Accused

Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision re Prosecution Witnesses - 29.01.2016 NIYITEGEKA Eliézer
(MICT-12-16)

10. […] in order to carry out their duties in full, counsel recognized, assigned, or appointed by the Registrar as acting for an accused or convicted person must, in principle, automatically have access to the complete record of the proceedings to which their client is entitled.[1] […]

[1]See Prosecutor v. Augustin Ngirabatware, Case No. MICT-12-29, Decision on Request for Access, 16 September 2015, p. 2, referring to Prosecutor v. Radoslav Brđanin, Case No. MICT-13-48, Decision on Request for Access, 3 August 2015, p. 1; The Prosecutor v. Jean de Dieu Kamuhanda, Case No. MICT-13-33, Decision on Request for Access, 25 June 2015, paras. 11, 14. 

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Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision on Right to Be Present - 05.10.2007 KAREMERA et al.
(ICTR-98-44-AR73.10)

11. […] However, the Appeals Chambers of both this Tribunal and of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (“ICTY”) have also held that the right to be present at trial is not absolute.[1] In the Zigiranyirazo Decision, this Appeals Chamber held that an accused person can waive or forfeit the right to be present at trial.[2] The Appeals Chamber noted that Rule 80(B) of the Rules allows a Trial Chamber to remove an accused for persistent disruption of the proceedings. It further held that in determining to restrict any statutory right of an accused, the Appeals Chamber must take into account “the proportionality principle, pursuant to which any restriction on a fundamental right must be in service of a sufficiently important objective and must impair the right no more than is necessary to accomplish the objective.”[3]

[1] See Zigiranyirazo Decision, para. 14; Slobodan Milošević v. The Prosecutor, Case No. IT-02-54-AR73.7, Decision on Interlocutory Appeal of the Trial Chamber’s Decision on the Assignment of Defense Counsel, 1 November 2004 (“Milošević Decision”), para. 13.

[2] See Zigiranyirazo Decision, para. 14.

[3] Id. (footnotes omitted).

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ICTR Statute Article 20(4)(d) ICTY Statute Article 21(4)(d)
Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision on Right to Be Present - 05.10.2007 KAREMERA et al.
(ICTR-98-44-AR73.10)

11. Article 20(a)(d) of the Statute provides that an accused has a right “to be tried in his or her presence”. The Appeals Chamber has interpreted the scope of this right as meaning that an accused has a right to be physically present at his trial.[1]  […]

[1] See Zigiranyirazo Decision [Protais Zigiranyirazo v. The Prosecutor, Case No. ICTR-2001-73-AR73, Decision on Interlocutory Appeal, 30 October 2006], paras. 11-13.

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ICTR Statute Article 20(4)(d) ICTY Statute Article 21(4)(d)
Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision on Right to Be Present - 05.10.2007 KAREMERA et al.
(ICTR-98-44-AR73.10)

15. The Appeals Chamber agrees that the right to an expeditious trial as a right guaranteed to all accused by the Statute of the Tribunal was a relevant consideration for the Trial Chamber in balancing whether or not to proceed in the absence of the Appellant. However, in the circumstances of this complex and lengthy case, the Appeals Chamber is not satisfied that the three day delay to the trial was sufficient to outweigh the statutory right of the Appellant to be present at his own trial when the absence of the Appellant was due to no fault of his own. […]

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ICTR Statute Article 20(4)(d) ICTY Statute Article 21(4)(d)