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LCHR's Statement on Ensuring Protection for
Refugees Media Contact: Heidi Altman Email: altmanh@lchr.org Tel.: (212) 845 5259
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Human Rights & Post-war Iraq
LCHR Calls
on UN Security Council to bear responsibility for Accountability
in Iraq (5/21/03) LCHR Statement
on Reported Iraqi Violations of Geneva Conventions (03/27/03) Throughout the war in Iraq and in the post-war period, the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights will monitor, analyze, and conduct advocacy on the following areas.
Urgent measures must be taken to protect those who are forced to flee. The Lawyers Committee is calling for maximum international protection for Iraqi refugees and internally displaced people. At this stage, we urge countries bordering on Iraq to keep borders open to the most desperate refugees who are fleeing for their lives. Our call echoes a demand by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Rudd Lubbers, who has appealed to all governments neighboring Iraq to keep their borders open to those in need of temporary protection and assistance. The international community must share this
responsibility and the financial burdens associated with it with
these neighboring states. Ensuring Accountability for Past Crimes The Government of Iraq has been engaged in widespread, gross violations of human rights for more than 25 years, including political killings, torture, arbitrary detentions, and genocide. During this period the Iraqi Government also has committed serious war crimes, including grave breaches of international humanitarian law. Among these violations were the violent attacks against the Kurds in the late 1980s, including use of chemical weapons, and the violent attacks against Shi’a in the South of Iraq in 1991, where villages were burned and thousands of civilians were forcibly displaced. The Lawyers Committee is calling on the international community to establish a comprehensive plan for holding those most responsible criminally accountable for their actions. Specifically we are urging the United Nations to set up a Commission of Inquiry into these past crimes with a view to establishing an international criminal tribunal for Iraq. Three principles should guide the Commission in its work. It should:
The war in Iraq is governed by international humanitarian law. The Lawyers Committee is calling on all parties to the conflict to adhere to these standards in the treatment of those who are detained. Specifically we urge parties to recognize formally that the law of international armed conflict applies and that the obligations of the Geneva Conventions do not depend on reciprocity. All persons not taking part in hostilities or no longer taking part in hostilities must be protected and treated with respect. Related Links Support for human rights activists in the
Middle East Challenging the Prolonged Detention
of Iraqi and other Middle Eastern Asylum Seekers in the US |
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