Year: 2021
All factual and legal evidence have indicated that the
so-called Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) has committed at least
the most serious international crimes: war crimes, crimes against humanity and
genocide. Many international organizations have confirmed this. The Independent
International Commission for Inquiry in Syria (IICIS), which was established in
2011 by the Resolution No. (S-17/1) by
the United Nations Human Rights Council, as well as the United Nations
Investigative Team to Promote Accountability for Crimes Committed by
Da’esh/ISIL (UNITAD), which was established by the Security Council Resolution
No. (2379) by
the request of the Iraqi government. they have proven in their reports that the ISIS has committed the core
international crimes. UNITAD confirmed in its latest report No. 4 issued in May
2020, which submitted to the United Nations Security Council, it says; despite the
evidence that ISIS militants have committed international crimes, but they have
not been prosecuted for the core international crimes.
The IICIS in its most important report in 2016 “They
Come to Destroy” confirmed that ISIS
committed the core international crimes, the IICIS clearly demands to the
United Nations Human Rights Council to establish a special international court for
prosecuting ISIS perpetrators.
The ISIS militants who arrested by the Iraqi
authorities and the Kurdistan Region authorities are being prosecuted according
to the anti-terrorism laws, and this from the Center's viewpoint constitutes a
real distress in proper access to criminal justice, at the same time
constitutes a legislative deficiency, it is indisputable that there is an urgent
requirement to address this dilemma. However, Human Rights Watch published a
report “Flawed Justice and Accountability for ISIS Crimes in Iraq”, the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) in another report “Trials
under the anti-terrorism laws and implications for justice, accountability, and
social cohesion in the aftermath of ISIL”, their concern about the type and form of the trials that are now taking place
against ISIS, described them as biased and flawed trials. lack of national
legislation to include core international crimes is the biggest obstacle, the
Kurdistan Center for International Law supports the international organizations
to focus on the necessity of forming an international court for prosecuting
ISIS fighters.
this File includes some articles and a proposal for establishing an Hybrid court in Iraq for prosecuting ISIS fighters, the file is in Kurdish language, click Here