News

Tuesday March 14, 2000


International Criminal Court Prepcom Commences

Grave threat to national sovereignty and cultural and religious traditions

UNITED NATIONS, Mar 14 (LSN.ca) – Yesterday the Preparatory Commission for the International Criminal Court began its fourth session of negotiations on the elaboration of the rules and guidelines for the eventual functioning of the Court. The session runs from March 13-31 and will focus on the texts of the Rules of Procedure and Evidence and Elements of Crimes, for which the completion deadline is June 30.

The rules cover such issues as composition and administration of the Court, penalties for crimes, obligations of international co-operation and assistance, as well as enforcement of sentences. On the matter of crimes within the Court’s jurisdiction – genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity – the Commission is at work identifying what is really covered by those crimes. Incredibly, despite these many variables, over five countries have already ratified the treaty, effectively surrendering their national sovereignty over whatever areas the Court later claims jurisdiction.

The Court will assume universal jurisdiction in the areas it defines once the treaty establishing the Court, known as the Rome Statute, receives 60 ratifications. This universal jurisdiction will extend even to countries that have refused to ratify the treaty. The Court would thus assume the status of a one-world governing body, at least with regard to the as yet undefined crimes within its purview. International experts from a wide spectrum of concern in Canada and the United States condemned the proposal as a threat to national sovereignty and the distinct cultural and religious values protected in individual countries.

Some delegates at an earlier ICC conference attempted to add issues such as abortion to the agenda of the court, leading some experts to warn that they will continue to push for changes to the ICC’s mandate once it was been ratified by leading nations. The UN report on the beginning of the current prepcom demonstrates that the category of crimes, which the Court hopes to preside over, is open to expansion. While the Court is now to be concerned with “genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity,” the document indicates that, “once the working group on aggression completes its work, it is envisaged that the Court will also be able to try individuals for that crime.”

In particular, pro-lifers familiar with the international scene, are concerned about the influence of feminists and the homosexual lobby at the international level and their potential to implement their agenda at the highest level of judicial appeal that currently exists. Indeed, as LifeSite reported last week, a panel discussion of radical feminists at the UN Beijing +5 Prepcom said the Court would be a “tool” that will serve as a “model” that “can be used to change domestic laws” to conform with feminist goals.

Last December, the Canadian government proposed a law (Bill C-19) which would ratify the Rome Statute.

According to the information on the Rome Statute provided by the Canadian government, countries will be forced to “surrender persons sought by the ICC for genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and other offences under the Statute. In addition, a person who is the subject of a request for surrender by the ICC would not be able to claim immunity from arrest or surrender.” The absolute supremacy of the ICC over national law is also revealed in the explanatory material. “It would not be a defence that an offence was committed in obedience to the law in force at the time and in the place of its commission,” says the document.

The Canadian government is urging other countries to make it a priority to ratify the ICC Statute and they have pledged $110,000 of taxpayer money in support of two international lobbying efforts in that regard.

See the UN report on the current prepcom:
https://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2000/20000313.l2948.doc.ht…

See the Canadian government press release on the subject:
https://canada.justice.gc.ca/news/communiques/1999/doc_24326….

See Bill C-19:
https://www.parl.gc.ca/36/2/parlbus/chambus/house/bills/gover…

For more information on the ICC see:
https://www.lifesitenews.com/interim/june98/11unwatch(criminalcourt).html https://www.lifesitenews.com/interim/august98/4ICC.html

ACTION ITEM

Canadian opponents of the ICC are asking citizens to immediately contact their MPs and ask them to oppose Bill C-19 as a serious danger to Canadian sovereignty and culture. Citizens of other countries, especially in the Third World, are also being strongly encouraged to demand that their political leaders oppose the current direction of the ICC. The co-operation of their governments in this and other recent UN agreements is leading their nations into political and demographic suicide and permanent economic subservience to a first world agenda ensuring continued western political and economic dominance. https://www.parl.gc.ca/36/sm-e.htm Grave threat to national sovereignty and cultural and religious traditions

UNITED NATIONS, Mar 14 (LSN.ca) – Yesterday the Preparatory Commission for the International Criminal Court began its fourth session of negotiations on the elaboration of the rules and guidelines for the eventual functioning of the Court. The session runs from March 13-31 and will focus on the texts of the Rules of Procedure and Evidence and Elements of Crimes, for which the completion deadline is June 30.

The rules cover such issues as composition and administration of the Court, penalties for crimes, obligations of international co-operation and assistance, as well as enforcement of sentences. On the matter of crimes within the Court’s jurisdiction – genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity – the Commission is at work identifying what is really covered by those crimes. Incredibly, despite these many variables, over five countries have already ratified the treaty, effectively surrendering their national sovereignty over whatever areas the Court later claims jurisdiction.

The Court will assume universal jurisdiction in the areas it defines once the treaty establishing the Court, known as the Rome Statute, receives 60 ratifications. This universal jurisdiction will extend even to countries that have refused to ratify the treaty. The Court would thus assume the status of a one-world governing body, at least with regard to the as yet undefined crimes within its purview. International experts from a wide spectrum of concern in Canada and the United States condemned the proposal as a threat to national sovereignty and the distinct cultural and religious values protected in individual countries.

Some delegates at an earlier ICC conference attempted to add issues such as abortion to the agenda of the court, leading some experts to warn that they will continue to push for changes to the ICC’s mandate once it was been ratified by leading nations. The UN report on the beginning of the current prepcom demonstrates that the category of crimes, which the Court hopes to preside over, is open to expansion. While the Court is now to be concerned with “genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity,” the document indicates that, “once the working group on aggression completes its work, it is envisaged that the Court will also be able to try individuals for that crime.”

In particular, pro-lifers familiar with the international scene, are concerned about the influence of feminists and the homosexual lobby at the international level and their potential to implement their agenda at the highest level of judicial appeal that currently exists. Indeed, as LifeSite reported last week, a panel discussion of radical feminists at the UN Beijing +5 Prepcom said the Court would be a “tool” that will serve as a “model” that “can be used to change domestic laws” to conform with feminist goals.

Last December, the Canadian government proposed a law (Bill C-19) which would ratify the Rome Statute.

According to the information on the Rome Statute provided by the Canadian government, countries will be forced to “surrender persons sought by the ICC for genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and other offences under the Statute. In addition, a person who is the subject of a request for surrender by the ICC would not be able to claim immunity from arrest or surrender.” The absolute supremacy of the ICC over national law is also revealed in the explanatory material. “It would not be a defence that an offence was committed in obedience to the law in force at the time and in the place of its commission,” says the document.

The Canadian government is urging other countries to make it a priority to ratify the ICC Statute and they have pledged $110,000 of taxpayer money in support of two international lobbying efforts in that regard.

See the UN report on the current prepcom:
https://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2000/20000313.l2948.doc.ht…

See the Canadian government press release on the subject:
https://canada.justice.gc.ca/news/communiques/1999/doc_24326….

See Bill C-19:
https://www.parl.gc.ca/36/2/parlbus/chambus/house/bills/gover…

For more information on the ICC see:
https://www.lifesitenews.com/interim/june98/11unwatch(criminalcourt).html https://www.lifesitenews.com/interim/august98/4ICC.html

ACTION ITEM

Canadian opponents of the ICC are asking citizens to immediately contact their MPs and ask them to oppose Bill C-19 as a serious danger to Canadian sovereignty and culture. Citizens of other countries, especially in the Third World, are also being strongly encouraged to demand that their political leaders oppose the current direction of the ICC. The co-operation of their governments in this and other recent UN agreements is leading their nations into political and demographic suicide and permanent economic subservience to a first world agenda ensuring continued western political and economic dominance. https://www.parl.gc.ca/36/sm-e.htm


SHARE THIS STORY: E-mail Print Newsvine Digg Reddit Del.icio.us Facebook


0 Comments

    Loading...