"International Responses to Mass Atrocities in Africa is an unusually thoughtful and nuanced contribution to the growing literature on mass atrocity prevention. Its detailed case studies and innovative protect, prosecute, and palliate framework offer fresh insights into why the implementation of R2P principles has lagged behind their normative development. Kurt Mills has proven, once again, that he belongs in the ranks of the world's leading human rights and humanitarian scholars."—Edward Luck, first United Nations Special Adviser on the Responsibility to Protect.
"Kurt Mills takes seriously our collective responsibility to halt atrocities, to prosecute their perpetrators, and to help those in the cross-hairs of armed conflicts. His focus is Africa, where feeble international responses in too many crises have demonstrated that "never again" is an aspiration and not a reality. His is an indispensable guide for anyone thinking about how to respond to conscience-shocking international crimes."—Thomas G. Weiss, The CUNY Graduate Center
"Too often, it is taken for granted that the international community's political, judicial and humanitarian responses to major crises are complementary. In this important volume, Kurt Mills explodes that myth and demonstrates the tensions between them and the ways in which they sometimes undermine one another. Combining detailed examination of some of the most crucial contemporary cases with a keen sense for broader political and normative trends, this is one of those rare volumes that is successful both at diagnosing the problem and offering viable solutions. With fine prose, Mills offers an important new perspective that will shape debate about how to respond to civil wars, mass atrocities and other humanitarian crises for years to come."—Alex J. Bellamy, The University of Queensland, Australia
"International Responses to Mass Atrocities in Africa makes a novel move by analyzing the responsibility to protect, the responsibility to prosecute, and the responsibility to palliate comprehensively. It is the first work that takes this collective approach, and there is much to be gained by doing so. This is an important book."—William W. Burke-White, University of Pennsylvania.
Since the end of World War II and the founding of the United Nations, genocide, crimes against humanity and other war crimes—mass atrocities—have been explicitly illegal. When such crimes are committed, the international community has an obligation to respond: the human rights of the victims outweigh the sovereignty claims of states that engage in or allow such human rights violations. This obligation has come to be known as the responsibility to protect. Yet, parallel to this responsibility, two other related responsibilities have developed: to prosecute those responsible for the crimes, and to provide humanitarian relief to the victims—what the author calls the responsibility to palliate. Even though this rhetoric of protecting those in need is well used by the international community, its application in practice has been erratic at best.
In International Responses to Mass Atrocities in Africa, Kurt Mills develops a typology of responses to mass atrocities, investigates the limitations of these responses, and calls for such responses to be implemented in a more timely and thoughtful manner. Mills considers four cases of international responses to mass atrocities—in Rwanda, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Uganda, and Darfur—putting the cases into historical context and analyzing them according to the typology, showing how the responses interact. Although all are intended to address human suffering, they are very different types of actions and accomplish different things, over different timescales, on different orders of magnitude, and by very different types of actors. But the critical question is whether they accomplish their objectives in a mutually supportive way—and what the trade-offs in using one or more of these responses may be. By expanding the understanding of international responsibilities, Mills provides critical analysis of the possibilities for the international community to respond to humanitarian crises.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
Chapter 1. Interrogating International Responsibilities
Chapter 2. Rwanda: The Failure of "Never Again"
Chapter 3. Democratic Republic of the Congo: Protecting Civilians?
Chapter 4. Uganda (and Beyond): Testing the International Criminal Court
Chapter 5. Darfur: The Post-World Summit Test
Chapter 6. Realizing R2P3: Labeling, Institutions, and Authority
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Kurt MILLS, International Responses to Mass Atrocities in Africa Responsibility to Protect, Prosecute, and Palliate, Philadelphie, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015 (320 pp.)
Kurt Mills is Senior Lecturer in International Human Rights in the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Glasgow.
INTRODUCTION [Excerpt]
Responding to Mass Atrocities
The core concern of this book is
how have, can, and should mass atrocities be addressed? It is thus historical,
analytical, and normative. It is historical because it examines how the
international community responded to four cases of mass atrocities, although
three of these situations are, in one way or another, still ongoing. It is
analytical in that it provides a typology of the different types of responses
and how these responses interact. It is normative because it begins with the
underlying assumption that the international community should "do
something" about mass atrocity situations, and that the "somethings"—military
intervention to stop atrocities, holding individuals criminally responsible for
atrocities, and providing basic assistance to help people survive the broader
effects of mass atrocities—are all important developments and may all be
appropriate, although perhaps appropriate in different ways and circumstances.
The first response—the use of
military force to protect civilians and stop atrocities—is a core part of what
has come to be known as the responsibility to protect (R2P). It follows from
previous debates over humanitarian intervention, but is a reflection of a
radical shift in the perceived balance between sovereignty and human rights.
The second response I call the responsibility to prosecute, since it stems from
an expanding recognition that those who commit atrocities should be punished.
The third response I call the responsibility to palliate, because although
there are significant humanitarian urges to help people in the middle of
conflict, this particular response usually can do little more than treat the
symptoms of a much more complicated situation. Taken together, these three sets
of norms and practices are identified as R2P3—responsibility to protect,
prosecute, and palliate). These responses, even though they are all rooted in
an urge to stop human suffering, are very different types of actions. They
accomplish very different things, over different timescales, and on different
orders of magnitude, and are accomplished by very different types of actors.
But the big question is whether they accomplish these different things in a
mutually supporting way, where all the elements of the broad human rights
edifice work seamlessly together to underpin this edifice. It will be obvious
that the answer to this question is that there may be very significant
trade-offs in using these responses—political trade-offs, practical trade-offs,
normative trade-offs—and that they may not always be mutually supporting.
Policymakers are thus faced with a
series of conundrums as they try to figure out how to protect people and keep
them alive in the midst of conflict, while also preventing and ending conflicts
and bringing perpetrators to justice. Military intervention might facilitate
the delivery of humanitarian assistance—or it might endanger it. Issuing an arrest
warrant might bring combatants to the negotiating table—or it might undermine a
peace process. Providing humanitarian assistance might keep people alive in the
midst of conflict—or it might contribute to the continuation of the conflict.
Yet the international community has agreed that it has a responsibility to do
each of these things to protect people and end suffering. So how does one
prioritize responsibilities? This book provides no easy formula—the dynamics
are fiendishly complex. However, by clearly delineating these manifold
conundrums, and exploring how they play out in a variety of circumstances, the
job of implementing these international responsibilities and stopping mass
atrocities becomes a little clearer.
Defining Atrocities
The term mass atrocities is not
unproblematic, given that language is employed to support action, prevent
action, or cover up inaction in the face of widespread grave human rights
abuses. I use the term "mass atrocity" here to include genocide,
crimes against humanity, some war crimes, and ethnic cleansing. Genocide
appears to have the most straightforward definition—"acts committed with
intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or
religious group," although the devil is in the detail, and in particular
the assertion of the intent. Crimes against humanity are defined in the Rome
Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) as including murder,
extermination, forcible transfer of populations, torture, rape and a number of
other acts undertaken in attacks against civilian populations (Article 7).
War crimes may be understood as
serious violations of international humanitarian law directed at civilians or
enemy combatants during an international or internal armed conflict, for which
the perpetrators may be held criminally liable on an individual basis.
Ethnic cleansing has been defined
as "a purposeful policy designed by one ethnic or religious group to
remove by violent and terror-inspiring means the civilian population of another
ethnic or religious group from certain geographic areas." Although there
is no recognized crime of ethnic cleansing, it is against international law and
would involve grave breaches of international humanitarian law, as well as
potentially genocide and crimes against humanity.
The term mass atrocity is preferred
for its simplicity in avoiding having to write out "genocide, crimes
against humanity, war crimes, and ethnic cleansing," although there will
be instances where one must be specific about the crimes being discussed to
communicate the magnitude of the crimes and the interests of humanity in
responding. As to a formal definition, I draw on the definition used by the
Mass Atrocity Response Operations project: "widespread and systematic use
of violence by state or non-state armed groups against non-combatants." On
the one hand, it elides the use of the emotive term "genocide," which
cries out "never again" and demands action—that "somebody"
should do "something"—and thus will be controversial. It appears to
undermine gravity and immediacy. Yet all too often scholars, journalists, and
diplomats get caught up in language that obfuscates rather than illuminates a
situation. In Rwanda, western leaders fell over themselves with awkward
linguistic constructions to avoid calling what was happening genocide—referring
instead to "acts of genocide"—while in Darfur, there was much
discussion about whether to call what was happening genocide or crimes against
humanity. But in the end it did not matter whether President Bashir of Sudan or
the Hutu leadership in Rwanda could be positively identified as having the
intent to wipe out a specific group of people. The same people were dying—even
though such language may be strategically deployed at times, I doubt that the
victims or their families cared what those on the UN Security Council called
it. Thus, mass atrocities will be used as an analytic category to indicate
situations where large numbers of people are dying or otherwise being widely
affected as a result of genocide, crimes against humanity, widespread war
crimes, or ethnic cleansing. "Mass atrocities and associated humanitarian
crises" may also be used to signal a recognition that most humanitarian
crises are political in nature and tied into larger patterns of human rights
abuse.
Conflict in Africa
The international responsibilities
in mass atrocity situations discussed above are embedded within evolving
political, geostrategic and normative realities. Globally, human rights norms
and machinery are expanding and spreading, although ambiguously. The UN
Security Council has become increasingly involved in human rights issues even
as there is increasing tension between the traditional powers on the Security
Council and a restive developing world, with emerging powers demanding more representation
at the apex of global power, bolstered, again, by charges of neocolonialism.
The responsibility to protect has been affected by the same charges, but there
is hardly unanimity. Other global developments, such as the ICC, further
underpin an expanding institutionalization of human rights, even as there is
pushback against its focus to date on Africa and its problematic relationship
to the Security Council. But Africa also serves as a stage for the post-9/11
global war on terror and the belief "that 'failed states' are ideal
staging and breeding grounds for international terrorists."
Africa has seen both advances and
retreats in normative and practical human rights developments. The African
Union (AU) Constitutive Act recognized an even more robust responsibility to
protect three years before the UN did, although it has failed to implement this
in any significant way. The responsibility to protect has found its voice in
the norm of "non-indifference" in Africa, but exactly how such a
double negative normative construction will be implemented is unclear.
Thirty-four African countries are members of the ICC, yet the AU has repeatedly
accused the ICC of being biased against Africa and called for it to suspend
ongoing cases against Africans. Africa has high hopes for an African Peace and
Security Architecture (APSA) and the development of an African Standby Force
(ASF), but implementation has lagged far behind the hopes. And although the AU
can present a public united front, there are still divisions among African
countries and, at times, a reversion to Westphalian notions of sovereignty and anticolonialism
that serve to prevent criticism of human rights abuses. Africa wants a larger
say in global politics, demanding, for example, more seats on the Security
Council, and a more even partnership between the AU and UN.
Africa was chosen as the focus of
this book for a number of reasons. From a continental perspective, Africa has
been the crucible for much normative development and practical application of
norms. The genocide in Rwanda was one of the driving forces for the development
of the responsibility to protect, but was also the site of one of the
precursors to the development of the ICC. All the prosecutions by the ICC to
date have taken place in Africa. The practice of humanitarianism has been
significantly affected by experiences in not only Rwanda, but also Ethiopia,
Sudan, Somalia and elsewhere. Furthermore, except for Europe, Africa has been
the region that has developed most substantially in the area of peacekeeping
activities, although even those developments have fallen significantly short at
times. Somalia and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), among others, have
been the site of significant innovations and failures in the practical
application of peacekeeping.
As to why these four
countries—Rwanda, DRC, Uganda, and Sudan (Darfur)—the answer is many-faceted.
Geographically, they are contiguous, with the DRC and Uganda bordering all
three other countries, and Rwanda and Sudan having common borders with two of
the others. They all have colonial histories that have significantly affected
their modern development, although the experiences and legacies are different,
with Sudan and Uganda having experienced British colonialism and the DRC and
Rwanda having a Belgian legacy (with resulting French influence). Central and
East Africa have been the focus of widespread gross violations of human rights
since the end of the Cold War. Burundi, the Central African Republic (CAR),
DRC/Zaire, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Somalia, Sudan, and Uganda have all seen
a mixture of significant civil conflict, genocide, crimes against humanity, and
war crimes, as well as significant humanitarian catastrophes. The conflicts
have spread across borders and in many instances become interrelated, affecting
neighboring countries like the CAR, Chad, and Tanzania. The conflict focused on
the Rwanda-Congo-broader Great Lakes nexus has witnessed untold human suffering
and devastation and has pulled in an even wider array of participants. The
northeastern corner of the DRC, which borders Rwanda, Uganda, and Sudan, perhaps
exemplifies the multinational, multi-actor, interrelated nature of conflict in
Africa today.These four countries have each had their own internal conflicts,
which have become internationalized as refugees and combatants flow unimpeded
across borders, bringing their fighting and suffering to new countries and
populations.
Kevin Dunn argues that Uganda's
Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) has created a cross-border "insecurity
complex . . . . transform[ing] a microregional conflict into a macroregional
zone of insecurity." One could expand this further to say that multiple
dynamics have contributed to a regional insecurity complex that involves a
dizzying array of state and nonstate actors and transcends sovereign boundaries
even as those boundaries play a significant role in structuring multiple
conflicts and widespread political and human insecurity. As will be seen, the
Rwandan genocide and lack of international response led directly and inexorably
to two decades of war in eastern DRC, millions dead, and the intervention of
around a dozen countries, even as internal Zairean/Congolese dynamics proved
fertile breeding ground for conflict. The spread of the LRA beyond Uganda
pulled Uganda into the DRC and southern Sudan, as well as the CAR. Uganda was
also the staging ground for the Tutsi invasion of Rwanda that ended the
genocide. Sudan endured civil war for two decades—and used the LRA as part of
its war against the south—before a relative peace was established and a new
country was born in South Sudan. But it was the conflict in Darfur—in the
western part of the country—that brought issues related to the responsibility
to protect and international criminal justice to the fore, posing some of the
first real tests for both R2P and the ICC—and the AU.
The conflicts are directly related,
but they have all served, in a sense, as part of an African proving ground for
the global responsibilities and responses at the core of this book. The
international community has dealt with these conflicts in varying ways, which
perhaps reflects partly the particular internal and regional dynamics of the
conflicts, but also the broader geopolitical perspectives and interests of the
main global powers. The response has ranged from apathy to a range of
innovative, but not necessarily completely satisfying, actions. Rwanda
highlights the dangers of ignoring genocidal situations and trying to use
nonstate actors—humanitarian organizations—for activities that states and
state-based organizations like the UN should be undertaking. It illustrates the
vast unintended consequences humanitarians can have as they carry out their
humanitarian imperative. And it was a testing ground for newly resurgent
international criminal justice norms. The DRC was a reflection of those
unintended consequences, but also of the inability of the international
community to adequately respond to a fiendishly complex set of conflicts that
spread across vast ungoverned spaces and borders. The UN slowly ratcheted up
its response, declaring the protection of civilians its highest priority, and,
in a very uneven, punctuated fashion, it tried to put this determination into
effect. Even with millions dead, there was nary a whisper of the highly
politicized responsibility to protect, even as the UN undertook proto-R2P
activities. The DRC also puts in high relief the politicized nature of the ICC,
as cases were chosen and narrowed to fit the specifications of the state.
Uganda highlights the dangers, yet again, of the unintended consequences of
unreflective humanitarian imperatives. But, most prominently, the very
conundrums of inserting a global judicial body into the middle of an on-going
conflict became apparent, with an asserted—if not always easily locatable—stark
trade-off between peace and justice, as well as between local, traditional
justice mechanisms and global, supposedly universal judicial authorities.
Darfur also demonstrates this peace versus justice dynamic, although on a more
global, geopolitical stage. Darfur was also the first post-R2P conflict,
although the eventual international reaction would not have been recognizable
to the original authors of R2P, given its tepid implementation and refusal to
stand up to the government in Khartoum. Darfur also illustrates how
humanitarians could become pawns in larger conflict dynamics.
R2P3
Each of these conflicts will be
analyzed through a matrix which examines how the three sets of human rights
related norms and practices identified above—protection, prosecution, and
palliation (R2P3)—are understood, are implemented and may interact with each
other. Chapter 1, which outlines and critiques the responsibilities and the
actors who have taken on the responsibilities, develops the matrix,
highlighting the major conundrums and tensions inherent in each of the
responsibilities and their interactions. At the end of each of the subsequent
case studies, the matrix for that case is presented, providing a summary of the
main issues identified in the case.
While all four cases have elements
of the R2P3 triumvirate, each case has a different focus and illustrates a
somewhat different set of concerns and dynamics. Rwanda illustrates quite
starkly the complex nature of humanitarian action, the trade-offs humanitarians
are faced with, and the very difficult situation theycan find themselves in when
states and the UN refuse to act. It also demonstrates the potential for
disaster when an adequate response to mass atrocities is not forthcoming. The
DRC was this disaster. The particular focus here is the very slow development
of military responses to widespread atrocities via peacekeeping and the
protection of civilians concept. In only very rare instances did action that
resembled R2P take place. Rather, most activities began with, and developed
from, more classical understandings and practices of peacekeeping evolving into
what Gareth Evans calls "peacekeeping plus." The conundrums facing
the ICC as it finds its feet and tries to gain state cooperation also feature.
In Uganda, the story starts with the very ambiguous role of humanitarians in
ultimately supporting state-sponsored forced displacement, but soon moves into
a discussion of the proper role of the ICC in on-going conflicts. Central is
the ongoing debate about whether there is a trade-off between peace and
justice. Darfur, too, features the role of the ICC in ongoing conflict and its
place in the increasingly complex arena of international security. We see
tensions mount between the ICC and an increasingly assertive AU. Darfur also
served as the first real test for R2P—a test it failed. In each of these cases,
we further see conundrums and trade-offs as multiple responses are deployed
simultaneously, illustrating, for example, the potential conflict between
humanitarian action and civilian protection, or how the presence of the ICC may
endanger humanitarian action.
A significant focus and element of
the story of each of the cases will be the role of major Western states and the
UN Security Council. This is because it is these states that have been pushing
to a significant extent the responsibilities agenda and, indeed, are its
political and financial patrons. They fund humanitarian action and
peacekeeping, and, as in the case of Libya, have the requisite capabilities to
engage in the most robust action to protect civilians—even if they have been reluctant
to actually use those capabilities or provide necessary resources. Indeed,
while the rich states provide the money, developing countries provide the
majority of troops for peacekeeping operations. And the Security Council serves
as a global legitimator or delegitimator of states and actions to address mass
atrocities. African states and the AU are also central, since these African
situations have been the crucible for the difficult work undertaken to create
more capable African institutions and provide an African version of developing
norms as part of Africa's attempt to provide "African solutions to African
problems." The ICC also plays a starring role as a state-created
semi-independent global justice actor with significant agency, but which is also
under significant political and practical constraints. Humanitarian actors are
also crucial to our story. Although at times identified with the broad brush
moniker international humanitarian organizations (IHOs), there are significant
differences. Some are affiliated with the UN and thus enjoy resources and
official mandates even as they are constrained politically. Nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs), on the other hand, do not suffer the same political
constraints and are sometimes more able to be vocal about realities on the
ground, but do experience significant situational constraints and are
frequently used as political footballs.
Whose Responsibility?
This discussion of the main actors
involved in responding to mass atrocities raises other questions about which
responsibilities accrue to which agents, and furthermore, what exactly is the
status of these responsibilities—are they legal, moral, ethical? These
questions are far beyond the scope of this book, which is more concerned with
the practical implementation and interpretation of international norms. Many of
these questions are addressed elsewhere, and Chapter 1 briefly touches on the
origins and outlines of the three responsibilities, but some brief observations
are in order.
First, the status and nature of
these responsibilities varies significantly. The responsibility to protect is
not a legal norm. It is a statement of intent, although the exact nature and
seriousness of that intent is under question. There is no international law
that absolutely requires any entity to militarily intervene to protect human
rights, although a vague expectation can be found in the Genocide Convention
and numerous statements by state officials over the decades, as embodied in the
oft-repeated assertion "never again." And it is directly tied into
more formal international human rights law, which outlaws many of the practices
that may demand such intervention. It is thus a moral and political expectation
based on decades of human rights development and diplomatic assertions. The
responsibility to prosecute is more firmly established as a legal norm,
particularly with the creation of the ICC, as well as the practice of universal
jurisdiction, which, while it does not have the same firmly institutionalized
legal status of the ICC, is a reflection of the expectation found in
international human rights and humanitarian law that those who violate the law
should be punished. The responsibility to palliate is a mixture of legal and
moral norms. The Geneva Conventions talk about the right to offer humanitarian
assistance, and the expectation that states will accept such offers.
Furthermore, UN Security Council Resolution 2165 (2014) asserts the right of
the international community to provide such assistance even in the absence of
state consent. And states, through statements and practice, have recognized the
necessity of providing such assistance. But, again, there is no international
law which decrees that states or other entities must provide such assistance.
It is thus a moral norm embedded in evolving international humanitarian law and
practice. The expectation that states accept humanitarian assistance appears to
be more formalized than the expectation that states provide such assistance in
the first place.
Second, as to upon whom such
responsibilities fall, the answer is equally ambiguous and multifaceted. The
responsibility to protect can, in the end, be carried out only by states and
state-based organizations like the UN. Indeed, the UN Security Council is
formally identified as the repository of this responsibility (although the AU
also claims the right to intervene in Africa). The question becomes what
happens if the Security Council does not act. Do other entities have a
responsibility? Periodically, regional organizations have taken it on
themselves to intervene, as have individual states or groups of states. As the
agents that have the capabilities to militarily intervene to stop atrocities,
the responsibility may thus fall on states, but the legal and moral considerations
in such situations are extremely murky. The responsibility to prosecute accrues
to states, which have agreed to criminalize a wide range of human rights abuses
and state-based entities created to prosecute such crimes. No other entities
have the legal or moral standing to implement this responsibility. This is not
so with regard to the responsibility to palliate. While certain moral and legal
expectations may fall upon states, and state-based actors, such as the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees, have been given a specific mandate—and thus a
responsibility—to provide humanitarian assistance, nonstate actors have taken
such responsibilities upon themselves, feeling a moral compunction to help
those in need—the humanitarian imperative. At times, they have carried out
responsibilities that fall upon states—either the target state, which has
responsibilities to help its people, or other states and the UN, which have
responsibilities to provide such help.
The responsibilities discussed in
this book are thus a mixture of legal and moral expectations that fall upon a
variety of actors—state, state-based, nonstate. When discussing the
"international community" to which such responsibilities accrue, I
will refer primarily to states and state-based organizations like the UN,
although with a recognition that non-state actors are increasingly important in
carrying out such responsibilities.
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