says that false positives currently in
civilian justice cannot be transferred to the military. So far, no human
rights organization has denounced specific cases of false positives that,
due to last year’s constitutional reform, have been transferred to the
military system. In a couple of years it will be known whether human
rights’ defenders’ fear was valid.”

 *Who is a “legitimate target”?*

As the bill is currently drafted, it explains:

 “It will be understood that, whenever he or she abstains from all hostile
acts and does not try to escape, any person is outside of combat who:
a) Is in the power of an agent of the state;
b) Is unconscious, has collapsed or is wounded or sick, or as a result
cannot defend himself or herself;
c) Has surrendered and is unarmed.”

 Anyone who has not met these conditions, according to the bill, is a
“legitimate target” if he or she “continues carrying out violent acts or
threats.” This, to critics of the legislation, is too ambiguous, and
fuzzier than the definition that already exists in international
humanitarian law.

Parmenio Cuéllar, a senator and former justice minister from the leftist
Polo Democrático
party,argued<http://cts.vresp.com/c/?JusttheFacts/0b81dfbddc/36ddb1edf4/5c1cfac58d>
 in the congressional debate that “if a person is already in a defenseless
state, but issues verbal threats, he or she might still be considered a
legitimate target by the security forces.” Civilian homes and workplaces
“can be attacked when a military commander presumes that a criminal action
is being planned there,”
contends<http://cts.vresp.com/c/?JusttheFacts/0b81dfbddc/36ddb1edf4/f6898faacf>
 Polo Democratico congressman Iván Cepeda.

The bill defines who is a member of an armed group, and thus a “legitimate
target” for the military. The definition given (that the violence reach a
certain level, that the group has a clear command structure) applies to
guerrillas but also to the so-called “Criminal Bands” or BACRIM, the
organized crime-linked militias whose roots go back to the pro-government
paramilitaries of the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s. Combating these groups has
been primarily a police mission, with the armed forces playing only an
occasional supporting role. The new bill may compel the armed forces to
play a greater role in the fight against BACRIM.

*Is military justice outside the chain of command?*

One reason for the military justice system’s history of leniency is the
status of military judges and prosecutors: they have not been independent
of the armed forces’ chain of command. Military judges and prosecutors who
rule against the institution risk retribution, especially when under
consideration for promotions and pay raises.

The new bill takes steps to address this. Article 52 declares that the
military justice system “will be administrated with autonomy with respect
to institutional command through a special administrative unit.” This unit
will have a “Directive Council” made up of five members, the majority of
them civilians.

Our colleague at Human Rights Watch, José Miguel Vivanco,
told<http://cts.vresp.com/c/?JusttheFacts/0b81dfbddc/36ddb1edf4/6f576e1943>
 Colombia’s *El Tiempo* earlier this week that this was not enough, because
the bill put the commander of the armed forces and the director of the
National Police on the Directive Council. “This does not de-link it from
the chain of command,” he said.

As if in response, in its final debate Colombia’s Senate appears to have
removed the requirement that the security forces’ top leadership be members
of the Directive Council. That is encouraging. Still, with a slim civilian
majority, it only takes one very pro-military civilian – a likely outcome –
to ensure that the military justice system is managed by a body that
prioritizes the interest of the armed forces’ high command over the
interest of achieving justice in human rights cases.

*A strangely uninformed debate*

Today, as the debate nears its end, it is remarkable how little of it was
guided by good information. The military’s claims of spurious prosecutions
at civilians’ hands were upheld with very little evidence. In the end,
though, that didn’t seem to matter. In a recent
column<http://cts.vresp.com/c/?JusttheFacts/0b81dfbddc/36ddb1edf4/8da0eed454>,
former Chief Prosecutor Alfonso Gómez Méndez noted this puzzling situation.

 "The public debate has gone ahead without enough relative information, for
example, about how many cases exist against members of the security forces
and for what crimes. The Congress should know them. For example: are there
cases against soldiers for killing guerrillas in combat? Or for fighting
militarily against armed subversives? Or for typical acts of service? If
so, the injustice should be undone immediately.

"Or are those acts referring to events that took place outside of combat,
like torture, disappearances, or human rights violations? In such
situations, no constitutional reform should assign competence to military
justice, as Prosecutor-General Eduardo Montealegre has said.

"It is said that soldiers are victims of a justice system that is
politicized or biased by leftist ideologies. But, which are those cases?
What prosecutors or judges have deviated from their mission to commit these
abuses? If the charge is true, these public servants should be in jail and
not administrating justice.

“Does the Congress that discusses this reform know about these cases and
does it have them documented?”

 We still do not know the true extent of the civilian justice system’s
alleged unfair treatment of suspected military human rights abusers. We
have seen few statistics or concrete examples from Colombia’s armed forces,
Defense Ministry, or from the administration of President Juan Manuel
Santos. Without knowing the extent of the problem, it is hard not to
conclude that the real problem is that Colombia’s powerful military is
angry about recent verdicts and trials, nearly all of them having to do
with abuses that took place out of combat.

It is also hard not to conclude that the change in jurisdiction over human
rights cases is the military’s price for its support of the Santos
government’s peace talks with the FARC guerrillas. “With this, Santos gains
more military support for the peace process with the FARC,” Juanita León
wrote<http://cts.vresp.com/c/?JusttheFacts/0b81dfbddc/36ddb1edf4/0cbe860432>
 last week.

Many Colombian experts whom we’ve consulted have little doubt that there is
some sort of tacit quid pro quo at work with the armed forces: less
judicial pressure in exchange for a green light for the peace talks. If
this is true, it would indicate that Colombia’s elected leaders’ room for
maneuver is more circumscribed, and the country’s civil-military relations
are in poorer condition, than is generally recognized.


 By Adam Isacson
06/16/2013


  Visit the Just the Facts blog
<http://cts.vresp.com/c/?JusttheFacts/0b81dfbddc/36ddb1edf4/f24139981c/utm_content=cort.greene%40gmail.com&utm_source=VerticalResponse&utm_medium=Email&utm_term=Visit%20the%20Just%20the%20Facts%20blog&utm_campaign=%5BBlog%5D%20For%20Colombia%27s%20military%2C%20a%20new%20era%20of%20reduced%20civilian%20human%20rights%20prosecutions>


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