Castan Centre for Human Rights Law
Submission to the Joint Standing Committee on Treaties*
Inquiry into ratification of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal
Court
The Castan Centre for Human Rights Law strongly supports the establishment
of the International Criminal Court ("ICC") and urges the Joint
Standing Committee on Treaties to recommend that the Government ratify the
Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court ("the Statute"),
without delay.
This submission outlines the reasons why ratification of the Statute
should not only proceed but be expedited. We have considered and addressed
the main objections to ratification. In addition, the Castan Centre has
reviewed the Government's proposed implementing legislation, concluding
that the Bills:
· fulfil Australia's obligations under the Statute;
· adequately protect national security interests and sovereignty;
and
· should be enacted with a small number of amendments.
1. Reasons for ratifying the Rome Statute of the International Criminal
Court
1.1 Reinforcement of the international criminal justice system
The ICC fills a long-standing gap in the international legal system.
In the past, it has been possible for individuals guilty of the most egregious
human rights abuses to hide, or rather, be hidden with impunity. The inability
or unwillingness of certain States to bring to justice and hold fully
accountable those responsible for genocide, war crimes and crimes against
humanity is staggering. By bringing the ICC into existence, State Parties
ensure that these individuals will be properly tried and duly punished
- if not by the State in which the crimes were committed, then by the
ICC itself. In this sense, the existence of the ICC will serve to encourage
States to act responsibly and transparently when dealing with those charged
with serious criminal offences.
1.2 The ICC is global and permanent
Whereas the ad hoc tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda are
restricted by geographical and time limitations, the ICC will be permanent
and global in its scope. The global nature of the ICC means that it will
not be selective in the areas of conflict it targets. The permanency of
the court will greatly reduce the costs (both time-wise and financial)
associated with establishing a new tribunal for every emerging human rights
conflict.
2. Reasons against ratification
2.1 Concession of Sovereignty
Various commentators have voiced the concern that ratification of the
Statute will constitute a concession of Australia's sovereignty. It is
true that every time the Government agrees to be bound in international
law, it yields some degree of autonomy. In the case of the Rome Statute,
State Parties agree to cooperate with the ICC - a supranational tribunal
- in its investigation, prosecution and punishment of individuals who
commit the most egregious crimes within their sovereign territories. Certainly,
Australia's accession to the Statute would indicate that an aspect of
our criminal justice system is now shared with this supranational tribunal.
Would ratification mean a loss of sovereignty? The simple answer is clearly,
no. Under the principle of complementarity, the ICC will act only when
national courts are unable or unwilling to genuinely exercise jurisdiction.
On a practical level, this would mean that unless the Australian criminal
justice system ceases to function in its current form, there would be
no intervention on the part of the ICC. Some critics have argued that
there may be arbitrariness in deciding whether a State Party has genuinely
executed its primary duties in prosecuting individuals in respect of Article
5 crimes. This is countered by the carefully detailed definitions of unwillingness
and inability in Article 17. In addition, the accused or any State (be
it a party to the Statute or not) may challenge the jurisdiction of the
ICC or the admissibility of the case. Related decisions may be appealed.
The Government's proposed implementing legislation reinforces the principle
of complementarity and further safeguards Australia's sovereignty. Clause
3 of the International Criminal Court Bill 2001 states:
'(1) It is the Parliament's intention that the jurisdiction of the ICC
is to be complementary to the jurisdiction of Australia.
(2) Accordingly, this Act does not affect the primary right of Australia
to exercise its jurisdiction with respect to crimes within the jurisdiction
of the ICC.'
2.2 Breach of Separation of Powers Doctrine
A concern has been raised in a number of submissions to JSCOT that Australia's
domestic implementation of the Statute would be unconstitutional and,
therefore, invalid. The Government is empowered to enact implementing
legislation under s 51(xxix) of the Constitution (the External Affairs
Power), which is subject to the rest of the Constitution, including Ch.
III. Under Ch. III, judicial power may only be vested in 'federal courts'
, including the High Court and state courts. The proposed legislation,
it has been argued, would invalidly confer judicial power on the ICC,
a court which is not a federal court as contemplated by s 71 of the Constitution.
In response, we offer three alternative arguments:
2.2.1 International tribunals exercise judicial power as an exception
to the separation of powers doctrine
There is judicial support, albeit limited, for the notion that an international
criminal court, operating in respect of a crime committed in Australia,
is not exercising Commonwealth judicial power. In Polyukhovich v Commonwealth,
Deane J commented in obiter:
'In so far as Australia's participation in the establishment and functioning
of an international tribunal for the trial and punishment of
crimes
[against international law] is concerned, the provisions of Ch. III would
be inapplicable for the reason that the judicial power of the Commonwealth
would not be involved. Australia's participation would be as a member
State of the International Community and the judicial power involved would
be the judicial power of that Community.'
Whilst it is unclear whether this argument would find favour with the
current High Court, there is every reason why it should be raised in the
event that Australia's proposed implementing legislation is challenged.
The US Supreme Court has created an exception to the strict doctrine
of separation of powers by adopting a purposive approach. In Commodity
Futures Trading Commission v Schor, the Court held that a tribunal which
fulfils an expert function not fulfilled by the federal or state trial
courts is not in breach of the separation of judicial powers provisions
set out in Article III of the US Constitution. Under this analysis, Audrey
Benison argues that because the ICC will prosecute 'high profile crimes
in an international forum
, [providing] the type of continuity that
is lacking from patchwork domestic prosecutions', there is no constitutional
impediment to US ratification of the Statute. In any case, as the Statute
makes clear in article 17, such international prosecutions will themselves
only occur where domestic courts lack the competence to prosecute - which
is precisely the sort of lacuna that must be filled.
2.2.2 The proposed domestic legislation is not constitutionally invalid
because it does not confer Commonwealth judicial power on the ICC
The Government's proposed implementing legislation may not be in breach
of Ch. III on the basis that it is not the instrument which confers judicial
power on the ICC. Rather, it is the initial step of ratification - an
act of the Executive - which triggers the jurisdiction of the ICC over
crimes committed in Australian territory:
'When will the Court [ICC] have jurisdiction over crimes? A State must
first consent to the Statute by ratifying
it. Once it is a party,
it accepts the Court's jurisdiction.'
Whilst the terms of an international treaty do not become binding in
Australian domestic law until an implementing Act has been passed, ratification
itself binds Australia in international law to the terms of the treaty.
In this particular instance, ratification of the Statute would activate
the ICC's jurisdiction over Australia irrespective of whether or not domestic
legislation has been enacted.
When the Government ratifies treaties, it is exercising its prerogative
power, derived from s 61 of the Constitution. Unlike the External Affairs
Power, s 61 is not subject to the rest of the Constitution. Requirements
raised by Ch. III, therefore, are arguably immaterial to the exercise
of prerogative power. As there is no precedent for resolving a conflict
between s 61 and s 71, it is difficult to project which would be granted
ascendancy. In any event, owing to its inherently "political"
nature, the prerogative power to ratify treaties has been held to be non-justiciable.
2.2.3 'Other courts' in s 71 should include international tribunals
Even if ratification was held to vest judicial power in the ICC (and
this argument itself poses conceptual difficulties: under s 71, judicial
power cannot be vested by the exercise of the prerogative; it can only
be vested by the Constitution or by Parliament), it could be argued that
the ICC falls within the category of 'such other courts as it [Parliament]
invests with federal jurisdiction'. The phrase has previously been read
to include state courts; with the increasing role of international law,
'other courts' should be further expanded to include international courts.
2.3 Further breaches of Ch. III / double jeopardy
Under the Statute, the ICC may decide to prosecute an individual who
has previously been tried by an Australian court.
If the ICC reached such a decision, it would no doubt request the assistance
of Australian executive officers to arrest and surrender the individual
to the ICC. This raises concerns about double jeopardy and breaches of
Ch. III. In his submission to JSCOT, Professor George Winterton writes:
'
such action by Australian executive officers may contravene the
separation of judicial power which requires executive compliance with
lawful decisions of courts exercising the judicial power of the Commonwealth.
It would seem to be a contravention of Ch. III of the Constitution for
the executive to arrest a person acquitted by a Ch. III court and surrender
him or her for further trial by another court exercising authority derived
from Commonwealth law (insofar as Australian law is concerned) for essentially
the same offence.' [emphasis added]
Several points can be made here. Firstly, the ICC is prohibited by Art
20(3) from prosecuting a person who has previously been tried lawfully:
it may only do so where the original trial was not conducted independently
or impartially or was undertaken for the purpose of shielding the defendant
from criminal responsibility for crimes within the jurisdiction of the
ICC. As such, any request made by the ICC to Australian executive officers
would not put them in breach of Ch. III which requires compliance with
lawful decisions of Ch. III courts.
Secondly, it has been argued that the ICC is not a court which derives
its power from Commonwealth law (see 2.2.1 and 2.2.2). It could be said
that the ICC derives its judicial authority from the International Community,
adopting Deane J's contention in Polyukhovich. Alternatively, it could
be argued that ratification, and not Commonwealth law actuates the jurisdiction
of the ICC over Australians and/or over criminal acts committed in Australian
territory. Under either analysis, executive officers would not be in breach
of Ch. III as they would not be surrendering a previously tried defendant
to another court exercising authority derived from Commonwealth law, i.e.
another Ch. III court.
Thirdly, political realities must be taken into consideration: if the
ICC requested the arrest and surrender of a person who had previously
been tried lawfully by an Australian court, it would seem most unlikely
that the Australian Government would comply. More to the point, it is
highly improbable that the ICC would invoke its jurisdiction in respect
of an Article 5 crime committed in Australia in the first place; therefore,
the risk of a successful constitutional challenge to ratification would
seem minimal. This minute risk needs to be weighed against the greater
value of joining the international community in protecting global peace
and security.
3. Reasons for expediting ratification
The ICC is established once 60 States have ratified the Statute. These
States will form the Assembly of States Parties which makes crucial management
decisions for the ICC. States which ratify but which are not within the
first 60 to do so will only be accorded observer status at the initial
meetings of the Assembly of States Parties. To date, 52 countries have
ratified the Statute.
If Australia is not amongst the first 60 countries to ratify the Statute,
its ability to influence the ICC's constitution and its processes will
be minimal:
· It will be unable to vote on the adoption of crucial instruments,
such as the Rules of Procedure and Evidence and the ICC's first year budget.
· No Australian can be nominated for election as a judge, prosecutor
or deputy prosecutor and Australia will be unable to vote in the elections
for these positions. The 18 judges are elected on a staggered basis: one
third for 3 years, one third for 6 years and the final third for 9 years.
The judges elected for 3 years will be eligible for reappointment for
a further 6 years and it is quite likely that all will be re-elected.
As such, there would be virtually no possibility of an Australian judge
on the ICC for at least the first 6 years of its operation.
Quite apart from the fact that observer status would severely limit Australia's
ability to influence and shape the future of the ICC, a failure to be
within the first 60 countries to ratify would reflect most poorly on Australia's
heretofore leading role in the negotiation process to create the ICC.
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade notes that in its role as
Chair of the "Like-Minded Group", a caucus of 67 States committed
to the establishment of the ICC, 'Australia has been active in encouraging
signature and ratification [of the Statute].' To retreat from such a position
would be highly inappropriate.
4. The proposed domestic legislation for implementing the Statute
We note that the International Criminal Court Bill and the International
Criminal Court (Consequential Amendments) Bill, produced by the Attorney-General
as exposure drafts, were referred to JSCOT to '
assist it to make
comprehensive recommendations on ratification of the Statute.' Nonetheless,
JSCOT has turned the focus of its inquiry from 'the question of whether
or not it would be in Australia's interest to ratify the Statute' to an
'examination of the Government's proposed legislation'. Whilst the Castan
Centre welcomes the opportunity to comment on the important proposed legislation,
we urge the Committee to not spend an undue amount of time assessing the
substance of the drafts (as this is not the task with which it has been
charged ).
Without wishing to conduct too technical an analysis of the two draft
Bills, it is our belief that the proposed legislation sets out Australia's
obligations under the Statute with precision and thoroughness. The definitions
given to the ICC crimes are highly progressive, often replicating the
Statute's own definitions. At the same time, the draft Bills amply provide
for the protection of Australia's national interests and its primary right
to exercise its own criminal jurisdiction.
Some minor amendments are recommended, however:
4.1 International Criminal Court Bill 2001
4.1.1 There should be time constraints on issuing arrest warrants
Under cl. 21, when the Attorney-General receives a request from the ICC
for the arrest and surrender of a person, he or she must present that
request to any magistrate who will then produce a warrant. Despite the
fact that Article 59 of the Statue emphasises the need for immediate action
in these circumstances, cl. 21 does not impose any time limitations upon
either the Attorney-General's response to a request or upon the magistrate's
granting of the warrant. The same deficiencies appear in cl. 22, regarding
provisional arrests.
4.1.2 Immunity of all ICC officials needs to be protected
Clause 102 states that while the ICC is sitting in Australia, it may
exercise its functions and powers as provided under the Statute, Article
48(2) of which sets out the privileges and immunities to be afforded to
ICC judges, prosecutor, deputy prosecutors and the registrar. The Preparatory
Committee recently adopted the Agreement on the Privileges and Immunities
of the ICC ("APIC"), extending such protection to other ICC
officials. We recommend that cl. 102 should be amended to reflect a commitment
to APIC and its extension of privileges and immunities to ICC officials
not named in Article 48(2).
4.1.3 Bill should articulate position on statute of limitations and
immunities attaching to official capacity
Articles 27 and 29 state that regular barriers to prosecution, such as
statutes of limitations and immunities attaching to official capacity,
will not apply to Article 5 prosecutions, whether at the national level
or in relation to a prosecution by the ICC. The draft legislation is silent
on these matters.
There is an inherent danger in not explicitly removing the operation
of statutes of limitations and official immunities in such circumstances.
In the case of national prosecutions of ICC crimes, the application of
these barriers might lead the ICC to determine that under Article 17,
Australia was unwilling to investigate or prosecute the case itself.
4.2 International Criminal Court (Consequential Amendments) Bill 2001
4.2.1 There should be no restrictive purpose requirement for crime
of torture
In defining torture as a war crime, the draft Bill imposes a restrictive
purpose requirement. In addition to the actus reus component, it must
be shown that the perpetrator acted for the purposes of:
(i) obtaining information or a confession; or
(ii) a punishment, intimidation or coercion; or
(iii) a reason based on discrimination of any kind.
Though these requirements were previously adopted in the Convention against
Torture , the Rome Statute specifically omits them. By broadening the
crime's ambit, the Statute reflects a better understanding of how and
why acts of torture are committed. We recommend that the draft legislation
follows this approach.
4.2.2 Minimum age for conscription should be eighteen years
With regard to the minimum age for recruitment into the armed forces,
there is a discrepancy between the Statute (which sets the minimum age
at 15 years) and the more progressive Optional Protocol to the Convention
on the Rights of the Child (which sets it at 18 years). Whereas the draft
Bill sets the minimum age for conscription at 15 years , it is our recommendation
that the approach of the Convention on the Rights of the Child be adopted.
5. Conclusion
At the beginning of the new millennium, Australia has the opportunity
to join the international community in bringing to an end the free reign
of those who commit the most extreme human rights abuses. The ICC represents
a watershed in the development of international justice and in the creation
of a more meaningful notion of global peace and security. Australia has
long taken a stance on such matters and should continue to do so in ratifying
the Rome Statute. Moreover, we urge JSCOT to recommend that the Government
ratify with haste so that Australia may actively participate in and influence
the direction of the ICC in its initial years of operation.
There are several concerns with ratifying the treaty, most of which are
nullified by a close reading of the Statute itself and by understanding
the intelligent approach the Attorney-General's Department has adopted
in drafting proposed implementing legislation. Other concerns, which are
highly legalistic in nature, require careful assessment. At the same,
however, legal considerations need to be placed in a political context:
· What is the likelihood that an ICC crime would be committed in
Australia?
· If it were, what is the likelihood that the Australian criminal
justice system would be unwilling or unable to conduct a bona fide prosecution?
· If the ICC unfairly determined that Australia had been unwilling
or unable to investigate and prosecute, is it realistic that Australia
would comply with requests to cooperate?
We consider that even if there could be a successful constitutional challenge
to Australia's ratification of the Statute and subsequent enactment of
implementing legislation, it is highly unlikely that the challenge would
actually arise. Under these circumstances, we strongly advocate the Government's
immediate ratification of the Rome Statute and entreat JSCOT to do the
same.
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