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  • Enforced Disappearance: Un Convention "A Major Achievement" That Bri

    ENFORCED DISAPPEARANCE: UN CONVENTION "A MAJOR ACHIEVEMENT" THAT BRINGS NEW HOPE
    Cordula Droege

    International Committee of Red Cross, Switzerland
    Dec 21 2006

    The new UN Convention on enforced disappearance was adopted by the
    United Nations General Assembly this week. In an interview for the
    website, ICRC legal adviser Cordula Droege explains the convention
    and talks about the difference this landmark treaty can make to the
    victims of enforced disappearance and their families.

    http://www.icrc.org/Web/Eng/siteeng0.ns f/htmlall/convention-enforced-disappearance-interv iew-201206
    Cordula Droege ©ICRC Overall, what does this convention address?

    The convention is the first universally binding treaty that defines
    enforced disappearance as a human rights violation and prohibits it.

    Enforced disappearance is defined, in short, as the abduction or
    deprivation of liberty of a person by state authorities, followed
    by the denial of those authorities to disclose the whereabouts or
    fate of the person. In order to prohibit enforced disappearance,
    the convention has four main aspects:

    Combating impunity - The convention puts an obligation on states to
    bring enforced disappearance offenders to justice. They must do so
    not only with regard to persons who commit enforced disappearances
    on their own territory, but also in cases of alleged offences in
    other jurisdictions: in those cases states have to either prosecute
    or extradite the alleged offender, so that no one can escape justice.

    Prevention - The convention provides for a number of procedural
    safeguards so that people don't go missing: people deprived of liberty
    have to be kept in an official place, to be registered, to have all
    their movements registered. Most importantly everyone deprived of
    liberty must be allowed contact with the outside world, especially
    to communicate with their family and counsel, and the family and
    counsel have a right to information on the detention and whereabouts
    of the person. Given the organization's long experience in prevention,
    the ICRC was very involved in the drafting of these guarantees.

    Rights of victims - This is the first convention that recognizes that
    the victims of enforced disappearances are not only the disappeared
    themselves but also their relatives. It acknowledges the right of the
    families to know the fate of their relatives, and also recognizes
    that victims of enforced disappearance have a right to reparation
    for the wrong that was done to them.

    Enforcement - The convention establishes an international committee
    of ten independent experts to monitor compliance. These experts will
    review reports by states and can also receive individual complaints.

    The convention also foresees a 'habeas corpus' procedure by which
    relatives and other interested persons who fear that a person has
    been subjected to enforced disappearance can seize the international
    committee directly and if the complaint is substantiated the committee
    will ask the state to search for and locate the missing person.

    ©ICRC/B. Heger/pe-e-00005 Ayacucho, Peru. National association of
    families of persons missing, detained or held hostage in areas under
    a state of emergency.

    Ayacucho, Peru. National association of families of persons missing,
    detained or held hostage in areas under a state of emergency.

    ©ICRC/B. Heger/pe-e-00005 Who else was involved in the drafting of
    the convention?

    Initially some Latin American associations of families of victims of
    enforced disappearance demanded an international convention in 1981.

    It then took twenty-five years to enter and go through the United
    Nations machinery. States were, of course, the main actors of the
    negotiations, since they will be bound by the convention. However,
    it is very important to note that family associations were present
    throughout the drafting, not only from Latin America, but also from
    other continents and the fact that they were present in the room during
    the drafting ensured that the final document, while not fulfilling
    all their expectations, is a strong treaty.

    What does this convention bring in terms of novelty to other
    international legal instruments already available?

    It's the first convention that explicitly prohibits enforced
    disappearance. Up until now, enforced disappearance had only been
    seen as a violation of certain rights in existing treaties, such as
    freedom from torture, the right to liberty or the right to life. But
    enforced disappearance is more than just the sum of these different
    aspects. It is characterized by the specific aspect of denial - denying
    the abducted person's very existence, denying families information on
    their relatives. This aspect is recognized in the convention because
    it sees enforced disappearance as a violation in itself. Moreover,
    there are a number of new binding norms in the text that did not
    exist before in any human rights treaty.

    Will this convention help in preventing enforced disappearances,
    in practical terms?

    In practical terms an international treaty can only ever help enforce
    human rights if and when it becomes implemented into national law and
    practice. So the treaty on its own will not suffice. What now needs
    to happen is ratification and then implementation. Implementation
    means two things: on the one hand, states have to enact national
    legislation so as to have the legal tools to apply the convention.

    For example, states have to make enforced disappearance a crime in
    their national law, otherwise they can't prosecute offenders.

    Secondly, states have to take practical measures such as training
    their officials and, very importantly, systematically bring to justice
    the perpetrators. This requires political will. The convention is
    an objective international legal yardstick that will help to provide
    a basis to combat enforced disappearance where there is the will to
    do so.

    ©ICRC/B. Heger/pe-e-00004 Yerevan, Armenia. Mothers with pictures of
    missing sons.

    Yerevan, Armenia. Mothers with pictures of missing sons. ©ICRC/B.

    Heger/pe-e-00004 How are families who have experienced enforced
    disappearance welcoming this convention? Is there any hope it will
    have a deterring effect on countries or groups who use enforced
    disappearance as a weapon of war?

    As I mentioned, there are some family associations that have been
    asking for this convention since 1981 and they are, of course,
    celebrating this extraordinary achievement. But then of course there
    are many victims of enforced disappearances and families who are very
    remote from the international legal scene and for those persons and
    their families only the implementation of the convention will make a
    difference. Will it have a deterring effect? Again, the convention in
    itself is not enough, unless states implement it seriously. That said,
    an international enforcement mechanism like the future committee on
    enforced disappearances set up by the convention, to which people can
    bring complaints beyond the state to an international body, can also
    hopefully make a difference.

    Are there states who oppose this convention?

    Some states were reluctant about the convention during the drafting
    and some states have made statements to the effect that while they
    accept the convention they will interpret it in certain ways that
    are in conformity with their national law. But what counts is that
    the convention was adopted by consensus, which means that no state
    raised its voice against it. The resolution adopting the convention
    had supporting states from all continents, so there is reason to
    be optimistic.

    So states will not dare publicly oppose this convention?

    I think it's very difficult for a state to oppose a treaty banning
    enforced disappearance, which is simply ethically unjustifiable. The
    real test is, however, which states will ratify the convention. It will
    be a matter of doing enough public communications work and campaigning
    so that states are sufficiently convinced to ratify the convention.

    Are you optimistic that all states that support the convention will
    ratify it?

    Yes, let's be optimistic, but it won't happen straight away. Some
    states have already acknowledged that it will take some time because
    they have to first adjust their national laws, which is a very
    legitimate concern. But let's not wait too long.

    --Boundary_(ID_DVa66IJvpmIOIqSCv3Ba5g)--
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