[국제정치]국제기구에 대하여

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[국제정치]국제기구에 대하여에 대한 자료입니다.
목차
A. Risking Judicial Tyranny
B. A Dangerous Precedent
C. An Indiscriminate Court
본문내용
The U.N. Security Council would create a Human Rights Commission or a special subcommittee to report whenever systematic human rights violations seem to warrant judicial action.



When the government under which the alleged crime occurred is not authentically representative, or where the domestic judicial system is incapable of sitting in judgment on the crime, the Security Council would set up an ad hoc international tribunal on the model of those of the former Yugoslavia or Rwanda.



The procedures for these international tribunals as well as the scope of the prosecution should be precisely defined by the Security Council, and the accused should be entitled to the due process safeguards accorded in common jurisdictions.

Kenneth Roth
Jewish American
Graduate of Yale Law School and Brown University
Executive director of Human Rights Watch since 1993
He was a federal prosecutor for the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York
And the Iran-Contra investigation in Washington
Conducted human rights investigations
around the globe, devoting special attention to
issues of human rights
He has written over 70 articles and chapters
on a range of human rights topics
Kissinger writes about Pinochet case that “because he led a coup d'état against an elected leader’ who was a favorite of the left.
Rather, Pinochet was targeted because security forces under his command murdered and forcibly “disappeared” some 3,000people and tortured thousands more.

Kissinger legitimately worries that the nations exercising universal jurisdiction could include governments with less-entrenched traditions of due process than the United Kingdom's.
But his fear of governments robotically extraditing suspects for sham or counterproductive trials is overblown.

Until the ICC treaty is renegotiated to avoid what Kissinger sees as its "shortcomings and dangers," he recommends that the U.N. Security Council determine which cases warrant an international tribunal.
That option was rejected during the Rome negotiations on the ICC because it would allow the council's five permanent members to exempt their nationals and those of their allies by exercising their vetoes.

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