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JUSTICE AND PEACE ?– Colombia’s transitional justice system. Peter Burbidge Westminster University . Transitional justice principles . UN (Louis Joinet) principles 1995 Justice – access for victims + an adequate punishment for war-crimes etc. Truth + collective memory
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JUSTICE AND PEACE ?– Colombia’s transitional justice system Peter Burbidge Westminster University
Transitional justice principles • UN (Louis Joinet) principles 1995 • Justice – access for victims + an adequate punishment for war-crimes etc. • Truth + collective memory • Full reparation for victims • Guarantee of non-repetition
Transitional Justice examples • South Africa peace settlement with amnesties subject to Truth & Reconciliation commissions. • Northern Ireland – Good Friday agreement – release of “political” prisoners. No further prosecutions? • Colombia – a transitional justice system but without the transition to peace!
Colombia’s civil conflicts • 1948 Bogatazo uprising leads to Violencia civil war – conservatives v. liberals. • 1958 national front- alternate governments • 1964 – FARC peasant guerrilla uprising starts. [other groups e.g ELN, M19] • 1965 – government “state of emergency”. Decree 3398 allows MoD to arm civilians temporarily.
The paramilitaries - 1 • 1968 - Decree now permanent – “self-defence groups” created with military support. • 1970s onwards – land-grabs, drug-trafficking, massacres, murders. • Targets – peasant farmers, trade-unionists, journalists, politicians – lawyers. • 1987 19 merchants massacre [1989 - investigators massacred]
The paramilitaries - 2 • 1989 – Decree 1194 makes self-defence groups a crime • Also a crime - promoting, directing, fostering, financing, organising, training or equipping especially if ex-military. • State responsibility for “interpretation of legal framework that gave them cover” Inter-American Court of Human Rights.
Peace initiatives – up to 1991 • Conditional amnesties for political crimes offered in 1981, 1982, 1985, 1989, 1990. • 1984 FARC ceasefire - creation of Union Patriotica (UP) with communists. • 1984 -1990s assassination of 3,000 UP party members by paramilitaries. • 1985 M19 occupation of Supreme Court ends with over 100 dead (13 judges).
The 1991 constitution • March 1990 – M19 signs peace deal forms Alianza Democratica (AD-M19) • May 1990 AD-M19 win 13% of vote. • Constituent assembly (AD-M19 with 19 members) votes new constitution. Rejected by FARC. • International treaties e.g American Convention on HR have higher status than Colombian law • Human rights, social, environmental and economic rights • Right of complaint to Constitutional Court (tutela)
State of play - 2002 • Guerrilla numbers (combatants) – FARC 13,000, ELN 4,000 [MOD figures] • Paramilitary numbers (AUC) – 13,500 • Many child soldiers • 3.6 million displaced persons • Over 60% best land in AUC hands • FARC and AUC links to drug-trafficking. • At least 300,000 dead.
Uribe – democratic security • Elected May 2002 (re-elected 2006) • Big military increases • Strategy - demobilise paramilitaries, negotiate with ELN (Cuba), put military pressure on FARC. • NB. Changes to justice system (inquisitorial to oral accusatorial) 2005
Demobilisation • December 2002 – AUC permanent ceasefire. Law 782 of 2002 – amnesty & rehabilitation. • November 2003 – 1st of 37 demobilising ceremonies. AUC held in camps. • By June 2006 30,944 paramilitaries demobilised – 17,564 weapons collected. • Individual demobilisation – 12,000 (mostly FARC) Rehabilitation programmes. • June 2005 Justice and Peace law 975 of 2005 – alternative sentence.
Amnesty? • Constitution 1991 allows amnesty for “political crimes” e.g. rebellion. • 2005 Law – membership of armed group = sedition = rebellion = political crime. • Hence paramilitaries can be amnestied! • Constitutional Court (May 2006) amnesty invalid as incorrect procedure (not retrospective) • Supreme Court (Aug. 2007) no amnesty for AUC members as not rebelling so not political!
Human Rights - impunity • Inter-American Commission/ Court of human rights (Washington + San Jose) • No amnesties for major HR violations. • Impunity: “the failure to investigate, prosecute, capture, judge and convict those responsible for violations of human rights” • Mapiripan 2005 – Prosecutors must a) identify victims; b) recover and preserve evidence; c) identify and take statements from witnesses and d) determine the cause, place and time of death etc
Rome Statute of the ICC 1988 • International Criminal Court – Nov. 2002 - jurisdiction over Colombian war crimes committed after that date: • Genocide (Rome Statute art. 6) • Crimes against humanity (art.7) • war crimes (art.8) – Colombian declaration under art.124. • State must investigate, prosecute and impose adequate penalties.
War crimes – art.8 • Is this an “armed conflict”? i.e. “protracted armed conflict between government and organised armed groups or between such groups”. • If only “internal disturbances” Art.8 does not apply. Gov. says fighting terrorists! • Colombia’s suspension under Art.124 expires Nov. 2009. ICC will then have jurisdiction for war crimes since 2002.
Justice and Peace Law • Covers crimes committed whilst member of armed group • Basic idea initial penalty under Penal Code (say 60 years) is reduced to 5-8 years alternative sentence provided free and full confession. • If not full truth (crimes, location of bodies etc) the initial After sentence must serve probationary period of half the sentence. Any crimes committed revive the initial penalty.
Rights of victims - reparation • (1) The Compensation Fund i.e. assets and resources recovered from armed group plus government budget and private donations. • (2) The National Commission for Reparation and Reconciliation (Gov. members + Advocate General + H.R. Ombudsman + victims associations).
Rights of victims continued • (3) Measuresinclude restitution, compensation, rehabilitation, just satisfaction, symbolic remedies e.g. apology, public acceptance of responsibility + guarantees of non-repetition + collective measures e.g. the reconstruction of displaced communities. • (4) Relatives showing damage (psychological, physical or financial) count as victims with rights to reparation, truth and justice.
Rights of victims - Truth • Joinet plus UN restatement 2005 • right to know truth about atrocities, circumstances and motives for them • right to collective memory through the preservation of archives • right of family to know the whereabouts of the victim. • May 2008 Extradition of Mancuso + 14 others?
Rights of victims in Justice & Peace • Access to justice, to be heard, to bring evidence, & receive prompt reparation • To indicate property not handed over by D. • To have adequate safety guarantees • To bring proof of damage • Rights to legal assistance, humane treatment, translators etc • www.fiscalia.gov.co/justiciapaz/Victimas
Confession hearings • First hearing – duty to give true & full confession on links with armed group, structure and activities. • Victims informed • Second hearing – victims can question D over each matter confessed – bring contrary proof etc.
Does it work? • 3,017 AUC in process – hearings begin. • Threats to witnesses/ victims leaders • Discovery of bodies – over 10,000 disappeared. Thru J&P aprox.1,000 sites discovered. • A certain lessening of violence • Limited funds recovered - no compensation but some restitution of lands. • Resources for 2008 – prosecutors up from 23 to 225; researchers from 40 to 800!
Risks for lawyers in this • Demobilised guerrillas etc act as paid informers. • Evidence of extra-judicial killings by military • Guilt by association – Government labelling of NGOs, lawyers etc “linked” to FARC. Cp Finucane case in N.Ireland. • Claims against NGOs e.g. for defamation
Claims against multinationals • Assassination of Trade unionists (78 in 2006) • Chiquita Bananas – fined $25 m. by US court for paying off AUC up to 2004 [NB AUC on US terrorist list on 10/9/2001] • Claims in US courts for damages by victims • Others thought to have used paramilitaries include Coca Cola, Repsol, BP etc. [See reports of Tribunal Permanente de los Pueblos www.tppcolombia.info] • June 2006 UK claim for £15m by 60 farmers against BP settled by mediation.
Conclusion • 2005 Law = a reasonable framework but under-resourced hence • Results so far inadequate. • No substitute for a political settlement as causes of paramilitarism still exist.