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{UAH} Jack Straw and UK government must face kidnap and torture claims, court rules

Robert Atahierew/ Lt.Col. Tony Owana,/Moses Nekyon/John Kwitonda/ Simon Peter Okurut

Here is another bomb placed under the bum of Rwandan outlaw Kayibanda Museveni. The legal dragnets are slowly but surely closing around ALL human rights abusers! Terrorists who think they will get away with the crimes they commit while holding state power, had better think again. This is the grim reality that terrorists like Jack Straw and Tony Blair have to come to terms with and to face fully in the face. There is now no hiding place for them. They can run, but they can't hide. Those who abuse state power in order to commit atrocities should now be under no illusion that the law will catch up with them. This is the clear message that the Supreme Court of the UK is sending to ALL tyrants around the world. I hope it is a clear, no-nonsense message to the blood-soaked Rwandan tyrant Yoseri Kayibanda Museveni, that, no matter how long it will take, the law will catch up with him. Kayibanda will be forced to climb the bar of justice and account for his crimes. From now on, he must not live under any illusion or doubt our determination to bring him and his cohort of criminals to justice.

For your reference, the UK Supreme Court (formerly known as the Judicial Committee of the House of Lords) has set the pace in establishing international standards in International Human Rights Law in the last 30 years. All its ground-breaking pronouncements on this subject have quickly been adopted by nearly every Common Law jurisdiction in the world and  today form the body of jurisprudence that governs and guides this sensitive topic that still bedevils humanity. In the face of ever occurring gross atrocities and egregious human rights abuses that routinely occur in the world today, what can International Law do about it?  The UK Supreme Court has stepped forward to provide the answers and to set the standards, not just for the UK jusridiction , but for the whole of humanity. The UK Supreme Court consequently nowadays looks at itself as the ONLY remaining Guardian of International Human Rights in the world, as the only institution that has the will and the intellectual zeal to stand up for suffering humanity, in a sad world where, UN organs, humanitarian institutions well-meaning  governmental action have failed.

The UK Supreme Court first made claim to this distinction in the Augusto PINOCHET Extradition Case in 2001. In this landmark case, the court decided as follows:

1. Some crimes are just so heinous and offensive to human sensibility that they can never be regarded as part of the duties of a Head of State for which he might claim Immunity from prosecution under the doctrine of STATE IMMUNITY. The doctrine of  state Immunity previously protected heads of State from ALL crimes committed while they were in office. Specifically, the court ruled that TORTURE can never be regarded as part of the duty of any head of state for which he might want to claim immunity from prosecution.
2. The Court ruled that some crimes are so evil and egregious, and so offensive to human sensibility that ANY Competent Jurisdiction In Any Country in the world has got the right to put alleged perpetrators on trial. These crimes include GENOCIDE, WAR CRIMES AND CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY. In this ground-making judgement, the Court threw out the prevailing doctrine of locus standi and introduced in its place the doctrine of UNIVERSATILITY OF JURISDICTION. This means no head of state, or anyone exercising the authority of the state, can claim that the crime was not committed in the territory of a country that seeks to put him on trial, or that  neither the victims, nor himself are nationals or residents of  the prosecuting authority.

The principles adopted in the Pinochet case has now become Customary International Law and has led directly to the setting up of International tribunals such as those on the Former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, and of the International Criminal Court.(ICC).

Bobby

 

Jack Straw and UK government must face kidnap and torture claims, court rules

Claims that rendition and torture of Abdel Hakim Belhaj breached Magna Carta rights must go before judges, supreme court rules

Abdul Hakim Belhaj
Abdul Hakim Belhaj has refused to settle with the UK government unless he and his wife receive an apology. Photograph: Cori Crider/Reprieve/PA

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