Nexus with the armed conflict

Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision on Jurisdiction - 31.08.2004 ŠEŠELJ Vojislav
(IT-03-67-AR72.1)

12. The Appeals Chamber agrees that the issue on this appeal is one of statutory interpretation. As was stated by the Appeals Chamber in the Tadić Appeals Decision, the Statute of the Tribunal should be interpreted in light of its object and purpose.[1] Article 1 of the Tribunal’s Statute defines the territorial and temporal jurisdiction of the Tribunal conferring “the power to prosecute persons responsible for serious violations of international humanitarian law committed in the territory of the former Yugoslavia since 1991”. The object of the Security Council’s establishment of the Tribunal, as stated in Security Council Resolution 808 (1993), is to bring to an end the reported widespread violations of international humanitarian law, bring to justice the persons responsible for those violations, and contribute to the restoration and maintenance of peace in the territory of the former Yugoslavia. In drafting Article 5 of the Tribunal’s Statute and imposing the additional jurisdictional requirement that crimes against humanity be committed in armed conflict, the Security Council intended to limit the jurisdiction of the Tribunal to those crimes which had some connection to armed conflict in the former Yugoslavia. At the meeting of the Security Council at which the Tribunal’s Statute was adopted, those members that addressed the scope of Article 5 of the Statute made clear their view that it encompassed widespread or systematic criminal acts committed against the civilian population on the territory of the former Yugoslavia during an armed conflict. [2]

13. As expressed in the jurisprudence of the Tribunal, the jurisdictional requirement of Article 5 requires the existence of an armed conflict at the time and place relevant to the indictment, but it does not mandate any material nexus between the acts of the accused and the armed conflict.[3] While this interpretation itself offers little guidance on the meaning of “time and place relevant to the indictment”, the Tribunal’s jurisprudence on the application of Article 5 of the Statute points towards a broad interpretation. For example, there is no requirement that an attack directed against a civilian population be related to the armed conflict. As the Appeals Chamber in the Tadić Appeals Decision held: “The two — ‘the attack on the civilian population’ and the ‘armed conflict’ — must be separate notions, although of course under Article 5 of the Statute the attack on ‘any civilian population’ may be part of an ‘armed conflict”.[4] Likewise, the above mentioned Tadić Appeals Chambers interpretation of the application of international humanitarian law, of which Article 5 is a part, supports a broad interpretation of the jurisdictional requirement that a crime against humanity be committed in armed conflict.

14. The Appeals Chamber does not accept that the jurisdictional requirement of Article 5 requires the Prosecution to establish that an armed conflict existed within the State (or region) of the Former Yugoslavia in which the charged Article 5 crime is alleged to have been committed. There can be situations where an armed conflict is ongoing in one state and ethnic civilians of one of the warring sides, resident in another state, become victims of a widespread and systematic attack in response to that armed conflict. All that is required under Article 5 of the Statute is that the prosecution establish that an armed conflict is sufficiently related to the Article 5 crime with which the accused is charged. While, as previous jurisprudence of this Tribunal has held, there is no need for the Prosecution to establish a material nexus between the acts of the accused and the armed conflict, the Prosecution must establish a connection between the Article 5 crime itself and the armed conflict. Consistently with the object of the purpose of the Tribunal’s Statute, the jurisdictional requirement that Article 5 crimes be committed in armed conflict requires the Prosecution to establish that a widespread or systematic attack against the civilian population was carried out while an armed conflict in Croatia and/or Bosnia and Herzegovina was in progress. Whether the Prosecution can establish this connection in this case with respect to crimes against humanity in Vojvodina is a question of fact to be determined at trial.

15. For the foregoing reasons the Prosecution’s Appeal is allowed and the Trial Chamber’s Impugned Decision is reversed.

[1] Prosecutor v Tadić, Decision on the Defence Motion for Interlocutory Appeal on Jurisdiction Case IT-94- 1 -AR72,

2 October 1995, par 88.

[2] Provisional Verbatim Record of the Three Thousand Two Hundred and Seventeenth Meeting, 25 May 1993, S/PV.

3217, 25 May 1993.

[3] Kunarac Appeals Judgment, par 83; Tadić Appeals Judgment, pars 249 and 251.

[4] Tadić Appeal Judgement, par 251.

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Reconsideration of Jurisdiction Decision - 15.06.2006 ŠEŠELJ Vojislav
(IT-03-67-AR72.1)

At para. 20, the Appeals Chamber confirmed its earlier finding in the impugned decision:

All that is required under Article 5 of the Statute is that the Prosecution establish that an armed conflict is sufficiently related to the Article 5 crime with which the accused is charged. While, as previous jurisprudence of this Tribunal has held, there is no need for the Prosecution to establish a material nexus between the acts of the accused and the armed conflict, the Prosecution must establish a connection between the Article 5 crime itself and the armed conflict. Consistently with the object of the purpose of the Tribunal’s Statute, the jurisdictional requirement that Article 5 crimes be committed in armed conflict requires the Prosecution to establish that a widespread or systematic attack against the civilian population was carried out while an armed conflict in Croatia and/or Bosnia and Herzegovina was in progress. Whether the Prosecution can establish this connection in this case with respect to crimes against humanity in Vojvodina is a question of fact to be determined at trial.[1]

It recalled its constant jurisprudence that “the existence of an armed conflict is not a constitutive element of the definition of crimes against humanity, but only a jurisdictional prerequisite.[2]” (para. 21).

[1] Prosecutor v. Vojislav Šešelj, Case No. IT-03-67-AR72, Decision on the Interlocutory Appeal Concerning Jurisdiction, 31 August 2004, para. 14.

[2] See Report of the Secretary-General Pursuant to Paragraph 2 of Security Council Resolution 808 (1993), UN Doc. S/25704, 3 May 1993, para. 47; Prosecutor v. Duško Tadić, Case No. IT-94-1-AR72, Decision on the Defence Motion for Interlocutory Appeal on Jurisdiction, 2 October 1995 (“Tadić Jurisdictional Decision”), para. 70; Prosecutor v. Duško Tadić, Case No. IT-94-1-A, Judgement, 15 July 1999 (“Tadić Appeal Judgement”), paras 249 and 251. See also Prosecutor v. Furundžija, Case No. IT-95-17/1-T, Judgement, 10 December 1998, para. 59; Prosecutor v. Dragoljub Kunarac, Radomir Kovač and Zoran Vuković, Case No. IT-96-23 & IT-96-23/1-A, Judgement, 12 June 2002, paras 82-83 (explaining that “[a] crime listed in Article 5 of the Statute constitutes a crime against humanity only when ‘committed in armed conflict’” and that this requirement is “a purely jurisdictional prerequisite that is satisfied by proof that there was an armed conflict and that objectively the acts of the accused are linked geographically as well as temporally with the armed conflict.”)

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ICTR Statute Article 3 ICTY Statute Article 5
Notion(s) Filing Case
Appeal Judgement - 28.09.2011 SETAKO Ephrem
(ICTR-04-81-A)

249. The Appeals Chamber recalls that the required nexus need not be a causal link, but that the existence of an armed conflict must, at a minimum, have played a substantial part in the perpetrator’s ability to commit the crime, his decision to commit it, the manner in which it was committed, or the purpose for which it was committed.[1] The Appeals Chamber has thus held that “if it can be established […] that the perpetrator acted in furtherance of or under the guise of the armed conflict, it would be sufficient to conclude that his acts were closely related to the armed conflict.”[2] To find a nexus, it is sufficient that the alleged crimes be closely related to the hostilities occurring in other parts of the territories controlled by the parties to the conflict.[3]

[1] Rutaganda Appeal Judgement, para. 569, citing Kunarac Appeal Judgement, para. 58. See also Stakić Appeal Judgement, para. 342.

[2] Rutaganda Appeal Judgement, para. 569, citing Kunarac Appeal Judgement, para. 58. See also Stakić Appeal Judgement, para. 342.

[3] Tadić Appeal Decision on Jurisdiction, para. 70. 

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Notion(s) Filing Case
Appeal Judgement - 22.03.2006 STAKIĆ Milomir
(IT-97-24-A)

342. For Article 3 to apply, the crime charged must be committed in a time of armed conflict and an accused’s acts must be closely related to that conflict.[1] The latter requirement is known as the “nexus” requirement. The nexus need not be a causal link, “but the existence of an armed conflict must, at a minimum, have played a substantial part in the perpetrator’s ability to commit [the crime], his decision to commit it, the manner in which it was committed or the purpose for which it was committed.”[2] The Appeals Chamber has thus held that “if it can be established … that the perpetrator acted in furtherance of or under the guise of the armed conflict, it would be sufficient to conclude that his acts were closely related to the armed conflict.”[3] To find a nexus, it is sufficient that the alleged crimes be closely related to the hostilities occurring in other parts of the territories controlled by the parties to the conflict.[4] For example, Article 3 crimes need not be committed in the area of armed conflict, but must at least be “substantially related” to this area, which at least includes the entire territory under control of the warring parties.[5] It is essential, however, that a Trial Chamber establish the existence of a geographical and temporal linkage between the crimes ascribed to the accused and the armed conflict.

[1] Tadić Appeal Decision on Jurisdiction, paras 67, 70; Kunarac Appeal Judgement, para. 55; Rutaganda Appeal Judgement, paras 569-571.

[2] Kunarac Appeal Judgement, para. 58.

[3] Kunarac Appeal Judgement, para. 58.

[4] Tadić Appeal Decision on Jurisdiction, para. 70.

[5] Kunarac Appeal Judgement, paras 60, 64.

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Notion(s) Filing Case
Appeal Judgement - 26.05.2003 RUTAGANDA George
(ICTR-96-3-A)

569. The Appeals Chamber of the ICTR has not previously endorsed a particular definition of the nexus requirement.[1] The Appeals Chamber of the ICTY has done so twice. The first time, in the Tadic Jurisdiction Decision, the Appeals Chamber stated that the offences had to be “closely related” to the armed conflict, but it did not spell out the nature of the required relation.[2] In the Kunarac Appeal Judgement, it endorsed the same standard. It then provided the following details, which appear relevant to the Prosecution appeal in this case:

58. What ultimately distinguishes a war crime from a purely domestic offence is that a war crime is shaped by or dependent upon the environment – the armed conflict – in which it is committed. It need not have been planned or supported by some form of policy. The armed conflict need not have been causal to the commission of the crime, but the existence of an armed conflict must, at a minimum, have played a substantial part in the perpetrator’s ability to commit it, his decision to commit it, the manner in which it was committed or the purpose for which it was committed. Hence, if it can be established, as in the present case, that the perpetrator acted in furtherance of or under the guise of the armed conflict, it would be sufficient to conclude that his acts were closely related to the armed conflict. The Trial Chamber’s finding on that point is unimpeachable.

59. In determining whether or not the act in question is sufficiently related to the armed conflict, the Trial Chamber may take into account, inter alia, the following factors: the fact that the perpetrator is a combatant; the fact that the victim is a non-combatant; the fact that the victim is a member of the opposing party; the fact that the act may be said to serve the ultimate goal of a military campaign; and the fact that the crime is committed as part of or in the context of the perpetrator’s official duties .[3]

570. This Chamber agrees with the criteria highlighted and with the explanation of the nexus requirement given by the ICTY Appeals Chamber in the Kunarac Appeal Judgement.  It is only necessary to explain two matters.  First, the expression “under the guise of the armed conflict” does not mean simply “at the same time as an armed conflict” and/or “in any circumstances created in part by the armed conflict”.  For example, if a non-combatant takes advantage of the lessened effectiveness of the police in conditions of disorder created by an armed conflict to murder a neighbour he has hated for years, that would not, without more, constitute a war crime under Article 4 of the Statute.  By contrast, the accused in Kunarac, for example, were combatants who took advantage of their positions of military authority to rape individuals whose displacement was an express goal of the military campaign in which they took part.  Second, as paragraph 59 of the Kunarac Appeal Judgement indicates, the determination of a close relationship between particular offences and an armed conflict will usually require consideration of several factors, not just one.  Particular care is needed when the accused is a non-combatant.

[1]   In the Akayesu case, the ICTR Appeals Chamber observed that “common Article 3 requires a close nexus between violations and the armed conflict.” (Akayesu Appeal Judgement, para. 444.)  It then stated:  “This nexus between violations and the armed conflict implies that, in most cases, the perpetrator will probably have a special relationship with one party to the conflict.  However, such a special relationship is not a condition precedent to the application of common Article 3 and hence of Article 4 of the Statute.” (Idem).  The Appeals Chamber expressly noted that the definition of the nexus requirement had not been raised on appeal.  (Idem, Footnote 807)  Trial Chambers of this Tribunal have four times considered charges under Article 4 of the Statute in their judgements.  The definitions of the nexus requirement used in the four cases were similar but not identical to each other.  In the Akayesu case, the Trial Judgement stated that the nexus requirement means that the acts of the accused have to be committed “in conjunction with the armed conflict.” (Akayesu Trial Judgement, para. 643)  In Kayishema-Ruzindana, the Trial Chamber used four different formulations to characterize the nexus requirement, apparently considering them synonymous.  It sometimes stated that there must be “a direct link” or “a direct connection” between the offences and the armed conflict.  (Kayishema-Ruzindana Trial Judgement, paras. 185, 602, 603, 623 [“direct link”]; 188, 623 [“direct connection”].  It also stated that the offences have to be committed “in direct conjunction with” the armed conflict. (Idem, para. 623).  Finally, it stated that the offences had to be committed “as a result of” the armed conflict”.  (Idem).  In the Musema case, the Trial Chamber took the view that the offences must be “closely related” to the armed conflict. (Musema Trial Judgement, para. 260).  In the Ntakirutimana Case (currently on appeal), the Trial Chamber acquitted one of the accused of the count under Article 4(a) of the Statue based, inter alia, on the Prosecution’s failure to establish a nexus between the offence and the armed conflict, but it offered no definition of the nexus requirement. (Elizaphan and Gérard Ntakirutimana Trial Judgement, para. 861).

[2] Tadić Appeal Judgement, 2 October 1995, para. 70.

[3] Kunarac Appeal Judgement, paras. 58 to 59. Before and after these paragraphs, the ICTY Appeals Chamber stated the following:

 

57.       There is no necessary correlation between the area where the actual fighting is taking place and the geographical reach of the laws of war. The laws of war apply in the whole territory of the warring states or, in the case of internal armed conflicts, the whole territory under the control of a party to the conflict, whether or not actual combat takes place there, and continue to apply until a general conclusion of peace or, in the case of internal armed conflicts, until a peaceful settlement is achieved. A violation of the laws or customs of war may therefore occur at a time when and in a place where no fighting is actually taking place. As indicated by the Trial Chamber, the requirement that the acts of the accused must be closely related to the armed conflict would not be negated if the crimes were temporally and geographically remote from the actual fighting. It would be sufficient, for instance, for the purpose of this requirement, that the alleged crimes were closely related to hostilities occurring in other parts of the territories controlled by the parties to the conflict.

60.       The Appellants’ proposition that the laws of war only prohibit those acts which are specific to an actual wartime situation is not right. The laws of war may frequently encompass acts which, though they are not committed in the theatre of conflict, are substantially related to it. The laws of war can apply to both types of acts . The Appeals Chamber understands the Appellants’ argument to be that if an act can be prosecuted in peacetime, it cannot be prosecuted in wartime. This betrays a misconception about the relationship between the laws of war and the laws regulating a peacetime situation. The laws of war do not necessarily displace the laws regulating a peacetime situation; the former may add elements requisite to the protection which needs to be afforded to victims in a wartime situation.

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Appeal Judgement - 15.07.1999 TADIĆ Duško
(IT-94-1-A)

248. The Appeals Chamber agrees with the Prosecution that there is nothing in Article 5 to suggest that it contains a requirement that crimes against humanity cannot be committed for purely personal motives. The Appeals Chamber agrees that it may be inferred from the words “directed against any civilian population” in Article 5 of the Statute that the acts of the accused must comprise part of a pattern of widespread or systematic crimes directed against a civilian population[1] and that the accused must have known that his acts fit into such a pattern. There is nothing in the Statute, however, which mandates the imposition of a further condition that the acts in question must not be committed for purely personal reasons, except to the extent that this condition is a consequence or a re-statement of the other two conditions mentioned.

249. The Appeals Chamber would also agree with the Prosecution that the words “committed in armed conflict” in Article 5 of the Statute require nothing more than the existence of an armed conflict at the relevant time and place. The Prosecution is, moreover, correct in asserting that the armed conflict requirement is a jurisdictional element, not “a substantive element of the mens rea of crimes against humanity”[2] (i.e., not a legal ingredient of the subjective element of the crime).

250. This distinction is important because, as stated above, if the exclusion of “purely personal” behaviour is understood simply as a re-statement of the two-fold requirement that the acts of the accused form part of a context of mass crimes and that the accused be aware of this fact, then there is nothing objectionable about it; indeed it is a correct statement of the law.  It is only if this phrase is understood as requiring that the motives of the accused (“personal reasons”, in the terminology of the Trial Chamber) not be unrelated to the armed conflict that it is erroneous. Similarly, that phrase is unsound if it is taken to require proof of the accused’s motives, as distinct from the intent to commit the crime and the knowledge of the context into which the crime fits.

251. […] A nexus with the accused’s acts is required, however, only for the attack on “any civilian population”. A nexus between the accused’s acts and the armed conflict is not required, as is instead suggested by the Judgement. The armed conflict requirement is satisfied by proof that there was an armed conflict; that is all that the Statute requires, and in so doing, it requires more than does customary international law.

See also paragraphs 256–270.

The Appeals Chamber concluded:

271. The Trial Chamber correctly recognised that crimes which are unrelated to widespread or systematic attacks on a civilian population should not be prosecuted as crimes against humanity. Crimes against humanity are crimes of a special nature to which a greater degree of moral turpitude attaches than to an ordinary crime. Thus to convict an accused of crimes against humanity, it must be proved that the crimes were related to the attack on a civilian population (occurring during an armed conflict) and that the accused knew that his crimes were so related.

272. For the above reasons, however, the Appeals Chamber does not consider it necessary to further require, as a substantive element of mens rea, a nexus between the specific acts allegedly committed by the accused and the armed conflict, or to require proof of the accused’s motives. Consequently, in the opinion of the Appeals Chamber, the requirement that an act must not have been carried out for the purely personal motives of the perpetrator does not form part of the prerequisites necessary for conduct to fall within the definition of a crime against humanity under Article 5 of the Tribunal’s Statute.

[1]    This requirement had already been recognised by this Tribunal in the Vukovar Hospital Rule 61 Decision:

“Crimes against humanity are to be distinguished from war crimes against individuals. In particular, they must be widespread or demonstrate a systematic character. However, as long as there is a link with the widespread or systematic attack against a civilian population, a single act could qualify as a crime against humanity. As such, an individual committing a crime against a single victim or a limited number of victims might be recognised as guilty of a crime against humanity if his acts were part of the specific context identified above.”(“Review of Indictment Pursuant to Rule 61 of the Rules of Procedure and Evidence”, The Prosecutor v. Mile Mrksić et al., Case No.: IT-95-13-R61, Trial Chamber I, 3 April 1996, para. 30).

[2] Cross-Appellant’s Brief [Brief of Argument of the Prosecution (Cross-Appellant), 12 January 1998], para. 4.9.

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Interlocutory Decision on Jurisdiction - 02.10.1995 TADIĆ Duško
(IT-94-1-AR72)

141. It is by now a settled rule of customary international law that crimes against humanity do not require a connection to international armed conflict. Indeed, as the Prosecutor points out, customary international law may not require a connection between crimes against humanity and any conflict at all. Thus, by requiring that crimes against humanity be committed in either internal or international armed conflict, the Security Council may have defined the crime in Article 5 [of the ICTY Statute] more narrowly than necessary under customary international law. There is no question, however, that the definition of crimes against humanity adopted by the Security Council in Article 5 comports with the principle of nullum crimen sine lege.

142. We conclude, therefore, that Article 5 may be invoked as a basis of jurisdiction over crimes committed in either internal or international armed conflicts. […]

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Appeal Judgement - 20.05.2005 SEMANZA Laurent
(ICTR-97-20-A)

269. […] [T]he Prosecution did not have to prove the existence of an armed conflict: contrary to Article 5 of the ICTY Statute, Article 3 of the ICTR Statute does not require that the crimes be committed in the context of an armed conflict.[1]  This is an important distinction.

[1] Cf. Tadić Appeal Judgement, para. 251; Kunarac et al. Appeal Judgement, para. 86.

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Appeal Judgement - 12.06.2002 KUNARAC et al.
(IT-96-23 & IT-96-23/1-A)

57. There is no necessary correlation between the area where the actual fighting is taking place and the geographical reach of the laws of war. The laws of war apply in the whole territory of the warring states or, in the case of internal armed conflicts, the whole territory under the control of a party to the conflict, whether or not actual combat takes place there, and continue to apply until a general conclusion of peace or, in the case of internal armed conflicts, until a peaceful settlement is achieved.[1] A violation of the laws or customs of war may therefore occur at a time when and in a place where no fighting is actually taking place. As indicated by the Trial Chamber, the requirement that the acts of the accused must be closely related to the armed conflict would not be negated if the crimes were temporally and geographically remote from the actual fighting.[2]  It would be sufficient, for instance, for the purpose of this requirement, that the alleged crimes were closely related to hostilities occurring in other parts of the territories controlled by the parties to the conflict.[3]

58. What ultimately distinguishes a war crime from a purely domestic offence is that a war crime is shaped by or dependent upon the environment – the armed conflict – in which it is committed.  It need not have been planned or supported by some form of policy. The armed conflict need not have been causal to the commission of the crime, but the existence of an armed conflict must, at a minimum, have played a substantial part in the perpetrator’s ability to commit it, his decision to commit it, the manner in which it was committed or the purpose for which it was committed.  Hence, if it can be established […] that the perpetrator acted in furtherance of or under the guise of the armed conflict, it would be sufficient to conclude that his acts were closely related to the armed conflict. […]

59. In determining whether or not the act in question is sufficiently related to the armed conflict, the Trial Chamber may take into account, inter alia, the following factors: the fact that the perpetrator is a combatant; the fact that the victim is a non-combatant; the fact that the victim is a member of the opposing party; the fact that the act may be said to serve the ultimate goal of a military campaign; and the fact that the crime is committed as part of or in the context of the perpetrator’s official duties.

[1]   Tadić Jurisdiction Decision [Prosecutor  v Duško Tadić, Case No. IT-94-1-AR72, Decision on the Defence Motion for Interlocutory Appeal on Jurisdiction, 2 October 1995], paras 67 and 70.

[2]   See Trial Judgement [Prosecutor v. Dragoljub Kunarac, Radomir Kovač and Zoran Vuković, Case No. IT-96-23& IT-96-23/1-A, Judgement, 12 June 2002], para 568.

3   Tadić Jurisdiction Decision, para 70.

 

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ICTY Statute Article 3
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Appeal Judgement - 12.06.2002 KUNARAC et al.
(IT-96-23 & IT-96-23/1-A)

67. The determination of what constitutes a war crime is therefore dependent on the development of the laws and customs of war at the time when an act charged in an indictment was committed.  As was once noted, the laws of war “are not static, but by continual adaptation follow the needs of a changing world”.[1] There is no question that acts such as rape […], torture and outrages upon personal dignity are prohibited and regarded as criminal under the laws of war and that they were already regarded as such at the time relevant to these Indictments.

[1]   Trial of the Major War Criminals before the International Military Tribunal, Nüremberg, 14 November 1945-1 October 1946, vol 1, p 221.

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ICTY Statute Article 3
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Appeal Judgement - 12.06.2002 KUNARAC et al.
(IT-96-23 & IT-96-23/1-A)

83. As pointed out by the Trial Chamber, this requirement is not equivalent to Article 3 of the Statute’s exigency that the acts be closely related to the armed conflict.[1]  As stated by the Trial Chamber, the requirement contained in Article 5 of the Statute is a purely jurisdictional prerequisite which is satisfied by proof that there was an armed conflict and that objectively the acts of the accused are linked geographically as well as temporally with the armed conflict.[2]

[1]   See discussion above at paras 57-60.

[2]   Trial Judgement para 413. See also Tadić Appeal Judgement, paras 249 and 251; Kupreškić Trial Judgement, para. 546 and Tadić Trial Judgement, para 632.

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ICTR Statute Article 3 ICTY Statute Article 5