For every important development, however, there have been numerous missed opportunities. For example, at one point, more than half of the ICTR indictments included charges of rape and
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A recent chapter in this story took place before the ICTY (below right). In July 2008, the ICTY refused to allow the prosecution to amend the indictment
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After Del Ponte (right) stepped down in January 2008, her replacement—Belgian jurist Serge
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► because of their grave and systematic nature;
► because they were integral to other persecutory policies employed in Višegrad;
► because the prosecutor did not need to call new witnesses;
► because the defense would have adequate time to meet the new charges;
► because the testimony would assist the prosecutor in meeting the defendants’ apparent alibi defenses; and—most importantly—
► because to leave out the testimony and counts was necessary “in the interest of justice” in order to allow the witnesses to testify fully about the harm they suffered at the hands of the defendants and to establish the full truth of the defendants’ crimes.
In a July 8, 2008 ruling, the ICTY denied the motion to amend the indictment on the ground that allowing the amendment after the Prosecutor’s unnecessary delay would unduly prejudice the accused. The cousins’ trial is ongoing and can be viewed here.
How to explain this mixed record of gender justice before the tribunals? Most critics of this apparent trend against gender justice take aim at the ICTR prosecution office, and in particular when it was under the leadership of Del Ponte. Advocates of gender justice have accused Del Ponte and the prosecutors in Kigali of neglecting the prosecution of crimes of sexual violence committed in Rwanda. Several policies and practices of the office of the prosecutor have been specifically singled out for criticism. The failure of early investigations to surface allegations about sexual violence is blamed on the fact that the majority of investigators were men, having been drawn from national police forces, with little experience or training in taking rape testimony from women victims and making it trial ready. Critics also point to
► the original lack of expertise in gender justice in the Office of the Prosecutor;
► the 2000 decision to disband the sexual assault investigative team formed in 1997 (it was later re-established);
► the lack of coordination between the office of the prosecutor and the Victims and Witnesses Unit (housed in the Registry);
► the failure to add sexual violence counts to new indictments despite available evidence;
► the pursuit of sexual violence claims with inadequate evidence; and
► the failure to fully and consistently incorporate investigations about sexual violence into the investigative or prosecutorial strategy.
After repeated frustrating experiences with the Tribunal,
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Overall, it appears that the Office of the Prosecution under Del Ponte proceeded without a coherent strategy for investigating sexual violence generally or a theory of how sexual violence fit into the way in which genocide was committed in Rwanda in particular. Where rape allegations are not central to a prosecutorial strategy, they become dispensable.
The current indictments against Karadžić and Mladić before the ICTY plead sexual violence as a predicate act of genocide. See, e.g., Prosecutor v. Karadžić, Case No. IT-95-5/18, Amended Indictment, at para. 17 (Apr. 28, 2000). Now that Karadžić is in custody, the new prosecutor has a chance to make sexual violence central to his prosecution of this longtime fugitive from justice. Women all over the world deserve nothing less.