Inciting Genocide Is a Crime (WSJ) WALL STREET JOURNAL OP-ED) BY ROBERT BERNSTEIN, IRWIN COTLER AND STUART ROBINOWITZ 05/02/12)
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Even if Iran´s radicals could be deterred from attacking Israel,
their actions are already illegal under international law
Many of Iran´s crimes are well-known to Americans and observers world-
wide. The Tehran regime wants to build a nuclear weapon despite being
a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty; it supports the
brutal crackdown of Syria´s Bashar al-Assad against his own people;
it is the leading state sponsor of terrorism, killing innocents from
Argentina to Lebanon, Afghanistan and beyond; and it is engaged in
massive domestic repression. Less recognized, however, is the legal
significance of Iran´s genocidal anti-Semitic and anti-Israel
rhetoric, which constitutes one of the most serious crimes under
international law.
The United Nations´ Genocide Convention
outlaws not only acts of
genocide but "incitement" to genocide, an egregious offense whether
or not genocide has yet occurred. The convention´s goal, of course,
is to prevent genocide before it takes place. Tragically, warnings of
impending atrocities in Rwanda were ignored by the international
community. As a result, 800,000 innocent civilians were slaughtered
in a genocide that could have been prevented. Iran has given the
world ample warning.
A website affiliated with Iranian Supreme
Leader Ali Khamenei
declared in February that Iran would be justified in killing all
Israeli Jews—which Tehran´s long-range missiles could accomplish in
nine minutes, boasted the site. Khamenei, for his part, has called
Israel a "cancerous tumor that must be removed" and declared that
there is "justification to kill all the Jews and annihilate Israel,
and Iran must take the helm."
Also in February, Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad hosted
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in Tehran, as billboards in the
city declared that it is every Muslim´s duty to "wipe out"
Israel. "If all the Jews gathered in Israel, it would save us the
trouble of going after them world-wide," Nasrallah has said. "It is
an open war until the elimination of Israel and until the death of
the last Jew on the earth."
Iranian officials´ threats are
accompanied by their denial of the
Holocaust and regular characterization of Jews as nonhuman or
subhuman: "bloodthirsty barbarians," "filthy bacteria," "wild
beasts," "cattle," "cancer," "filthiest criminals," "a blot," "a
stain," "wild dogs" and the like. Similar slurs were made in Nazi
Germany and Rwanda. They are the precursors to genocide.
Some
argue that Tehran is unlikely to act on its threats for fear of
retaliation. But Iran claims it could exterminate most of Israel´s
population in a matter of minutes, so there would be little
opportunity for retaliation. In any event, even if Iran´s radicals
could be deterred, their incitement to genocide is still illegal
under international law.
Those who incite genocide, and those
who defend them, often invoke
the freedom of speech. But no free-speech law condones threats of
mass murder. The Nuremberg tribunal convicted and executed Nazi
newspaper publisher Julius Streicher for inciting the murder of
Europe´s Jews, even though he hadn´t committed murders directly. Like
Khamenei and Ahmadinejad, Streicher referred to Jews as "a nation of
bloodsuckers and extortionists," adding that "The Jewish problem is
not yet solved. Only when world Jewry has been annihilated will it
have been solved."
The International Criminal Tribunal for
Rwanda recently convicted
journalists and politicians for public statements calling for the
extermination of Tutsis (even though, as with Streicher, the
defendants hadn´t participated in genocidal acts themselves). The
tribunal declared that the right to freedom of expression is
restricted by the Genocide Convention. Since the Genocide Convention
removes the traditional immunity for heads of states, former Rwandan
Prime Minister Jean Kambanda was sentenced to life in prison for his
incendiary speeches.
Such precedents should lead state parties
to the Genocide Convention
to file complaints against Iran—which is also party to the convention—
before the International Court of Justice. Member states should also
request that the U.N. Security Council pass a resolution condemning
Iran´s incitement to genocide. They should also request that the
council refer the matter to the prosecutor of the International
Criminal Court, who can indict Khamenei, Ahmadinejad and their
collaborators, as it has Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir. This
threat of criminal prosecution should be added to existing diplomatic
and economic pressures meant to deter terrorism and nuclear-weapons
development by Tehran.
Silence is not a moral option when
states threaten genocide—
especially when they are on the verge of acquiring nuclear weapons
and boast that they can bring about a holocaust in a matter of
minutes.
Mr. Bernstein, a former president of Random House, was
founder and
chair of Human Rights Watch from 1978-98. He is now the chair of
Advancing Human Rights (AHR). Mr. Cotler, a member of the Canadian
parliament and emeritus professor of law at McGill University, is a
former minister of justice and attorney general of Canada. Mr.
Robinowitz, of counsel to Paul, Weiss LLP and former adjunct faculty
member at Yale Law School, led fact-finding missions for the American
Bar Association, Human Rights Watch and Helsinki Watch. He is a board
member of AHR. (Copyright © Dow Jones & Company, Inc.) 05/02/12)
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