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Date sent:              Mon, 10 May 1999 17:14:14 -0700
To:                     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From:                   Sid Shniad <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:                LAWYERS CHARGE NATO LEADERS BEFORE WAR CRIMES TRIBUNAL

PRESS RELEASE                                                   MAY 7, 1999

LAWYERS CHARGE NATO LEADERS BEFORE WAR CRIMES TRIBUNAL

A group of lawyers from several countries has laid a formal complaint 
with the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia 
against all of the individual leaders of the NATO countries and officials of 
NATO itself. 

The group, lead by professors from Osgoode Hall Law School of York 
University in Toronto -- where Tribunal prosecutor Louise Arbour was 
also a professor before becoming a judge -- have charged Bill Clinton, 
Madeleine Albright, Javier Solana, Jamie Shea, Jean Chretien, Art Eggle-
ton, Lloyd Axworthy and 60 other heads of state and government, foreign 
ministers, defence ministers and NATO officials, with war crimes commit-
ted in NATO's six-week old bombing campaign against Yugoslavia. 

The list of crimes includes "wilful killing, wilfully causing great suffering 
or serious injury to body or health, extensive destruction of property, not 
justified by military necessity and carried out unlawfully and wantonly, 
employment of poisonous weapons or other weapons to cause unnecessary 
suffering, wanton destruction of cities, towns, or villages, or devastation 
not justified by military necessity, attack, or bombardment, by whatever 
means, of undefended towns, villages, dwellings, or buildings, destruction 
or wilful damage done to institutions dedicated to religion, charity and 
education, the arts and sciences, historic monuments and works of art and 
science." 

The complaint also alleges "open violation" of the United Nations Charter, 
the NATO treaty itself, the Geneva Conventions and the Principles of In-
ternational Law Recognized by the Nuremberg Tribunal (the latter of 
which makes "planning, preparation, initiation or waging of a war of ag-
gression or a war in violation of international treaties, agreements or as-
surances" a crime). 

Under the Statute "a person who planned, instigated, ordered, committed 
or otherwise aided and abetted in the planning, preparation or execution of 
a crime shall be individually responsible for the crime" and "the official 
position of any accused person, whether as Head of State or Government 
or as a responsible Government official, shall not relieve such person of 
criminal responsibility or mitigate punishment." 

The complaint points to the bombing of civilian targets and alleges that 
NATO leaders "have admitted publicly to having agreed upon and ordered 
these actions, being fully aware of their nature and effects" and that "there 
is ample evidence in the public statements of NATO leaders that these at-
tacks on civilian targets are part of a deliberate attempt to terrorize the 
population to turn it against its leadership." 

The complaint cites a recent statement of the President of the Tribunal, 
Judge Gabrielle Kirk McDonald, urging that: "All States and organisa-
tions in possession of information pertaining to the alleged commission of 
crimes within the jurisdiction of the Tribunal should make such informa-
tion available without delay to the Prosecutor." 

The complaint also cites a statement of United Nations High Commis-
sioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson in which she says that "large 
numbers of civilians have incontestably been killed, civilian installations 
targeted on the grounds that they are or could be of military application 
and NATO remains sole judge of what is or is not acceptable to bomb...In 
this situation, the principle of proportionality must be adhered to by those 
carrying out the bombing campaign. It surely must be right to ask those 
carrying out the bombing campaign to weigh the consequences of their 
campaign for civilians in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia." Under the 
Statute, the Prosecutor is bound to "initiate investigations ex-officio or on 
the basis of information obtained from any source, particularly from Gov-
ernments, United Nations organs, intergovernmental and non-
governmental organizations" and to "assess the information received or 
obtained and decide whether there is sufficient basis to proceed. Upon a 
determination that a case exists, the Prosecutor is bound to "prepare an 
indictment containing a concise statement of the facts and the crime or 
crimes with which the accused is charged under the Statute and transmit it 
to a judge of the Trial Chamber." 

The complaint asks Judge Arbour to "immediately investigate and indict 
for serious crimes against international humanitarian law" the 67 named 
leaders and whoever else shall be determined by the Prosecutor's investi-
gations to have committed crimes in the NATO attack on Yugoslavia 
commencing March 24, 1999." 

Copies of the charges have been sent to the accused. 

Participating in the action are 15 lawyers and law professors as well as 
the American Association of Jurists, a pan American organization of law-
yers, judges, law professors and students, with membership in all coun-
tries of the American Continent from Tierra del Fuego to Canada, an 
NGO with consultative status before the Social and Economic Council of 
the United Nations. 

Professor Michael Mandel, spokesman for the group of complainants, said 
in Toronto today: "The bombing of civilians is not only immoral, it is 
criminal and punishable under the laws governing the Tribunal. You can-
not kill a woman and child in Belgrade on the theoretical possibility that it 
might save a woman and child in Pristina. Even in a legal war you cannot 
kill civilians and destroy an entire country as a military strategy. But this 
is an illegal war and the NATO leaders are acting like outlaws. So far 
they have risked nothing by sending others to do their killing and destroy-
ing. We believe that if they are held individually responsible, as the law 
requires, they won't feel so free to spill other peoples' blood." 

For further information please contact: 
Toronto: Professor Michael Mandel ( telephone 416-736-5039 e-mail 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] or David Jacobs telephone 416-539---e-mail 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
In Geneva: Alejandro Teitelbaum, e-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Michel Chossudovsky, Professor of Economics, University of Ottawa
Member of the Ad Hoc Committee to Stop Canada's Participation in 
the War in Yugoslavia 
Voice 613-5625800, Ext. 1415 email [EMAIL PROTECTED]

On Kosovo: http://www.transnational.org/features/crimefinansed.html
On the break-up of Yugoslavia:
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/62/022.html



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