Amnesty International welcomes the decision of the
Chamber of Deputies of 14 July 2005, rejecting the bilateral
impunity agreement between Jordan and the United States of America
(USA), and urges the Senate likewise to oppose this unlawful
agreement.
"No
one, regardless of their nationality, should enjoy impunity for the
worst crimes known to humanity. This agreement grants absolute
impunity from international prosecution to US nationals who are
accused by the International Criminal Court of committing genocide,
crimes against humanity or war crimes," Amnesty International said.
The
agreement was signed by the Jordanian Government on 16 December 2004
and requires Jordan to refuse to surrender US nationals accused of
such crimes to the International Criminal Court. Having been
rejected by the Chamber of Deputies last Thursday, it will now be
referred to the Senate.
"Agreements
securing impunity for US nationals from prosecution are unlawful.
They violate both Jordan’s legal duty to cooperate with the
International Criminal Court, and the obligations of all states
under international law to ensure that those responsible for
genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes are brought to
justice," Amnesty International stressed.
Amnesty
International emphasized that the agreement would guarantee impunity
to US nationals who committed genocide, war crimes or crimes against
humanity in Jordanian territory. "If this agreement is ratified,
Jordan will be unable to ensure that US nationals are held
individually criminally responsible for their actions and required
to provide reparations to victims and their families. If such crimes
are committed by US nationals in Jordan, and the USA is unable or
unwilling to investigate these crimes, Jordan will have no way to
ensure that those responsible are brought to justice," Amnesty
International said.
The
EU, Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Japan, Mali, Mexico, New Zealand,
Paraguay, Peru, Samoa, Slovenia, South Africa, St. Lucia,
Switzerland, Tanzania, Trinidad and Tobago and Venezuela have all
refused to enter into impunity agreements.
Amnesty International calls on the Senate to affirm Jordan's
commitment to international justice by rejecting this agreement,
which violates the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court
(Rome Statute) and other international law, including the Geneva
Conventions.
Background
The
US initiative is part of a worldwide campaign to undermine the
International Criminal Court and ensure impunity for US nationals.
Although the USA claims that 100 states have signed impunity
agreements, parliaments in only 19 states have approved ratification
of such agreements.
The
USA is demanding that any US national accused of crimes under the
jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court should be returned
to the USA, without any commitment that they be prosecuted by US
courts and without any recourse if US courts fail to fulfil their
responsibilities. In fact, in many cases US courts will not be able
to do so as US law does not recognize many of the crimes under
international law as defined in the Rome Statute.
Although the USA has claimed that such impunity agreements are
permitted under Article 98 of the Rome Statute, as Amnesty
International has explained, that article was designed for the
limited purpose of permitting states parties to the Rome Statute to
honour existing Status of Forces Agreements (SOFAs), which allocate
jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute crimes committed by
members of armed forces of the sending state stationed in another
state (the receiving state). They were not designed to permit states
that have not ratified the Rome Statute to exempt their nationals
from any investigation or prosecution for genocide, crimes against
humanity or war crimes. See: The International Criminal Court: US
efforts to obtain impunity for genocide, crimes against humanity and
war crimes, AI Index: IOR 40/025/2002, 2 September 2002, and The
International Criminal Court: The need for the European Union to
take more effective steps to prevent members from signing impunity
agreements, AI Index: IOR 40/030/2002, 1 October 2002.
On
11 April 2002, Jordan ratified the Rome Statute of the International
Criminal Court, which has now been ratified by 99 states.