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Genocide - the gravest crime in international law

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  • Genocide - the gravest crime in international law

    Agence France Presse
    May 10, 2013 Friday 11:44 PM GMT


    Genocide - the gravest crime in international law

    THE HAGUE, May 10 2013

    Genocide, which former Guatemalan dictator Efrain Rios Montt was
    convicted of Friday, is the gravest crime in international
    humanitarian law -- and also the most difficult to prove.

    Derived from the Greek word "genos", for race or tribe, and the suffix
    "cide" from the Latin for "to kill"; genocide is defined by the United
    Nations as an "act committed with intent to destroy in whole or in
    part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group."
    The word was coined in 1944 by Raphael Lemkin, a Polish Jew who took
    refuge in the United States, to describe crimes committed by Nazi
    Germany during the Holocaust.

    It was used for the first time within a legal framework by an
    international military tribunal at Nuremberg to try Nazi leaders for
    their crimes in 1945. However, those accused were eventually convicted
    on charges of crimes against humanity.

    Genocide has been recognised within international law since 1948, with
    the advent of the UN Convention.

    The massacre of hundreds of thousands of Armenians in 1915 was
    recognised in 1985 as genocide by the United Nations.

    But even though the European Parliament recognised the Armenian
    genocide in 1987, only France, Switzerland, Belgium and Greece have
    followed suit in Europe.

    The Rwandan genocide, in which the UN said some 800,000 Tutsis and
    moderate Hutus were murdered in 1994, led to the creation of the
    International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, based in Arusha, Tanzania.

    It has handed out around 20 convictions since 1998 for the crime of
    genocide and complicity.

    The massacre of almost 8,000 Muslim men and boys by Bosnian Serb
    forces at Srebrenica, in July 1995 during the Bosnian war, was
    recognised as genocide by the UN's highest judicial organ, the
    International Court of Justice in 2007.

    The Balkans war crimes court, the International Criminal Tribunal for
    the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), has convicted several accused of
    genocide -- and several trials, including that of former Bosnian Serb
    military leader Ratko Mladic, are still underway.

    In Phnom Penh, two former leaders of Cambodia's Khmer Rouge regime
    from 1975-79 are currently on trial for genocide and war crimes before
    a UN-sponsored tribunal.

    Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir is wanted by the International
    Criminal Court (ICC) on an arrest warrant for genocide related to
    crimes committed against Darfur's civilian population.

    The Hague-based ICC, created in 1992, is the only permanent
    international tribunal to try the perpetrators of genocide.

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