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The Human Right/ Rule of Law Department monitors local compliance with the
Rules of the Road Procedures, monitors local war crime trials, and facilitates
the Inter-Entity exhumation process.
Domestic War Crime Trials and the Rules of the Road:
Paragraph 5 in the Rome
Agreement (18 February 1996) states:
"Persons, other than those already indicted by the International Tribunal,
may be arrested and detained for serious violations of international
humanitarian law only pursuant to a previously issued order, warrant, or
indictment that has been reviewed and deemed consistent with international legal
standards by the International Tribunal."
The rationale behind the Rome agreement was to facilitate freedom of
movement. This was particularly important in the immediate aftermath of the
cessation of hostilities in order to promote participation by persons of each
ethnicity in the Municipal Elections, the first of which were held in September
1996. It was subsequently also crucial to facilitating the implementation of
these election results, as this required the return of some elected
representatives to their municipalities.
The Rome Agreement requires review, by the International Criminal
Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY)
of specific cases, before authorities can arrest individuals suspected of having
committed war crimes. To this end a set of "Procedures and Guidelines for
Parties for the Submission of Cases to the International Criminal Tribunal for
the Former Yugoslavia under the Agreed Measures of 18 February 1996" was
developed. These procedures have become known as the Rules of the Road
Procedures.
The Rules of the Road review serves two purposes: (1) to determine
whether [Rule 7,a] "sufficient evidence has been produced to provide reasonable
grounds for believing that a person who is the subject of the request has
committed a serious violation of humanitarian law", and (2) [Rule 7,b] "whether
the Prosecutor intends to take steps under the Tribunalas rules to secure the
arrest of detention of the person who is subject of the request, or intends to
request national courts to defer the competence of the International
Tribunal."
It is important to stress that the Rules of the Road is not designed
to determine the guilt or innocence of individuals for specific crimes, a point
which largely has been lost at the local press and unfortunately occasionally
also on the authorities. Rather the focus of the Rules of the Road is to
determine whether a sufficient threshold under international humanitarian law
has been met in the pre-trial phase.
A review of over 50 domestic war crimes trials which the
International Community have knowledge of and in many cases have monitored shows
that the authorities, with some exceptions, have adhered to the procedures
established under the Rome Agreement. It should be noted that although a few
cases have been conducted in the Republika Srpska, and several cases are
presently underway in Mostar, the vast majority of war crimes cases before
domestic courts have been conducted in Bosniak majority areas. Finally it should
also be mentioned that a large number of cases have been submitted for review
where there have not yet been any arrests.
Inter-Entity Exhumations and Missing Persons:
Inter-Entity exhumations are based on the so-called Banja Luka
Agreement (25 June 1996) and the subsequently developed Operational
Agreement on Exhumations (4 September 1996). According to these two
agreements the three parties are in principle free to carry out exhumations and
collect unburied mortal remains in territory under the authority of a different
majority ethnic groupas. The Operational Agreement establishes a notification
procedure involving OHR as an intermediary - which the parties must
observe. Inter-Entity exhumations have been carried out since fall 1996 without
any security incidents.
In August 2000, the International Commission for Missing Persons (ICMP) founded the Missing Persons
Institute (MPI) for BiH. The
Institute represents an effort to integrate the BiH government into a national
structure that represents all three majority ethnic/religious groups in the
pursuit of a common goal: to resolve the fate of persons missing from the
conflicts in Bosnia, regardless of their religion or ethnic origin. On January
1, 2001 the Joint Exhumation Process was transferred from the Office of the High
Representative (OHR) to the Missing Persons Institute (MPI). The MPI Supervisory
Board convened for the first time in March 2001, chaired by Jakob Finci with 3
members from family associations and 3 representatives of the Federation and RS
Commissions on Missing Persons (representing the 3 majority ethnicities).
By March 2001, the International Committee of the Red Cross received tracing
requests from families relating to 20,560 persons. Of these, the fate of 2,275
has been clarified.
OHR Human Rights/ Rule of Law Department, September 2001
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