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FIFTH
SECTION
CASE OF
JORGIC v. GERMANY
(Application
no. 74613/01)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
12
July 2007
This judgment will
become final in the circumstances set out in Article 44 § 2
of the Convention. It may be subject to editorial revision.
In the case of Jorgic v. Germany,
The
European Court of Human Rights (Fifth Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Mr P. Lorenzen, President,
Mrs S.
Botoucharova,
Mr V. Butkevych,
Mrs M.
Tsatsa-Nikolovska,
Mr R. Maruste,
Mr J. Borrego
Borrego,
Mrs R. Jaeger, judges,
and Mrs C. Westerdiek,
Section Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 19 June 2007,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 74613/01) against the Federal
Republic of Germany lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the
Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms (“the Convention”) by a national of Bosnia and
Herzegovina, of Serb origin, Mr Nicola Jorgic (“the
applicant”), on 23 May 2001.
- The
applicant was represented before the Court by Mr H. Grünbauer,
a lawyer practising in Leipzig. The German Government
(“the
Government”) were represented by their Agent,
Mrs
A. Wittling-Vogel, Ministerialdirigentin, of the Federal
Ministry of Justice, assisted by Mr G. Werle, Professor of
Law at Humboldt University in Berlin.
- The
applicant, invoking Article 5 § 1 (a) and
Article 6 § 1 of the Convention, alleged that the
German courts had not had jurisdiction to convict him of genocide. He
further argued that, due, in particular, to the domestic courts'
refusal to call any witness for the defence who would have had to be
summoned abroad he had not had a fair trial within the meaning of
Article 6 §§ 1 and 3 (d) of the Convention.
Moreover, he complained that his conviction for genocide was in
breach of Article 7 § 1 of the Convention in
particular because the national courts' wide interpretation of that
crime had no basis in German or public international law.
- On
7 July 2005 the Court decided to give notice of the application
to the Government. On 2 October 2006 it decided to examine the
merits of the application at the same time as its admissibility under
the provisions of Article 29 § 3 of the Convention
taken in conjunction with Rule 54A § 3 of the Rules of
Court.
- The
Government of Bosnia and Herzegovina, having been informed of their
right to intervene in the proceedings (Article 36 § 1
of the Convention and Rule 44, did not indicate that they wished
to exercise that right.
THE FACTS
THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
applicant was born in 1946. When he lodged his application, he was
detained in Bochum, Germany.
1. Background to the case
- In
1969 the applicant, a national of Bosnia and Herzegovina of Serb
origin, entered Germany, where he legally resided until the beginning
of 1992. He then returned to Kostajnica, which forms part of the city
of Doboj in Bosnia, where he was born.
- On
16 December 1995 the applicant was arrested when entering
Germany and placed in pre-trial detention on the ground that he was
strongly suspected of having committed acts of genocide.
2. Proceedings in the Düsseldorf Court of Appeal
- On
28 February 1997 the applicant's trial, on the charge of having
committed genocide in the Doboj region between May 1992 and
September 1992, started before the Düsseldorf Court of
Appeal (Oberlandesgericht) acting as a court of first
instance.
- In
the course of the proceedings the Court of Appeal heard evidence from
six witnesses called by the prosecution, who had to be summoned
abroad.
- On
18 June 1997 the applicant requested the Court of Appeal to call
and hear evidence from eight witnesses from Kostajnica for the
purpose of proving the fact that he had been placed in pre-trial
detention in Doboj between 14 May and 15 August 1992 and
could not therefore have committed the crimes he was accused of. On
10 July 1997 the applicant sought leave to summon another
seventeen witnesses from Kostajnica to prove his allegation.
- On
18 August 1997 the Court of Appeal dismissed the applicant's
requests to summon these witnesses. Relying on Article 244 § 5,
second sentence, of the Code of Criminal Procedure (see paragraph 39
below),
it considered the testimony of these witnesses to be of
little evidential value. Seven of these witnesses had made written
statements which had already been read out in court. Only one of them
had actually claimed to have visited the applicant in prison. Having
regard to the evidence already taken, the court could exclude the
possibility that the testimony of the witnesses named by the
applicant, if heard in person, might influence the court's assessment
of the evidence. It pointed out that more than twenty witnesses who
had already been heard in court, including two journalists who had
not been victims of the crimes the applicant was accused of, had seen
the applicant in different places outside prison during the time he
claimed to have been detained. The documents submitted by the
applicant in relation to the beginning and end of his detention in
Doboj did not warrant a different conclusion, as they had obviously
been signed by a person whom the applicant knew well.
- On
8 September 1997 the applicant requested the court to call three
witnesses from Doboj in order to prove that he had been detained
between 14 May and 15 August 1992. He also requested an
inspection of the scene of the crime (Augenscheinseinnahme) in
Grabska or, alternatively, that a topographical map be drawn up in
order to prove that the witnesses' statements concerning his
purported acts in Grabska were untrustworthy.
- On
12 September 1997 the Court of Appeal rejected the applicant's
requests. As regards the refusal to summon the three witnesses named,
the court, relying again on Article 244 § 5 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure, found that the testimony of these
witnesses would be of little evidential value. Having heard the
evidence given by other witnesses, it was satisfied that the
applicant had not been detained at the material time. It further
considered an inspection of the scene of the crime or the drawing-up
of a topographical map thereof to be unobtainable evidence
(unerreichbare Beweismittel) within the meaning of Article 244
§ 3 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (see paragraph 38
below), which it therefore did not have to take.
- In
its judgment of 26 September 1997 the Düsseldorf Court of
Appeal convicted the applicant on eleven counts of genocide
(Article 220a nos. 1 and 3 of the Criminal Code – see
paragraph 34 below) and for the murder of twenty-two people in
one case, seven people in another case, one person in a third case;
and on several counts of dangerous assault and deprivation of liberty
in the remaining cases. It sentenced the applicant to life
imprisonment and stated that his guilt was of a particular gravity
(see paragraph 37 below).
- The
court found that the applicant had set up a paramilitary group, with
whom he had participated in the ethnic cleansing ordered by the
Bosnian Serb political leaders and the Serb military in the Doboj
region.
He had in particular participated in the arrest,
detention, assault and ill-treatment of male Muslims of three
villages in Bosnia in the beginning of May and June 1992. He had
killed several inhabitants of these villages.
He had in
particular shot twenty-two inhabitants of the village of Grabska –
women and disabled and old people – in June 1992.
Subsequently,
the applicant, together with the paramilitary group
he had led, had chased some forty men from their home village and had
ordered them to be
ill-treated and six of them to be shot. A
seventh injured person had died from being burnt with the corpses of
the six people shot. In September 1992 the applicant had killed
a prisoner, who was being ill-treated by soldiers in the Doboj
prison, with a wooden truncheon in order to demonstrate a new method
of ill-treatment and killing.
- The
court stated that it had jurisdiction over the case pursuant to
Article 6 no. 1 of the Criminal Code (see paragraph 34
below). There was a legitimate link for criminal prosecution in
Germany, as this was in accordance with Germany's military and
humanitarian missions in Bosnia and Herzegovina and the applicant had
resided in Germany for more than twenty years and had been arrested
there. Furthermore, agreeing with the findings of an expert in public
international law, the court found that the German courts were not
debarred under public international law from trying the case. In
particular, neither Article VI of the Convention on the
Prevention and Suppression of the Crime of Genocide (Genocide
Convention) (1948), nor Article 9 of the Statute of the
International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY
Statute) (1993)
(see paragraphs 48-49 below) excluded the
jurisdiction of German courts over acts of genocide committed outside
Germany by a foreigner against foreigners. The court considered that
this view was confirmed by the fact that the International Criminal
Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) had stated that it was not
willing to take over the applicant's prosecution.
- Furthermore,
the court found that the applicant had acted with intent to commit
genocide within the meaning of Article 220a of the Criminal
Code. Referring to the views expressed by several legal writers, it
stated that the “destruction of a group” within the
meaning of Article 220a of the Criminal Code meant destruction
of the group as a social unit in its distinctiveness and
particularity and its feeling of belonging together (“Zerstörung
der Gruppe als sozialer Einheit in ihrer Besonderheit und Eigenart
und ihrem Zusammengehörigkeitsgefühl”); a
biological-physical destruction was not necessary. It concluded that
the applicant had therefore acted with intent to destroy the group of
Muslims in the North of Bosnia, or at least in the Doboj region.
3. Proceedings before the Federal Court of Justice
- On
30 April 1999 the Federal Court of Justice, following an appeal
by the applicant on points of law and after a hearing, convicted the
applicant on one count of genocide and thirty counts of murder. It
sentenced him to life imprisonment and stated that his guilt was of a
particular gravity.
- Endorsing
the reasons given by the Court of Appeal, it found that German
criminal law was applicable to the case and that the German courts
consequently had jurisdiction over it by virtue of Article 6
no. 1 of the Criminal Code. It found, in particular, that no
rule of public international law prohibited the applicant's
conviction by the German criminal courts in accordance with the
principle of universal jurisdiction (Universalitäts- /
Weltrechtsprinzip) enshrined in that Article. It conceded that
the said principle had not been expressly laid down in Article VI
of the Genocide Convention, despite earlier drafts of the Genocide
Convention in which it had been proposed to do so. However, the said
Article did not prohibit persons charged with genocide from being
tried by national courts other than the tribunals of the State in the
territory of which the act was committed. Any other interpretation
would not be reconcilable with the erga omnes obligation
undertaken by the Contracting States in Article I of the
Genocide Convention to prevent and punish genocide (see paragraph 48
below). The aforesaid interpretation of the Genocide Convention was
also confirmed by Article 9 § 1 of the ICTY Statute,
which provided for concurrent jurisdiction of the ICTY and all other
national courts.
- Moreover,
the Federal Court of Justice found that the German courts also had
jurisdiction pursuant to Article 7 § 2 no. 2 of
the Criminal Code (see paragraph 34 below).
- The
Federal Court of Justice did not expressly deal with the applicant's
complaint that the Court of Appeal, in its decision of
18 August 1997, had refused to summon abroad any of the
defence witnesses he had named on the basis of Article 244 § 5
of the Code of Criminal Procedure. However, it referred in general to
the submissions of the Federal Public Prosecutor
(Generalbundesanwalt), who had argued that the applicant's
appeal was inadmissible in this respect, as he had failed to set out
the relevant facts in sufficient detail. As regards the applicant's
complaint that the Court of Appeal, in its decision of
12 September 1997, had refused to summon three further
defence witnesses abroad, the Federal Court of Justice considered his
complaint to be inadmissible, as he had not sufficiently set out the
relevant facts and had not provided sufficient reasons in his appeal.
The court further referred to the Federal Public Prosecutor's
submissions regarding the applicant's complaint that the Court of
Appeal had refused to have a topographical map drawn up. According to
the Federal Public Prosecutor, the applicant's complaint was
ill-founded in this respect, especially as the Court of Appeal
already had a video of the relevant locality.
- The
Federal Court of Justice upheld the Court of Appeal's finding that
the applicant had intended to commit genocide within the meaning of
Article 220a of the Criminal Code, but found that his actions as
a whole had to be considered as only one count of genocide. It
referred to the wording of Article 220a § 1 no. 4
(imposition of measures which are intended to prevent births within
the group) and no. 5 (forcible transfer of children of the group
into another group) in support of its view that genocide did not
necessitate an intent to destroy a group physically, but that it was
sufficient to intend its destruction as a social unit.
4. Proceedings before the Federal Constitutional Court
- On
12 December 2000 the Federal Constitutional Court declined to
consider the applicant's constitutional complaint.
- According
to the Constitutional Court, the criminal courts had not violated any
provision of the Basic Law by establishing their jurisdiction
pursuant to Article 6 no. 1 of the Criminal Code, taken in
conjunction with Article VI of the Genocide Convention. The
principle of universal jurisdiction afforded a reasonable link to
deal with subject matter arising outside the territory of Germany,
while observing the duty of non-intervention (Interventionsverbot)
under public international law.
The competent courts' reasoning,
namely, that Article 6 no. 1 of the Criminal Code taken in
conjunction with Article VI of the Genocide Convention entitled
them to examine the applicant's case, was not arbitrary. It could
properly be reasoned that the Genocide Convention, while not
expressly regulating the principle of universal jurisdiction,
provided that the Contracting Parties were not obliged to prosecute
perpetrators of genocide, but had jurisdiction to do so. In fact,
genocide was the classic subject matter to which the principle of
universal jurisdiction applied. The criminal courts' reasoning did
not interfere with Bosnia and Herzegovina's personal or territorial
sovereignty, as that State had expressly refrained from requesting
the applicant's extradition.
- Pointing
out that in the case of an admissible constitutional complaint, it
was entitled to examine the act complained of under all
constitutional angles, the Federal Constitutional Court further found
that the applicant's right to a fair trial as guaranteed by the Basic
Law had not been violated. There was no doubt that Article 244
§§ 3 and 5 of the Code of Criminal Procedure were
constitutional. The legislature was not obliged to set up specific
rules of procedure for certain criminal offences. The right to a fair
trial did not grant the applicant a right to have certain evidence
taken, such as calling witnesses who had to be summoned abroad.
- In
respect of the interpretation of Article 220a of the Criminal
Code, the Federal Constitutional Court found that there had been no
violation of the principle that criminal law was not to be applied
retroactively as guaranteed by Article 103 § 2 of the
Basic Law. It stated that the way in which the Court of Appeal and
the Federal Court of Justice had construed the notion of “intent
to destroy” in the said Article was foreseeable. Moreover, the
interpretation conformed to that of the prohibition of genocide in
public international law – in the light of which Article 220a
of the Criminal Code had to be construed – by the competent
tribunals, several scholars and as reflected in the practice of the
United Nations, as expressed, inter alia, in Resolution 47/121
of the General Assembly (see paragraph 41 below).
5. Reopening of the proceedings
- On
3 July 2002 the Düsseldorf Court of Appeal declared
inadmissible a request by the applicant to reopen the proceedings.
The fact that one of the witnesses who had been examined by the Court
of Appeal, and who was the only person claiming to have eyewitnessed
the applicant murdering twenty-two people in Grabska, was suspected
of perjury, did not warrant a reopening. Even assuming that the said
witness had invented the allegations against the applicant, the
latter would still have to be sentenced to life imprisonment for
genocide and on eight counts of murder.
- On
20 December 2002 (decision served on 28 January 2003) the
Federal Court of Justice decided that the applicant's request to
reopen the proceedings was admissible in so far as it concerned the
murder of twenty-two people in Grabska. It pointed out, however,
that, even assuming that the applicant's conviction on twenty-two
counts of murder was not upheld, his conviction for genocide and on
eight counts of murder, and therefore his life sentence, including
the finding that his guilt was of a particular gravity, would
prevail.
- In
a constitutional complaint of 28 February 2003 the applicant
claimed that the decisions of the Düsseldorf Court of Appeal and
the Federal Court of Justice concerning the reopening of the
proceedings violated his right to liberty as guaranteed by the Basic
Law. He argued that they had erred in their finding that, in the
proceedings to have the case reopened, the question whether the
applicant's guilt was of a particular gravity did not have to be
assessed anew.
- On
22 April 2003 the Federal Constitutional Court refused to admit
the applicant's constitutional complaint.
- On
21 June 2004 the Düsseldorf Court of Appeal decided to
reopen the proceedings in respect of the applicant's conviction for
shooting twenty-two people in Grabska. It found that the only person
claiming to have eyewitnessed these murders was guilty of perjury at
least in respect of some other statements. Therefore, it could not
rule out the possibility that the judges then adjudicating the case
would have acquitted the applicant on that charge if they had known
that some statements by this witness had been false.
- In
so far as the applicant's request to reopen the proceedings was
granted, the Court of Appeal discontinued the proceedings. It argued
that the sentence to be expected by the applicant, if he was again
found guilty of having murdered twenty-two people in Grabska, was not
significantly greater than the sentence which had already been
imposed upon him with binding effect for genocide. Consequently, the
judgment of the Düsseldorf Court of Appeal of 26 September
1997 remained final regarding the applicant's conviction for genocide
and on eight counts of murder, including the court's finding that his
guilt was of a particular gravity.
B. Relevant domestic and public international law and
practice
1. Criminal Code
- The
relevant provisions of the Criminal Code, in their versions in force
at the material time, on the jurisdiction of German courts, the crime
of genocide and the gravity of a defendant's guilt provided as
follows:
Article 6
Acts committed abroad against internationally
protected legal interests
“German criminal law shall further apply,
regardless of the law applicable at the place of their commission, to
the following acts committed abroad:
1. genocide (Article 220a); ...”
Article 7
Applicability to acts committed abroad in other cases
“(1) ...
(2) German criminal law shall apply to other
offences committed abroad if the act is punishable at the place of
its commission or if the place of its commission is not subject to
enforcement of criminal law and if the perpetrator
...
2. was a foreigner at the time of the act,
was found to be in Germany and, although the law on extradition would
permit extradition for such an act, is not extradited because a
request for extradition is not made, is rejected or the extradition
is not enforceable.”
Article 220a
Genocide
“(1) Whoever, acting with the intent to
destroy, in whole or in part, a national, racial, religious or
ethnical group as such,
1. kills members of the group,
2. causes serious bodily or mental harm ...
to members of the group,
3. places the group in living conditions
capable of bringing about their physical destruction in whole or in
part,
4. imposes measures which are intended to
prevent births within the group,
5. forcibly transfers children of the group
into another group,
shall be punished with life imprisonment.”
- Article 220a
of the Criminal Code was inserted into the German Criminal Code by
the Act of 9 August 1954 on Germany's accession to the Genocide
Convention and entered into force in 1955. Articles 6 no. 1
and 220a of the Criminal Code ceased to be effective on 30 June
2002 when the Code on Crimes against International Law
(Völkerstrafgesetzbuch) entered into force. Pursuant to
Article 1 of the new Code, it applies to criminal offences
against international law such as genocide (see Article 6 of the
new Code) even when the offence was committed abroad and bears no
relation to Germany.
- The
applicant is the first person to be convicted of genocide by German
courts under Article 220a since the incorporation of that
Article into the Criminal Code. At the time when the applicant
committed his acts in 1992, a majority of scholars took the view that
genocidal “intent to destroy a group” under Article 220a
of the Criminal Code had to be aimed at the physical-biological
destruction of the protected group (see, for example, A. Eser,
in Schönke / Schröder, Strafgesetzbuch –
Kommentar, 24th edition, Munich 1991,
Article 220a, §§ 4-5 with further references).
However, a considerable number of scholars were of the opinion that
the notion of destruction of a group as such, in its literal meaning,
was wider than a physical-biological extermination and also
encompassed the destruction of a group as a social unit (see, in
particular, H.-H. Jescheck, Die internationale
Genocidium-Konvention vom 9. Dezember 1948
und die Lehre vom Völkerstrafrecht,
ZStW 66 (1954), p. 213; and B. Jähnke, in
Leipziger Kommentar, Strafgesetzbuch, 10th edition,
Berlin,
New York 1989, Article 220a, §§ 4,
8, 13).
- Under
Article 57a § 1 of the Criminal Code, a sentence to
life imprisonment may only be suspended on probation if, in
particular, fifteen years of the sentence have been served and the
particular gravity of the defendant's guilt (besondere Schwere der
Schuld) does not warrant the continued execution of the sentence.
2. Code of Criminal Procedure
- Pursuant
to Article 244 § 3 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,
an application to adduce evidence may be rejected only under the
conditions set out in that Article. It may be dismissed, inter
alia, if the evidence is unobtainable (unerreichbar).
- Article 244
§ 5, second sentence, of the Code of Criminal Procedure
lays down special conditions for rejecting an application to examine
a witness who would have to be summoned abroad. These conditions are
less strict than those for rejecting an application to hear evidence
from a witness who can be summoned in Germany. It is sufficient that
the court, in the proper exercise of its discretion, deems the
examination of the witness not to be necessary for establishing the
truth.
3. Comparative and public international law and
practice
a. Definition and scope of the crime of
genocide
i. Convention on the Prevention and
Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Genocide Convention) (1948)
- The
relevant provision of the Genocide Convention, which entered into
force for Germany on 22 February 1955, provides:
Article II
“In the present Convention, genocide means any of
the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in
part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:
(a) Killing members of the group;
(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of
the group;
(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of
life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or
in part;
(d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within
the group;
(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to
another group.”
ii. Resolution of the United Nations
General Assembly
- In
its Resolution 47/121 (no. A/RES/47/121) of 18 December
1992 concerning the situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1992, the
United Nations General Assembly stated:
“Gravely concerned about the deterioration of the
situation in the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina owing to
intensified aggressive acts by the Serbian and Montenegrin forces to
acquire more territories by force, characterized by a consistent
pattern of gross and systematic violations of human rights, a
burgeoning refugee population resulting from mass expulsions of
defenceless civilians from their homes and the existence in Serbian
and Montenegrin controlled areas of concentration camps and detention
centres, in pursuit of the abhorrent policy of “ethnic
cleansing”, which is a form of genocide, ...”
iii. Case-law of the International
Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
- In
the case of Prosecutor v. Krstic, IT-98-33-T, judgment of
2 August 2001, §§ 577-80, the Trial Chamber of
the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY),
expressly diverging from the wider interpretation of the notion of
“intent to destroy” by the United Nations General
Assembly and the Federal Constitutional Court in its judgment of
12 December 2000 in the present case, found as follows with
regard to the Genocide Convention:
“577. Several recent declarations and
decisions, however, have interpreted the intent to destroy ... so as
to encompass evidence relating to acts that involved cultural and
other non physical forms of group destruction.
578. In 1992, the United Nations General
Assembly labelled ethnic cleansing as a form of genocide. ...
579. The Federal Constitutional Court of
Germany said in December 2000 that
the statutory definition of genocide defends a
supra-individual object of legal protection, i.e. the social
existence of the group ... the intent to destroy the group ...
extends beyond physical and biological extermination ... The text of
the law does not therefore compel the interpretation that the
culprit's intent must be to exterminate physically at least a
substantial number of the members of the group. ...
580. The Trial Chamber is aware that it must
interpret the Convention with due regard for the principle of nullum
crimen sine lege. It therefore recognises that, despite recent
developments, customary international law limits the definition of
genocide to those acts seeking the physical or biological destruction
of all or part of the group. Hence, an enterprise attacking only the
cultural or sociological characteristics of a human group in order to
annihilate these elements which give to that group its own identity
distinct from the rest of the community would not fall under the
definition of genocide. The Trial Chamber however points out that
where there is physical or biological destruction there are often
simultaneous attacks on the cultural and religious property and
symbols of the targeted group as well, attacks which may legitimately
be considered as evidence of an intent to physically destroy the
group.”
- The
Trial Chamber's judgment was upheld in this respect by the judgment
of 19 April 2004 rendered by the Appeals Chamber of the ICTY,
IT-98-33-A, which found:
25. “The Genocide Convention, and
customary international law in general, prohibit only the physical or
biological destruction of a human group. ... The Trial Chamber
expressly acknowledged this limitation, and eschewed any broader
definition. ...”
33. “... The fact that the forcible
transfer does not constitute in and of itself a genocidal act does
not preclude a Trial Chamber from relying on it as evidence of the
intentions of members of the VRS Main Staff. The genocidal intent may
be inferred, among other facts, from evidence of “other
culpable acts systematically directed against the same group.”
- Similarly,
in the case of Prosecutor v. Kupreskic and Others
(IT-95-16-T, judgment of 14 January 2000, § 751),
which concerned the killing of some 116 Muslims in order to
expel the Muslim population from a village, the ICTY found:
“Persecution is only one step away from genocide –
the most abhorrent crime against humanity – for in genocide,
the persecutory intent is pushed to its utmost limits through the
pursuit of the physical annihilation of the group or of members of
the group. In the crime of genocide the criminal intent is to destroy
the group or its members; in the crime of persecution the criminal
intent is instead to forcibly discriminate against a group or members
thereof by grossly and systematically violating their fundamental
human rights. In the present case, according to the Prosecution –
and this is a point on which the Trial Chamber agrees – the
killing of Muslim civilians was primarily aimed at expelling the
group from the village, not at destroying the Muslim group as such.
This is therefore a case of persecution, not of genocide.”
iv. Case-law of the International Court
of Justice
- In
its judgment of 26 February 2007 in the case of Bosnia and
Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro (“Case concerning the
application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the
Crime of Genocide”) the International Court of Justice (ICJ)
found under the heading of “intent and 'ethnic cleansing'”
(at § 190):
“The term 'ethnic cleansing' has frequently been
employed to refer to the events in Bosnia and Herzegovina which are
the subject of this case ... General Assembly resolution 47/121
referred in its Preamble to 'the abhorrent policy of 'ethnic
cleansing', which is a form of genocide', as being carried on in
Bosnia and Herzegovina. ... It [i.e. ethnic cleansing] can
only be a form of genocide within the meaning of the Convention, if
it corresponds to or falls within one of the categories of acts
prohibited by Article II of the Convention. Neither the intent,
as a matter of policy, to render an area “ethnically
homogeneous”, nor the operations that may be carried out to
implement such policy, can as such be designated as genocide:
the intent that characterizes genocide is “to destroy, in whole
or in part” a particular group, and deportation or displacement
of the members of a group, even if effected by force, is not
necessarily equivalent to destruction of that group, nor is such
destruction an automatic consequence of the displacement. This is not
to say that acts described as 'ethnic cleansing' may never constitute
genocide, if they are such as to be characterized as, for example,
'deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated
to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part',
contrary to Article II, paragraph (c), of the Convention,
provided such action is carried out with the necessary specific
intent (dolus specialis), that is to say with a view to the
destruction of the group, as distinct from its removal from the
region. As the ICTY has observed, while 'there are obvious
similarities between a genocidal policy and the policy commonly known
as 'ethnic cleansing'' (Krstić, IT-98-33-T, Trial Chamber
Judgment, 2 August 2001, para. 562), yet '[a] clear
distinction must be drawn between physical destruction and mere
dissolution of a group. The expulsion of a group or part of a group
does not in itself suffice for genocide. ...”
v. Interpretation by other Convention
States
- According
to the material available to the Court, there have been only very few
cases of national prosecution of genocide in other Convention States.
There are no reported cases in which the courts of these States have
defined the type of group destruction the perpetrator must have
intended in order to be found guilty of genocide, that is, whether
the notion of “intent to destroy” covers only physical or
biological destruction or whether it also comprises destruction of a
group as a social unit.
vi. Interpretation by legal writers
- Amongst
scholars, the majority have taken the view that ethnic cleansing, in
the way in which it was carried out by the Serb forces in Bosnia and
Herzegovina in order to expel Muslims and Croats from their homes,
did not constitute genocide (see, amongst many others, William
A. Schabas, Genocide in International Law: the crime of
crimes, Cambridge 2000, pp. 199 et seq.).
However, there are also a considerable number of scholars who have
suggested that these acts did amount to genocide (see, inter alia,
M. Lippman, Genocide: The Crime of the Century, HOUJIL 23
(2001), p. 526, and J. Hübner, Das Verbrechen des
Völkermordes im internationalen und nationalen Recht,
Frankfurt a.M. 2004, pp. 208-17; G. Werle,
differentiating in Völkerstrafrecht, 1st edition,
Tübingen 2003, pp. 205, 218 et seq., pointed
out that it depended on the circumstances of the case, in particular
on the scope of the crimes committed, whether an intent to destroy
the group as a social unit,
as opposed to a mere intent to expel
the group, could be proved).
b. Universal jurisdiction for the crime of
genocide
i. Convention on the Prevention and
Suppression of the Crime of Genocide (Genocide Convention) (1948)
- The
relevant provisions of the Genocide Convention read:
Article I
“The Contracting Parties confirm that genocide,
whether committed in time of peace or in time of war, is a crime
under international law which they undertake to prevent and to
punish.”
Article VI
“Persons charged with genocide or any of the other
acts enumerated in article III shall be tried by a competent
tribunal of the State in the territory of which the act was
committed, or by such international penal tribunal as may have
jurisdiction with respect to those Contracting Parties which shall
have accepted its jurisdiction.”
ii. Statute of the International
Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY Statute) (1993)
- The
relevant provision of the Statute of the International Criminal
Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia provides:
Article 9
Concurrent jurisdiction
“1. The International Tribunal and
national courts shall have concurrent jurisdiction to prosecute
persons for serious violations of international humanitarian law
committed in the territory of the former Yugoslavia since 1 January
1991.
2. The International Tribunal shall have
primacy over national courts. At any stage of the procedure, the
International Tribunal may formally request national courts to defer
to the competence of the International Tribunal in accordance with
the present Statute and the Rules of Procedure and Evidence of the
International Tribunal.”
iii. Case-law of the International
Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
- The
Appeals Chamber of the ICTY, in its decision of 2 October 1995
on the defence motion for interlocutory appeal on jurisdiction in the
case of Prosecutor v. Tadic (no. IT-94-1), stated that
“universal jurisdiction [is] nowadays acknowledged in the
case of international crimes” (§ 62).
- Likewise,
the Trial Chamber of the ICTY, in its judgment of 10 December
1998 in the case of Prosecutor v. Furundzija
(no. IT-95-17/1-T) found that [it] has been held that
international crimes being universally condemned wherever they occur,
every State has the right to prosecute and punish the authors of such
crimes. As stated in general terms by the Supreme Court of Israel in
Eichmann, and echoed by a USA court in Demjanjuk, “it
is the universal character of the crimes in question ... which vests
in every State the authority to try and punish those who participated
in their commission” (§ 156).
iv. Domestic law and practice in other
Convention States
- According
to the information and material before the Court, including material
submitted by the Government which has not been contested by the
applicant, the statutory provisions of numerous other Convention
States authorise the prosecution of genocide in circumstances
comparable to those in issue in the present case.
- In
many Contracting States of the Convention, the prosecution of
genocide is subject to the principle of universal jurisdiction, that
is, jurisdiction for crimes committed outside the State's territory
by non-nationals against non-nationals of that State and which are
not directed against the State's own national interests, at least if
the defendant was found to be present on its territory (e.g. Spain,
France, Belgium (at least until 2003), Finland, Italy, Latvia,
Luxembourg, the Netherlands (since 2003), Russia, the Slovak
Republic, the Czech Republic and Hungary). At the time of the
applicant's trial, numerous other States had authorised the
prosecution of genocide committed abroad by foreign nationals against
foreigners in accordance with provisions similar to the
representation principle (stellvertretende Strafrechtspflege)
(compare Article 7 § 2 no. 2 of the German
Criminal Code, paragraph 34 above), for example Austria,
Denmark, Estonia, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Sweden and Switzerland
(since 2000). Convention States which do not provide for universal
jurisdiction for genocide include, notably, the United Kingdom.
- Apart
from the Austrian, Belgian and French courts, it is in particular the
Spanish courts that have already adjudicated on charges of genocide,
relying on the principle of universal jurisdiction. The Spanish
Audiencia Nacional, in its judgment of 5 November 1998 in
the Augusto Pinochet case, held that the Spanish courts had
jurisdiction over the case. On the subject of the scope of the
Genocide Convention it stated:
“Article 6 of the Convention does not
preclude the existence of judicial bodies with jurisdiction apart
from those in the territory where the crime was committed or
international tribunals. ... it would be contrary to the spirit of
the Convention ..., in order to avoid the commission with impunity of
such a serious crime, to consider that this Article of the Convention
limits the exercise of jurisdiction, excluding any jurisdiction other
than those envisaged by the provision in question. The fact that the
Contracting Parties have not agreed on universal jurisdiction over
the crime for their respective national jurisdictions does not
preclude the establishment, by a State which is a party to the
Convention, of such jurisdiction over a crime which involves the
whole world and affects the international community and indeed all of
humanity directly, as stated in the Convention itself. ... Neither do
the terms of Article 6 of the Convention of 1948 constitute an
authorization to exclude jurisdiction for the punishment of genocide
in a State Party such as Spain, whose law establishes
extraterritoriality with regard to prosecution for such crimes ...”
(see International Law Reports, vol. 119, pp. 331 et seq.,
335-36).
THE LAW
I. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 5 § 1 (a)
AND ARTICLE 6 § 1 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant complained that his conviction for genocide by the
Düsseldorf Court of Appeal, as upheld by the Federal Court of
Justice and the Federal Constitutional Court, which he alleged had no
jurisdiction over his case, and his ensuing detention amounted to a
violation of Article 5 § 1 (a) and Article 6
§ 1 of the Convention, the relevant parts of which provide:
Article 5
“1. Everyone has the right to liberty
and security of person. No one shall be deprived of his liberty save
in the following cases and in accordance with a procedure prescribed
by law:
(a) the lawful detention of a person after
conviction by a competent court;”
Article 6
“1. In the determination of ... any
criminal charge against him, everyone is entitled to a fair ...
hearing ... by [a] ... tribunal established by law.”
- The
Government contested that submission.
A. Admissibility
- The Court notes that this complaint is not manifestly
ill-founded within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 of
the Convention. It further notes that it is not inadmissible on any
other grounds. It must therefore be declared admissible.
B. Merits
1. The parties' submissions
a. The applicant
- The
applicant took the view that there was a general rule of public
international law, namely the duty of non-intervention, which, in
principle, prohibited the German courts from prosecuting a foreigner
living abroad for genocide purportedly committed by him in a foreign
country against foreign victims. In his submission, the German courts
were also debarred from exceptionally assuming jurisdiction in
accordance with the international criminal law principle of universal
jurisdiction enshrined in Article 6 no. 1 of the Criminal
Code, as jurisdiction in accordance with that principle was not
recognised internationally in the case of genocide.
- The
applicant argued in particular that, pursuant to Article VI of
the Genocide Convention, only the tribunal of the State in the
territory of which the act was committed or an international tribunal
had jurisdiction to try persons charged with genocide. That Article
therefore reflected the duty of non-intervention flowing from
the principle of sovereignty and equality of all States, and the
prohibition of an abuse of rights, which were general rules of public
international law. He conceded that the principle of universal
jurisdiction, as recognised in customary public international law,
could, in theory, confer jurisdiction on a national court other than
the one named in Article VI of the Genocide Convention. However,
he maintained that jurisdiction in accordance with that principle,
being an exception to the rule of the duty of non-intervention, was
neither recognised in international treaty law nor in customary
international law for the purpose of trying persons charged with
genocide. The German courts had therefore arbitrarily assumed
jurisdiction.
b. The Government
- In
the Government's submission, the German courts had been the
“competent court[s]” within the meaning of Article 5
§ 1 (a) of the Convention to convict the applicant and
the “tribunal[s] established by law” within the meaning
of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention. German criminal
law had been applicable to the facts of the case so that, in
accordance with German law, German courts had had jurisdiction over
the offences the applicant had been charged with. They had been
competent under Article 6 no. 1 of the Criminal Code (in
its version then in force). There had also been a legitimate link
between the prosecution of the offences the applicant had been
charged with and Germany itself, as considered necessary by the
German courts beyond the wording of Article 6 no. 1 of the
Criminal Code in order to establish jurisdiction, thus respecting the
principle of non-intervention. The applicant had lived in Germany for
many years, was still registered with the authorities as living there
and had been arrested on German territory. Moreover, Germany had
participated in the military and humanitarian missions in Bosnia and
Herzegovina. In addition to that, the requirements of Article 7
§ 2 no. 2 of the Criminal Code, which incorporated the
representation principle, had been met, particularly as neither the
ICTY nor the criminal courts at the place of the crime in Bosnia and
Herzegovina had requested the applicant's extradition.
- The
Government further took the view that the provisions of German law on
jurisdiction conformed to the principles of public international law.
In particular, as had been convincingly shown by the German courts,
Article VI of the Genocide Convention, which laid down minimum
requirements in respect of the duty to prosecute genocide, did not
prohibit the tribunal of a State other than the one in the territory
of which the act was committed from prosecuting genocide.
- Moreover,
the principle of universal jurisdiction as recognised in customary
public international law authorised all States to establish
jurisdiction over crimes against international law such as acts of
genocide, which were directed against the interests of the
international community as a whole, irrespective of where or by whom
those crimes had been committed. Likewise, jurisdiction under the
representation principle as laid down in Article 7 § 2
no. 2 of the Criminal Code did not contravene public
international law. The German courts had therefore been authorised to
adjudicate on the applicant's case.
- The
Government submitted that the legislation and case-law of numerous
other Contracting States to the Convention and the case-law of the
ICTY expressly authorised the prosecution of genocide in accordance
with the principle of universal jurisdiction.
2. The Court's assessment
a. Relevant principles
- The
Court finds that the case primarily falls to be examined under
Article 6 § 1 of the Convention under the head of
whether the applicant was heard by a “tribunal established by
law”. It reiterates that this expression reflects the principle
of the rule of law, which is inherent in the system of protection
established by the Convention and its Protocols. “Law”,
within the meaning of Article 6 § 1, comprises in
particular the legislation on the establishment and competence of
judicial organs (see, inter alia, Lavents v. Latvia,
no. 58442/00, § 114, 28 November 2002).
Accordingly, if a tribunal does not have jurisdiction to try a
defendant in accordance with the provisions applicable under domestic
law, it is not “established by law” within the meaning of
Article 6 § 1 (compare Coëme and Others v.
Belgium, nos. 32492/96, 32547/96, 32548/96, 33209/96 and
33210/96, ECHR 2000-VII, §§ 99, 107-08).
- The
Court further reiterates that, in principle, a violation of the said
domestic legal provisions on the establishment and competence of
judicial organs by a tribunal gives rise to a violation of Article 6
§ 1.The Court is therefore competent to examine whether the
national law has been complied with in this respect. However, having
regard to the general principle according to which it is in the first
place for the national courts themselves to interpret the provisions
of domestic law, the Court finds that it may not question their
interpretation unless there has been a flagrant violation of domestic
law (see, mutatis mutandis, Coëme and Others,
cited above, § 98 in fine, and Lavents, cited
above, § 114). In this respect the Court also reiterates
that Article 6 does not grant the defendant a right to choose
the jurisdiction of a court. The Court's task is therefore limited to
examining whether reasonable grounds existed for the authorities to
establish jurisdiction (see, inter alia, G. v. Switzerland,
no. 16875/90, Commission decision of 10 October 1990, and
Kübli v. Switzerland, no. 17495/90, Commission
decision of 2 December 1992).
b. Application of the principles to the
present case
- The
Court notes that the German courts based their jurisdiction on
Article 6 no. 1 of the Criminal Code, taken in conjunction
with Article 220a of that Code (in their versions then in
force). These provisions provided that German criminal law was
applicable and that, consequently, German courts had jurisdiction to
try persons charged with genocide committed abroad, regardless of the
defendant's and the victims' nationalities. The domestic courts had
therefore established jurisdiction in accordance with the clear
wording of the pertinent provisions of the Criminal Code.
- In
deciding whether the German courts had jurisdiction under the
material provisions of domestic law, the Court must further ascertain
whether the domestic courts' decision that they had jurisdiction over
the applicant's case was in compliance with the provisions of public
international law applicable in Germany. It notes that the national
courts found that the public international law principle of universal
jurisdiction, which was codified in Article 6 no. 1 of the
Criminal Code, established their jurisdiction while complying with
the public international law duty of non-intervention. In their view,
their competence under the principle of universal jurisdiction was
not excluded by the wording of Article VI of the Genocide
Convention, as that Article was to be understood as establishing a
duty for the courts named therein to try persons suspected of
genocide, while not prohibiting the prosecution of genocide by other
national courts.
- In
determining whether the domestic courts' interpretation of the
applicable rules and provisions of public international law on
jurisdiction was reasonable, the Court is in particular required to
examine their interpretation of Article VI of the Genocide
Convention. It observes, as was also noted by the domestic courts
(see, in particular, paragraph 20 above), that the Contracting
Parties to the Genocide Convention, despite proposals in earlier
drafts to that effect, had not agreed to codify the principle of
universal jurisdiction over genocide for the domestic courts of all
Contracting States in that Article (compare paragraphs 20 and 54
above). However, pursuant to Article I of the Genocide
Convention, the Contracting Parties were under an erga omnes
obligation to prevent and punish genocide, the prohibition of which
forms part of the jus cogens. In view of this, the national
courts' reasoning that the purpose of the Genocide Convention, as
expressed notably in that Article, did not exclude jurisdiction for
the punishment of genocide by States whose laws establish
extraterritoriality in this respect must be considered as reasonable
(and indeed convincing). Having thus reached a reasonable and
unequivocal interpretation of Article VI of the Genocide
Convention in accordance with the aim of that Convention, there was
no need, in interpreting the said Convention, to have recourse to the
preparatory documents, which play only a subsidiary role in the
interpretation of public international law
(see Articles 31
§ 1 and 32 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties
of 23 May 1969).
- The
Court observes in this connection that the German courts'
interpretation of Article VI of the Genocide Convention in the
light of Article I of that Convention and their establishment of
jurisdiction to try the applicant on charges of genocide is widely
confirmed by the statutory provisions and case-law of numerous other
Contracting States to the Convention (for the Protection of Human
Rights) and by the Statute and case-law of the ICTY. It notes, in
particular, that the Spanish Audiencia Nacional has
interpreted Article VI of the Genocide Convention in exactly the
same way as the German courts (see paragraph 54 above).
Furthermore, Article 9 § 1 of the ICTY Statute
confirms the German courts' view, providing for concurrent
jurisdiction of the ICTY and national courts, without any restriction
to domestic courts of particular countries. Indeed, the principle of
universal jurisdiction for genocide has been expressly acknowledged
by the ICTY (see paragraphs 50-51 above) and numerous Convention
States authorize the prosecution of genocide in accordance with that
principle, or at least where, as in the applicant's case, additional
conditions – such as those required under the representation
principle – are met (see paragraphs 52-53 above).
- The
Court concludes that the German courts' interpretation of the
applicable provisions and rules of public international law, in the
light of which the provisions of the Criminal Code had to be
construed, was not arbitrary. They therefore had reasonable grounds
for establishing their jurisdiction to try the applicant on charges
of genocide.
- It
follows that the applicant's case was heard by a tribunal established
by law within the meaning of Article 6 § 1 of the
Convention. There has therefore been no violation of that provision.
- Having
regard to the above finding under Article 6 § 1,
namely, that the German courts had reasonably assumed jurisdiction to
try the applicant on charges of genocide, the Court concludes that
the applicant was also lawfully detained after conviction “by a
competent court” within the meaning of Article 5 § 1
(a) of the Convention. Accordingly, there has been no violation of
that Article either.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 6 §§ 1 AND
3 (d) OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant claimed that, due to the Düsseldorf Court of Appeal's
refusal, on the basis of Article 244 § 5 of the
Criminal Code, to call any witness for the defence who would have had
to be summoned abroad, he had not had a fair trial within the meaning
of Article 6 §§ 1 and 3 (d) of the
Convention. He further complained that the refusal of the Court of
Appeal to inspect the purported scene of the crime in Grabska or to
have a topographical map drawn up also amounted to a violation of
Article 6 §§ 1 and 3 (d) of the Convention,
which, in so far as relevant, reads as follows:
“1. In the determination of ... any
criminal charge against him, everyone is entitled to a fair ...
hearing ... by [a] ... tribunal ...
3. Everyone charged with a criminal offence
has the following minimum rights: ...
(d) to examine or have examined witnesses
against him and to obtain the attendance and examination of witnesses
on his behalf under the same conditions as witnesses against him;”
- The
Government contested that submission.
A. The parties' submissions
1. The Government
- In
the Government's submission, the applicant had not exhausted domestic
remedies in respect of his objection to the Court of Appeal's refusal
to call twenty-eight witnesses in the proceedings before the Federal
Court of Justice on the ground that he had not sufficiently
substantiated his complaints. They further argued that the applicant
had not in any way raised his complaint about the Court of Appeal's
refusal to inspect the purported scene of the crime in Grabska in the
proceedings before the Federal Court of Justice and had therefore
also failed to exhaust domestic remedies in that respect.
- The
Government further claimed that the applicant could no longer claim
to be the victim of a violation of his Convention rights and that the
application was incompatible ratione personae with the
Convention in so far as his complaints related to requests to take
evidence in respect of the charge of murder of twenty-two people in
Grabska. They argued that the criminal proceedings against the
applicant had been reopened and discontinued in respect of these
offences.
- The
Government submitted that, in any event, the applicant's right to a
fair trial under Article 6 of the Convention had not been
violated.
The Court of Appeal had taken evidence in compliance
with the requirements of that provision. Pursuant to Article 244
of the Code of Criminal Procedure in particular, the same rules for
the taking of evidence applied both to the prosecution and the
defence. Under the German Code of Criminal Procedure, it was for the
criminal courts themselves to investigate the truth of their own
motion. Even though the investigation into offences committed abroad
raised considerable procedural problems, the defendants were
protected by the rules on criminal procedure and by having the
benefit of the doubt.
- In
the Government's view, the Court of Appeal had not acted arbitrarily
in dismissing the applicant's requests to take further evidence.
It
had duly examined the applicant's requests and had given objectively
justified reasons for dismissing them. Its conclusion under
Article 244 § 5 of the Code of Criminal Procedure that
the summoning of the witnesses named by the applicant was not
necessary in the circumstances of the case for ascertaining the truth
did not disclose any error of law and the Court of Appeal had given
full reasons for its decisions.
2. The applicant
- The
applicant contested the Government's view. He stressed that the
Federal Constitutional Court had not dismissed his complaint for lack
of exhaustion of domestic remedies and maintained that he had not
lost his status of victim of a violation of Article 6 of the
Convention.
- The
applicant complained that Article 6 §§ 1 and
3 (d) of the Convention had been violated in that, under
Article 244 § 5, second sentence, of the Code of
Criminal Procedure, the Court of Appeal had refused to call all
twenty-eight defence witnesses named by him who would have had to be
summoned abroad, whereas it had called and examined six witnesses
named by the prosecution who had been summoned abroad.
He
maintained that in the circumstances of his case, the Court of
Appeal, had it used its discretionary powers correctly, would have
been debarred from applying Article 244 § 5 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure. The said provision laid down
preconditions for refusing to call a witness who had to be summoned
abroad which were less strict than those applicable to a refusal to
call witnesses living in Germany. It was based on the assumption that
for criminal trials in Germany, evidence could mainly be obtained in
Germany. However, in his case, which concerned acts purportedly
committed in Bosnia and Herzegovina, as a rule all the witnesses
lived abroad. The application of Article 244 § 5 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure had therefore been arbitrary. If the
Court of Appeal had called the witnesses named, it would immediately
have found that the witness for the prosecution concerning the
alleged offences in Grabska had not told the truth.
B. The Court's assessment
- The
Court does not consider it necessary in the present case to rule on
the Government's objections concerning the exhaustion of domestic
remedies and the applicant's victim status since, even assuming that
the applicant has exhausted domestic remedies and can still claim to
be a victim of a violation of Article 6 of the Convention in all
respects, it considers that the application is in any event
inadmissible for the reasons set out below.
1. General principles
- The
Court reiterates that, as a general rule, it is for the national
courts to assess the evidence before them, as well as the relevance
of the evidence which the defendant seeks to adduce. More
specifically, Article 6 § 3 (d) – which
lays down specific aspects of the general concept of a fair trial set
forth in Article 6 § 1 – leaves it to them, in
principle, to assess, in particular, whether it is appropriate to
call certain witnesses. It does not require the attendance and
examination of every witness on behalf of the accused. However, it is
the task of the Court to ascertain whether the taking and assessment
of evidence violated the principle of a full “equality of
arms”, rendering the proceedings as a whole unfair (see, inter
alia, Vidal v. Belgium, judgment of 22 April 1992,
Series A no. 235, pp. 32-33, § 33, and
Heidegger v. Austria (dec.), no. 27077/95, 5 October
1999).
- In
cases arising from individual applications it is not the Court's task
to examine the domestic legislation in the abstract, but it must
examine the manner in which that legislation was applied to the
applicant in the particular circumstances (see, amongst others, Sahin
v. Germany [GC], no. 30943/96, § 87,
ECHR 2003-VII, and Sommerfeld v. Germany [GC],
no. 31871/96, § 86,
ECHR 2003-VIII).
2. Application of those principles to the present case
- The
Court therefore has to determine whether the domestic courts'
application of Article 244 of the Criminal Code and their
ensuing refusal to call certain witnesses, inspect the scene of the
purported offence or have a topographical map drawn up rendered the
proceedings as a whole unfair.
- The
Court observes at the outset that it is uncontested between the
parties that Article 244 of the Criminal Code applies to all
requests to call witnesses or to obtain other evidence, whether
brought by the prosecution or the defence. In cases like the present
one, in which the crime was committed outside Germany and in which it
will, as a rule, prove necessary to obtain evidence from abroad, its
application did not therefore generally favour applications to take
evidence brought by the prosecution. Moreover, it is true that
Article 244 § 5, second sentence, of the Code of
Criminal Procedure lays down special conditions for rejecting an
application to examine a witness – whether for the prosecution
or for the defence – who would have to be summoned abroad.
These conditions are indeed less strict than those for rejecting an
application to hear evidence from a witness who can be summoned in
Germany. However, these witnesses are not automatically treated as
unobtainable evidence. The courts, pre-assessing the evidence before
them, may, however, conclude that the examination of such a witness
is not necessary for establishing the truth (see paragraph 39
above).
- The
Court further notes that the Court of Appeal, acting as a court of
first instance, while having summoned six prosecution witnesses
abroad, refused to call any of the twenty-eight witnesses living in
Bosnia named by the applicant. However, this fact as such does not
warrant the conclusion that the principle of equality of arms or the
applicant's right to obtain the attendance of witnesses were
disregarded, and that, consequently, the proceedings as a whole were
unfair. In this respect, the Court observes in particular that the
Court of Appeal, giving detailed reasons for the refusal to take
further evidence, considered the written statements of at least seven
of the said twenty-eight witnesses to prove the same fact (namely the
applicant's detention at the time of the offence) before
concluding that the testimony of all twenty-eight witnesses would be
of little evidential value and irrelevant in deciding the case. The
Court observes that the Court of Appeal, when rejecting the
applicant's request to call these witnesses, had already heard the
testimonies of more than twenty witnesses, including that of two
journalists who were not affected by the offences the applicant was
charged with (and could therefore, as a rule, be considered as
particularly credible). These witnesses, who could be cross-examined
by the applicant, had all stated that they had seen the applicant
outside prison during the time he claimed to have been detained. In
these circumstances, the Court cannot find that the domestic courts
had acted arbitrarily in deciding that the testimonies of the
witnesses named by the applicant to prove his detention at the time
of the offence had not been relevant. Therefore, the Court finds no
indication that the proceedings against the applicant were as a whole
unfair.
- As
regards the applicant's complaint about the refusal of the Court of
Appeal to inspect the purported scene of the crime in Grabska or to
have a topographical map drawn up for the purpose of proving that the
witnesses' submissions concerning the purported acts were
untrustworthy, the Court finds that the Court of Appeal gave proper
reasons for its decision why it considered the taking of this
evidence to be unobtainable. Having regard to the fact that the Court
of Appeal had a video of the relevant locality and that the applicant
could question the conclusiveness of the evidence taken in respect of
the acts in question, the Court finds no indication that the failure
to take additional evidence was incompatible with Article 6 §§ 1
and 3.
- It
follows that the applicant's complaints under Article 6 §§ 1
and 3 (d) of the Convention must be dismissed as manifestly
ill-founded, in accordance with Article 35 §§ 3
and 4 of the Convention.
III. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 7 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant further complained that the wide interpretation of the
crime of genocide, as adopted by the German courts, did not have a
basis in the wording of that offence as laid down in German and
public international law, and that the German courts arbitrarily
found that his guilt was of a particular gravity. He claimed that his
conviction therefore amounted to a breach of Article 7 § 1
of the Convention, which provides:
“No one shall be held guilty of any criminal
offence on account of any act or omission which did not constitute a
criminal offence under national or international law at the time when
it was committed. Nor shall a heavier penalty be imposed than the one
that was applicable at the time the criminal offence was committed.”
- The
Government contested that argument.
A. Admissibility
- The
Court notes that this complaint is not manifestly ill-founded within
the meaning of Article 35 § 3 of the Convention. It further
notes that it is not inadmissible on any other grounds. It must
therefore be declared admissible.
B. Merits
1. The parties' submissions
a. The applicant
- The
applicant stated that a conviction for genocide under Article 220a
of the Criminal Code required proof that the offender had acted with
intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, racial, ethnical
or religious group as such. He maintained that, having regard to the
literal meaning of the term “destroy”, a mere attack on
the living conditions or the basis of subsistence of a group, as in
the present case, did not constitute destruction of the group itself.
The “ethnic cleansing” carried out by Bosnian Serbs in
the Doboj region had been aimed only at driving all Muslims away from
that region by force, that is, at expelling that group, not
destroying its very existence. It therefore could not be considered
as genocide within the meaning of Article 220a of the Criminal
Code.
- Furthermore,
according to the applicant, the German courts' interpretation of
“intent to destroy” in Article 220a, which had been
included in the Criminal Code in order to incorporate the Genocide
Convention into national law, was contrary to the interpretation of
the same notion in Article II of the Genocide Convention as
adopted by the community of States. In fact, according to the
internationally accepted doctrine, genocide applied only to cases in
which murder, extermination or deportation was carried out with
intent to eliminate a narrowly defined group, that is, to destroy it
in a biological-physical sense, not merely as a social unit. The
ethnic cleansing in former Yugoslavia could not be compared to the
extermination of Jews committed during the Nazi regime, which had
been the reason for creating the Genocide Convention.
- The
applicant claimed that it had not therefore been foreseeable for him
at the time of the commission of his acts that the German courts
would qualify them as genocide under German or public international
law.
- Likewise,
according to the applicant, the German courts' finding that his guilt
was of a particular gravity amounted to a violation of Article 7
§ 1 of the Convention in that the courts did not take into
consideration that he had therefore played only a minor role in the
purported genocide in Bosnia.
b. The Government
- In
the Government's view, the German courts' interpretation of the
notion of “genocide” was not in breach of Article 7
§ 1 of the Convention. The wording of the offence of
genocide in Article 220a of the German Criminal Code permitted
interpreting the notion of genocide as comprising acts committed with
intent to destroy a group as a social unit. In particular, the intent
to destroy had to be directed against the “group as such”,
which suggested that not only the physical, but also the social
existence of the group was protected. Moreover, the definition of
genocide laid down in Article 220a § 1 no. 4
(imposition of measures which are intended to prevent births within
the group) and no. 5 (forcible transfer of children of the group
into another group) did not entail the physical destruction of living
members of the group in question either.
- For
the same reasons, the wording of Article II of the Genocide
Convention, which corresponded to Article 220a of the Criminal
Code, did not restrict the offence of genocide to the
physical-biological destruction of the group in question. This was
confirmed by numerous scholars and by the UN General Assembly, which
interpreted the Genocide Convention so as to comprise the protection
of a group as a social unit (see paragraph 41 above).
- As
the German courts' interpretation of the offence of genocide was
compatible with the wording of Article 220a of the Criminal
Code, the domestic courts' interpretation had been foreseeable at the
time the applicant committed the offence in 1992. Moreover, German
scholars had by then taken the view that criminal liability for
genocide was also aimed at protecting the social existence of groups
(see paragraph 36 above).
- The
Government conceded that in its judgment of 2 August 2001 in the
case of Prosecutor v. Krstic, the Trial Chamber of the ICTY,
as upheld on appeal, had expressly rejected the Federal
Constitutional Court's interpretation of the notion of “intent
to destroy” in its judgment in the present case. Relying on the
principle of nullum crimen sine lege, the ICTY had argued for
the first time that the offence of genocide under public
international law was restricted to acts aimed at the physical or
biological destruction of a group. However, this narrower
interpretation of the scope of the crime of genocide by the ICTY in
2001 – which, in the Government's view, was not convincing –
did not call into question the fact that it had been foreseeable for
the applicant, when he committed his offences in 1992, that these
would be qualified as genocide. In any event, the German courts had
not qualified ethnic cleansing in general as genocide, but had found
that the applicant, in the circumstances of the case, was guilty of
genocide as he had intended to destroy a group as a social unit and
not merely to expel it.
2. The Court's assessment
a. General principles
- The
Court reiterates that the guarantee enshrined in Article 7 of
the Convention is an essential element of the rule of law. It is not
confined to prohibiting the retroactive application of criminal law
to the disadvantage of an accused. It also embodies, more generally,
the principle that only the law can define a crime and prescribe a
penalty (nullum crimen, nulla poena sine lege) and the
principle that criminal law must not be extensively construed to the
detriment of an accused, for instance by analogy. From these
principles it follows that an offence must be clearly defined in the
law. This requirement is satisfied where the individual can know from
the wording of the relevant provision and, if need be, with the
assistance of the courts' interpretation of it, what acts and
omissions will make him criminally liable. When speaking of “law”
Article 7 alludes to the very same concept as that to which the
Convention refers elsewhere when using that term, a concept which
comprises written as well as unwritten law and implies qualitative
requirements, notably those of accessibility and foreseeability (see,
inter alia, S.W. v. the United Kingdom, judgment of
22 November 1995, Series A no. 335-C, pp. 41-42,
§§ 34-35; C.R. v. the United Kingdom, judgment
of 22 November 1995, Series A no. 335-C, pp. 68-69,
§§ 32-33; and Streletz, Kessler and Krenz v.
Germany [GC], no. 34044/96, 35532/97, 44801/98, § 50,
ECHR 2001-II).
- In
any system of law, including criminal law, however clearly drafted a
legal provision may be, there is an inevitable element of judicial
interpretation. There will always be a need for elucidation of
doubtful points and for adaptation to changing circumstances. Indeed,
in the Convention States, the progressive development of the criminal
law through judicial law-making is a well entrenched and necessary
part of legal tradition. Article 7 of the Convention cannot be
read as outlawing the gradual clarification of the rules of criminal
liability through judicial interpretation from case to case, provided
that the resultant development is consistent with the essence of the
offence and could reasonably be foreseen (see, inter alia,
S.W. v. the United Kingdom, cited above, p. 42, § 36;
C.R. v. the United Kingdom, cited above, p. 69, § 34;
Streletz, Kessler and Krenz, cited above, § 50; and
K.-H. W. v. Germany [GC], no. 37201/97, § 45,
ECHR 2001-II).
- As
regards the interpretation and application of domestic law, the Court
reiterates that it is primarily for the national authorities, notably
the courts, to interpret and apply domestic law (see, mutatis
mutandis, Kopp v. Switzerland, judgment of 25 March
1998, Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1998-II, p. 541,
§ 59, and Streletz, Kessler and Krenz, cited above,
§ 49). While the Court's duty, in accordance with
Article 19 of the Convention, is to ensure the observance of the
engagements undertaken by the Contracting Parties to the Convention,
it is not its function to deal with errors of fact or law allegedly
committed by a national court unless and in so far as they may have
infringed rights and freedoms protected by the Convention (see,
mutatis mutandis, Schenk v. Switzerland, judgment of
12 July 1988, Series A no. 140, p. 29, § 45,
and Streletz, Kessler and Krenz, cited above, § 49).
b. Application of the principles to the
present case
- In
the light of the above principles, the Court therefore needs to
decide whether the national courts' interpretation of the crime of
genocide under German law, notably of the genocidal “intent to
destroy”, so as to cover the applicant's acts committed in the
course of the ethnic cleansing in Bosnia and Herzegovina was
consistent with the essence of that offence and could reasonably be
foreseen by the applicant at the material time.
- In
determining, firstly, whether the German courts' interpretation was
consistent with the essence of the offence of genocide, the Court
observes that the domestic courts did not construe the scope of that
offence narrowly. They considered that the “intent to destroy”
a group within the meaning of Article 220a of the Criminal Code,
as interpreted also in the light of Article II of the Genocide
Convention, did not necessitate an intent to destroy that group in a
physical or biological sense. It was sufficient that the perpetrator
aimed at destroying the group in question as a social unit.
- The
Court notes that the domestic courts construed the “intent to
destroy a group as such” systematically in the context of
Article 220a § 1 of the Criminal Code as a whole,
having regard notably to alternatives no. 4 (imposition of
measures which are intended to prevent births within the group) and
no. 5 (forcible transfer of children of the group into another
group) of that provision, which did not necessitate a physical
destruction of living members of the group in question. The Court
finds that the domestic courts' interpretation of “intent to
destroy a group” as not necessitating a physical destruction of
the group, which has also been adopted by a number of scholars (see
paragraphs 36 and 47 above), is therefore covered by the
wording, read in its context, of the crime of genocide in the
Criminal Code and does not appear unreasonable.
- Furthermore,
the Court, like the national courts, considers it necessary, in order
to determine the essence of the offence of genocide, to take into
consideration also the codification of the prohibition of genocide in
Article II of the Genocide Convention, for the observance of
which Article 220a had been incorporated into the Criminal Code
and in the light of which the said Article was to be construed. As
the wording of Article 220a of the Criminal Code corresponds to
that of Article II of the Genocide Convention in so far as the
definition of genocide is concerned, the above reasoning with respect
to the scope of the prohibition of genocide equally applies.
- Moreover,
the German courts' interpretation has not only been supported by a
number of scholars at the relevant time of the commission of the
crime (see paragraph 36 above). In its Resolution 47/121 of
18 December 1992 the UN General Assembly agreed with the wider
interpretation adopted by the German courts in the present case
(see
paragraph 41 above).
- Consequently,
the applicant's acts, which he committed in the course of the ethnic
cleansing in the Doboj region with intent to destroy the group of
Muslims as a social unit, could reasonably be regarded as falling
within the ambit of the offence of genocide.
- In
deciding, secondly, whether the domestic courts' interpretation of
the crime of genocide by the domestic courts could reasonably be
foreseen by the applicant at the material time, the Court notes that
the applicant is the first person to be convicted of genocide by
German courts under Article 220a since the incorporation of that
Article into the Criminal Code in 1955. In these circumstances, the
Court finds that, as opposed to cases concerning a reversal of
pre-existing case-law, an interpretation of the scope of the offence
which was – as in the present case – consistent with the
essence of that offence, must, as a rule, be considered as
foreseeable. Despite this, the Court does not exclude that,
exceptionally, an applicant could rely on a particular interpretation
of the provision being taken by the domestic courts in the special
circumstances of the case.
- In
the present case, which concerns the interpretation by national
courts of a provision stemming from public international law, the
Court finds it necessary, in order to ensure that the protection
guaranteed by Article 7 § 1 of the Convention remains
effective, to examine whether there were special circumstances
warranting the conclusion that the applicant,
if necessary after
having obtained legal advice, could rely on a narrower interpretation
of the scope of the crime of genocide by the domestic courts, having
regard, notably, to the interpretation of the offence of genocide by
other authorities.
- The
Court notes in this connection that at the material time the scope of
Article II of the Genocide Convention, on which Article 220a
of the Criminal Code is based, was contested amongst scholars as
regards the definition of “intent to destroy a group”.
Whereas the majority of legal writers took the view that ethnic
cleansing, in the way in which it was carried out by the Serb forces
in Bosnia and Herzegovina in order to expel Muslims and Croats from
their homes, did not constitute genocide,
a considerable number
of scholars suggested that these acts did indeed amount to genocide
(see paragraph 47 above).
- The
Court further observes that – also after the applicant
committed the impugned acts – the scope of genocide was
interpreted differently by the international authorities. It is true
that the ICTY, in its judgments in the cases of Prosecutor v.
Krstic and Prosecutor v. Kupreskic, expressly
disagreed with the wide interpretation of the “intent to
destroy” as adopted by the UN General Assembly and the German
courts. Referring to the principle of nullum crimen sine lege,
the ICTY considered that genocide, as defined in public international
law, comprised only acts aimed at the physical or biological
destruction of a protected group. However, as the judgments of the
ICTY – as well as further decisions concerning this subject
matter taken by national and international courts, in particular the
International Court of Justice (see paragraph 45 above), in
respect of their own domestic or international codifications of the
crime of genocide – were delivered subsequent to the
commission of his offences, the applicant could not rely on this
interpretation being taken by the German courts in respect of German
law at the material time, that is, when he committed his offences.
- In
view of the foregoing, the Court concludes that, while many
authorities had favoured a narrow interpretation of the crime of
genocide, there had already been several authorities at the material
time which had construed the offence of genocide in the same wider
way as the German courts. In these circumstances, the Court finds
that the applicant, if need be with the assistance of a lawyer, could
reasonably have foreseen that he risked being charged with and
convicted of genocide for the acts he had committed in 1992. In this
context the Court also has regard to the fact that the applicant was
found guilty of acts of a considerable severity and duration: the
killing of several people and the detention and ill-treatment of a
large number of people over a period of several months as the leader
of a paramilitary group in pursuit of the policy of ethnic cleansing.
- Therefore,
the national courts' interpretation of the crime of genocide could
reasonably be regarded as consistent with the essence of that offence
and could reasonably be foreseen by the applicant at the material
time. These requirements being met, it was for the German courts to
decide which interpretation of the crime of genocide under domestic
law they wished to adopt. Accordingly, the applicant's conviction for
genocide was not in breach of Article 7 § 1 of the
Convention.
- As
regards the applicant's further complaint under Article 7 § 1
that the courts wrongly found that his guilt was of a particular
gravity, the Court notes that the applicant's submissions in this
respect are limited to an allegation of factual and legal errors.
They disclose neither an appearance of a breach of the said provision
nor a breach of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention.
- Accordingly,
the Court concludes that there has been no violation of Article 7
§ 1 of the Convention.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
- Declares the complaint under Article 6 §§ 1
and 3 (d) of the Convention concerning the domestic courts'
taking of evidence inadmissible and the remainder of the application
admissible;
- Holds that there has been no violation of
Article 6 § 1 or Article 5 § 1 of the
Convention in so far as the applicant complained about the German
courts' lack of jurisdiction to try him on charges of genocide;
- Holds that there has been no violation of
Article 7 of the Convention.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 12 July 2007,
pursuant to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Claudia Westerdiek Peer Lorenzen
Registrar President