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Permanent international war crimes court approved Copyright 1998 Nando.net Copyright 1998 The Associated Press ROME (July 17, 1998 5:46 p.m. EDT http://www.nandotimes.com) -- Delegates from more than 100 countries overwhelmingly approved a historic treaty Friday creating the world's first permanent war crimes tribunal -- ignoring strenuous U.S. objections. The delegates erupted into cheers and applause when the treaty won final approval by a vote of 120-7, with 21 abstaining. An American bid to undermine the package deal was beat back by a vote of 113-17, with 25 nations abstaining. India also tried to torpedo the deal. The showdown at the U.N. talks attended by 160 nations created strange bedfellows: Joining the United States in denouncing treaty provisos were nations like Libya, Algeria, China, Qatar and Yemen. Meanwhile, its closest allies, countries like Canada and Britain, mustered to the treaty's defense. But more than a defeat for a superpower, the vote was a victory for an idea, one born with the Nuremberg trials of Nazi war criminals, put in the deep freeze by the Cold War, then revived in the ethnic bloodbaths of Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia. "I think this is a great, historic achievement," said Benjamin Ferencz, 78, a Nuremberg prosecutor who's worked ever since for a permanent tribunal. The new international criminal court, which will operate out of The Hague, Netherlands, will bring individuals to justice for genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and aggression. Independent of the United Nations, it will be able to act even when the international community is divided, as it was in the Balkans and in Africa. A temporary war crimes tribunal, also in The Hague, was established in 1993 by the U.N. Security Council to prosecute war crimes in the former Yugoslavia. It has indicted 75 people. The court also is pursuing atrocities committed in the 1994 Rwandan genocide. Friday's carefully crafted compromise treaty emerged after weeks of difficult talks in Rome and years of preliminary negotiations. The United States wanted the option to veto the prosecution of any American citizen. With U.S. troops deployed in hot spots around the world, Washington fears they could become targets of politically motivated charges. But the escape hatch wouldn't have been exclusive; many feared the Pol Pots of the world could also jump through it. A wide coalition of nations, including America's best allies, fought vehemently to block it. Despite weeks of arm-twisting, U.S. diplomats failed to win the day. Their bid to prevent the creation of an independent prosecutor also met with defeat. "We don't expect them to sign the treaty," Canadian Foreign Minister Lloyd Axworthy said of the Americans. "But at least if they aren't aggressively opposed ..." The American pressure was intense and its delegation wielded virtually every carrot -- and stick -- at its disposal. It threatened poor nations with a loss of aid and allies like Germany with the rupture of key military alliances. In the final hours of the grueling, five-week conference, the behind-the-scenes maneuvering reached a fever pitch. The draft was already full of concessions; proponents feared any tinkering might unravel the whole deal. The list of crimes, for example, was expanded to add aggression, which the nonaligned nations had sought. In a nod to the five nuclear powers on the U.N. Security Council, the treaty omits any specific mention of nuclear weapons. A proviso on war crimes addressed French concerns. The negotiations split the conference into two opposing camps: one lobbying for the strongest, most independent court possible and the other hoping to curb its scope. A major force was a broad coalition of 800 citizen groups from around the world, which worked closely with a group of about 60 nations, many of them America's best allies and fellow democracies. The citizen groups lobbied hard for an independent prosecutor, the inclusion of crimes of sexual violence and internal conflicts, victims' rights, and a host of other issues. William Pace, the coalition's coordinator, praised the treaty as "one of the greatest victories for peace in the last 100 years." "This is the rule of law prevailing over the rule of brute force," he said. A formal signing ceremony for the treaty was scheduled for Saturday. --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl