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Professor
William Schabas, “Human Rights and the Reaction to Terrorism”, 59 Advocate 905.
The lawyers Weekly Vol. 21, No. 21 October 5, 2001.
Human
Rights and the Reaction to Terrorism
Professor William
Schabas
The terrorist
acts of September 11 may well have been an attack on democracy, as George
Bush, Tony Blair and others asserted, but they were no threat to democracy.
Democratic regimes have survived far worse.
It is the reaction to terrorism that destroys democracies.
Modern democracies have perfectly
We track them down, catch
adequate justice systems for dealing with terrorists.them, bring them to trial and impose fit punishment.
That is what the US and the UK did with those responsible for the
Lockerbie crash, and for the embassy bombings in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam.
It is what the UN is doing for those accused of genocide and crimes against
humanity in the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda.
How much more healthy it is
for democracy that Milosevic be judged by an international court rather than
murdered by a cruise missile aimed at his home. As for the two Lockerbie defendants, one was
acquitted by Scottish judges earlier this year. Had the advocates of assassination and summary execution prevailed
in that case, an innocent man would have been killed in the name of democracy’s
war on terrorism.
Some American politicians
now argue that criminal justice is inadequate because the events of September
11 were an “act of war”. But according
to international law, we must know what State committed it.
A group of individuals, even numbering in the hundreds, cannot commit
an “act of war”.
Perhaps those who harbour
terrorists may themselves be accomplices in an “act of war”.
But let us remember the last time this bold claim was made, in 1914,
when Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia because a Serb nationalist had assassinated
its archduke. It unleashed a cascade of belligerent declarations
justified by an earlier equivalent of article 5 of the NATO treaty.
We now look
back in horror and bewilderment at how an overreaction to terrorism, in the
name of punishment and retribution, provoked a chain of events that ultimately
slaughtered an entire generation of European youth.
The anger and even the thirst
for vengeance of the victims and their families can well be understood.
But any act of reprisal that takes civilian casualties or is directed
against civilian objects is quite simply forbidden by international law.
It is a war crime. To the extent
reprisals are allowed at all, they must target purely military objectives.
The US seeks sympathy for
the thousands of innocent victims of this tragedy, and they have it.
Our hearts have been broken to see the agony of the bereaved relatives,
and an unbearably sad hole in a beloved skyline.
But international solidarity should not become a pretext for promoting
a US political agenda that has little to do with catching the perpetrators and
preventing future crimes.
Above all, if measures are
to be taken in the name of protecting democracy, there can be no room for double
standards. Only two years ago, in another
context, the US argued that a civilian office building in Belgrade was a legitimate
military target because it housed a television station.
The US justified the resulting deaths of civilian office workers as “collateral
damage”. If those responsible for attacking the World
Trade Centre are ever brought to court, they may invoke this precedent. The scale of the killings was different in
Belgrade, but the principle is barely distinguishable.
Let us recall, again and again,
that civilians must be spared in any conflict. The right to life is the most fundamental of
all human rights. The right to life
of thousands of innocent civilians in New York City and Washington has been
egregiously violated. But that same
right also belongs without exception to civilians in Belgrade, Baghdad and Kabul.
Professor
William A. Schabas, director, Irish Centre for Human Rights, Galway. Professor Schabas is a member and a director
of Lawyers’ Rights Watch Canada (LRWC), a committee of Canadian lawyers
promoting the rule of law and human rights internationally. LRWC can be contacted at: lrwc@portal.ca
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