Sexual Crimes in Conflict Database
A collection of relevant literature and case law
Showing 1 to 10 of 14 results.
-
Literature
Bergsmo, Morten et al. - Understanding and Proving...
- Year
- 2012
- Issues
- Definitions/Elements of Sexual Violence Crimes
- Reference link
- http://www.toaep.org/ps-pdf/12-bergsmo-skre-wood
- Full reference
- Bergsmo, Morten, Alf Butenschøn Skre and Elisabeth J. Wood (eds.), Understanding and Proving International Sex Crimes, Torkel Opsahl Academic EPublisher, 2012.
- Type of literature
- Book
- Research focus
- Investigation, Prosecution and Prevention of Conflict related Sexual Violence
- Author
- Bergsmo, Morten; Butenschøn Skre, Alf and Woods, Elisabeth J. (eds.)
-
Jurisprudence judicial mechanism
Court of Bosnia-Herzegovina (War Crimes Chamber) - Boban Simsic
- Year
- 2007
- Country
- Bosnia Herzegovina
- Keywords
- Detention Centers Humiliating and Degrading Treatment Persecution on Sexual Grounds Rape Sexual Violence, Persecution Sexual Violence, Torture Aiding
- Reference link
- http://www.internationalcrimesdatabase.org/Case/1187
- Type of mechanism
- Domestic court
- Name of mechanism
- Court of Bosnia-Herzegovina (War Crimes Chamber)
- Name of accused
- Boban Simsic
- Charges
- Simsic was charged on 8 July 2005 (indictment confirmed) with persecution as a crime against humanity, including sexual violence (Article 172(1)(h) read with subparagraph (g) of the Criminal Code of Bosnia and Herzegovina) for: (i) in the second half of June 1992, at the Fire Brigade premises in Višegrad, together with two Serbian soldiers, taking part in the harassment and rapes of ten girls and women of Bosniak ethnicity; (ii) whenSimsic was a guard at the facility of the Hasan Veletovac elementary school during the second half of June 1992, when Bosniak civilians were detained at the school, Simsic either on his own or together with other members of the Serbian army, police and paramilitary formations took part in the rape of a number of girls and young women.
- Trial chamber verdict
- On 11 July 2006, the Court rendered the first instance verdict finding the accused guilty of persecution as a crime against humanity, including sexual violence and sentencing him to 5 years’ imprisonment. The panel found the accused guilty of aiding in the enforced disappearance and rape of Bosniak civilians in the Hasan Veletovac school premises in Visegrad, which occurred as part of a widespread and systematic attack by the Serb Army, police and paramilitary groups directed against the Bosniac civilian population in the area of Visegrad between April and July 1992. The panel, however, found the accused not guilty of participation in attacks on villages Zljieb, Velji Lug and Kuka (municipality of Visegrad), illegal arrests and confinement, murder, rape, torture and infliction of serious injury or physical suffering to, and seizure of property of confined Bosniak civilians in the area of Visegrad between April and July 1992.
- sentencing
- At first instance Simsic was sentenced to 5 years' imprisonment. This, however, was increased to 14 year by the Appellate Panel.
- Appeals chamber verdict
- On 5 January 2007, the Appellate Panel rendered a decision upholding the appeals filed by the Prosecutor’s Office of BiH and Defense and revoking the Trial Panel’s verdict. The same decision orders a retrial before the Appellate Panel. On 14 August 2007, the Appellate Panel handed down the final verdict finding Simsic guilty of persecution as a crime against humanity, including sexual violence and sentencing him to 14 years’ imprisonment. The Appellate Panel found that in the second half of June 1992, as a guard securing several hundred detained Bosniak civilians in the Hasan Veletovac Elementary School, together with other members of the Serb army, police, and paramilitary formations, Simsic participated in killings, enforced disappearance, and torture of detainees. He also aided in the coercing of girls and young women to sexual intercourse. In addition, on several occasions, Simsic took girls and younger women to other members of the Serb army who perpetrated multiple rapes, beatings and humiliation on them. Simsic was acquitted of the count which alleged that, on an undetermined date in the second half of June 1992, he took five girls and five younger women from the room in which Bosniak civilians were detained in the Fire Station in Visegrad, moving them to another room where, together with two Serb soldiers, he beat them and took turns raping them.
- Status
- 2715
- Case number
- X-KRZ-05/04
-
Jurisprudence judicial mechanism
Court of Bosnia-Herzegovina (War Crimes Chamber) - Dusko Knezevic (“Mejakic et al.”)
- Year
- 2009
- Issues
- Modes of Liability
- Country
- Bosnia Herzegovina
- Keywords
- Rape Sexual Violence Joint Criminal Enterprise (JCE) Persecution on Sexual Grounds Camp
- Reference link
- http://www.internationalcrimesdatabase.org/Case/1063
- Type of mechanism
- Domestic court
- Name of mechanism
- Court of Bosnia-Herzegovina (War Crimes Chamber)
- Name of accused
- Dusko Knezevic
- Charges
- Knezevic was indicted on 14 July 2006 (indictment confirmed) for charges of crimes against humanity, including sexual violence (rape and other forms of sexual abuse) (Article 172(g) of the Criminal Code of BiH), under Articles 29 (accomplice) and 180(1) (individual responsibility) of CC BiH. Knezevic participated in abuses and persecutions committed during the period from 30 April to the end of 1992 against the non-Serbs in the territory of the Prijedor municipality; about 7000 non-Serb civilians were subjected to capturing, taking to and arbitrary confinement at the Omarska and Keraterm camps, as part of the plan of permanent removal of the non-Serbs.
- Trial chamber verdict
- On 30 May 2008, the Trial Panel found Knezevic guilty of crimes against humanity, including sexual violence (rape and other forms of sexual abuse), under Article 180(1), for: “rape and other forms of sexual abuse of the detainees directly or personally committed by persons other than Dusko Knezevic but in furtherance of the described system of ill-treatment and persecution at the camp in which he participated, including witness K019 who was raped on numerous occasions by the camp guards; witness K027 who was sexually assaulted by the shift Commander Mlado Radic and in July 1992 by Nedeljko Grabovac; witness K040 who was sexually abused twice by camp guard Lugar.” These events related to the Omarska camp. In addition, Knezevic was also found guilty of sexual violence committed in Keraterm camp
- sentencing
- Knezevic was sentenced to 31 years’ imprisonment.
- Appeals chamber verdict
- On 16 February 2009, Knezevic's conviction and sentence was upheld on appeal. However, the mode of liability was changed from Article 180(1) to liability on the grounds of JCE.
- Status
- 2715
- Case number
- X-KRŽ-06/200
-
Jurisprudence judicial mechanism
Court of Bosnia-Herzegovina (War Crimes Chamber) - Zeljko Mejaki (“Mejakic et al.”)
- Year
- 2009
- Issues
- Definitions/Elements of Sexual Violence Crimes Modes of Liability
- Country
- Bosnia Herzegovina
- Keywords
- Rape Joint Criminal Enterprise (JCE) Persecution on Sexual Grounds Sexual Assault/Attack/Abuse
- Reference link
- http://www.internationalcrimesdatabase.org/Case/1063
- Type of mechanism
- Domestic court
- Name of mechanism
- Court of Bosnia-Herzegovina (War Crimes Chamber)
- Name of accused
- Zeljko Mejakic
- Charges
- Mejakic was indicted on 14 July 2006 (indictment confirmed) for charges of crimes against humanity, including sexual violence (Article 172(g) of the Criminal Code of BiH), under Articles 29 (accomplice) and 180(1) and (2) (individual and command responsibility) of CC BiH. Mejakic participated in abuses and persecutions committed during the period from 30 April to the end of 1992 against the non-Serbs in the territory of the Prijedor municipality; about 7000 non-Serb civilians were subjected to capturing, taking to and arbitrary confinement at the Omarska and Keraterm camps, as part of the plan of permanent removal of the non-Serbs.
- Trial chamber verdict
- On 30 May 2008, the Trial Panel found Mejakic guilty of crimes against humanity, including sexual violence, under Article 180(1) and (2), for: “rapes and other forms of sexual abuse of detainees committed by persons over whom Zeljko Mejakic had effective control and which rapes and sexual abuse were committed in furtherance of the described system of ill-treatment and persecution at the camp in which he participated, including witness K019 who was sexually abused on numerous occasions by the camp guards; witness K027 who was sexually assaulted by the Shift Commander Mlado Radic and on another occasion in July 1992 by Nedeljko Grabovac; witness K040 who was sexually assaulted twice by camp guard Lugar.” All related to events in the Omarska camp.
- sentencing
- Mejakic was sentenced to 21 years’ imprisonment.
- Appeals chamber verdict
- On 16 February 2009, Mejakic’s conviction and sentence was upheld on appeal. However, the mode of liability was changed from Article 180(1) and (2) to liability on the grounds of JCE.
- Status
- 2715
- Case number
- X-KRZ-06/200
-
Jurisprudence judicial mechanism
ICC - Al Hassan
- Reference link
- http://www.icc-cpi.int/mali/al-hassan
- Type of mechanism
- International Criminal Tribunal/Court
- Name of mechanism
- International Criminal Court
- Name of accused
- Al Hassan Ag Abdoul Aziz Ag Mohamed Ag Mahmoud
- Charges
- (1) Crimes against humanity allegedly committed in Mali, in the context of a widespread and systematic attack against the civilian population, between April 2012 and January 2013, including rape and sexual slavery. (2) War crimes in the context of an armed conflict not of an international nature allegedly committed in Mali between April 2012 and January 2013, including rape and sexual slavery.
- Status
- 2778
- Case number
- ICC-01/12-01/18
-
Jurisprudence judicial mechanism
ICTR - Gratien Kabiligi (Bagasora et al. "Military I")
- Year
- 2008
- Issues
- Sexual Violence as a Weapon of War
- Country
- Rwanda
- Keywords
- Acquittal Command Responsibility Persecution on Sexual Grounds Tutsi Military
- Reference link
- http://unictr.irmct.org/en/cases/ictr-98-41
- Type of mechanism
- International Criminal Tribunal/Court
- Name of mechanism
- International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR)
- Name of accused
- Gratien Kabiligi
- Charges
- Kabiligi had been charged with sexual violence crimes - i.e. conspiracy to commit genocide, genocide, complicity in genocide, rape as a crime against humanity, persecution as a crime against humanity, other inhumane acts as a crime against humanity, violence to health and to the physical or mental well-being of civilians as a violation of Article 3 common to the Geneva Conventions and of Additional Protocol II as a war crime and outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment, rape and indecent assault as a violation of Article 3 common to the Geneva Conventions and of Additional Protocol II as a war crime under Article 6(3) (command responsibility) for: (i) rapes, sexual assaults and other crimes of a sexual nature committed against Tutsi women and girls throughout Rwanda, including at the secondary nursing school in Kabgayi, in Gitarama prefecture; and (ii) the sexual assault of Prime Minister Agathe Uwilingiyimana.
- Trial chamber verdict
- Kabiligi was acquitted by the Trial Chamber on 18 December 2008 on all counts, thus including the sexual violence charges. The Trial Chamber did not find that he was directly involved in any of the specific criminal events alleged. In addition, the evidence did not show that his subordinates committed crimes when Kabiligi exercised effective control over them.
- Appeals chamber verdict
- The Prosecution did not appeal these sexual violence acquittals.
- Status
- 2715
- Case number
- ICTR-98-41
-
Jurisprudence judicial mechanism
ICTY - Milan Martic (“RSK”)
- Year
- 2008
- Issues
- Sexual Violence against Men
- Country
- Former Yugoslavia
- Keywords
- Sexual Violence against Men/Boys Persecution on Sexual Grounds Forced Oral Sex Forced Masturbation Rape/Sexual Violence in Detention Joint Criminal Enterprise (JCE)
- Reference link
- http://www.icty.org/cases/party/733/4
- Type of mechanism
- International Criminal Tribunal/Court
- Name of mechanism
- International Criminal Tribunal for Former Yugoslavia (ICTY)
- Name of accused
- Milan Martic
- Charges
- - Persecution as a crime against humanity under Article 7(1) (JCE III) of the Croat, Muslim and other non-Serb civilian population, which included sexual abuses, forced mutual oral sex among detainees or with prison guards and mutual masturbation in the old hospital in Knin.- Torture as a crime against humanity, inhumane acts as crimes against humanity, torture as a violation of the laws or customs of war as a war crime and cruel treatment as a violation of the laws or customs of war as a war crime under Article 7(1) (JCE III), which included sexual assaults of Croat, Muslim and other non-Serb civilians detained in the old hospital in Knin, forced mutual oral sex among detainees or with prison guards and mutual masturbation.
- Trial chamber verdict
- Martic was found guilty by the Trial Chamber on 12 June 2007 of: - Persecution as a crime against humanity - Torture as a crime against humanity, inhumane acts as crimes against humanity, torture as a violation of the laws or customs of war as a war crime and cruel treatment as a violation of the laws or customs of war as a war crime
- sentencing
- Martic was sentenced to 35 years’ imprisonment on 8 October 2008.
- Appeals chamber verdict
- The convictions were upheld by the Appeals Chamber on 8 October 2008.
- Status
- 2715
- Case number
- IT-95-11
-
Jurisprudence judicial mechanism
ICTY - Milan Milutinovic ("Sainovic et al.; previously Milutinovic et al.")
- Year
- 2009
- Issues
- Definitions/Elements of Sexual Violence Crimes Modes of Liability
- Country
- Former Yugoslavia
- Keywords
- Acquittal Definition of Sexual Assault Kunarac Persecution on Sexual Grounds Foreseeable Consequence Extended Joint Criminal Enterprise
- Reference link
- http://www.icty.org/cases/party/740/4
- Type of mechanism
- International Criminal Tribunal/Court
- Name of mechanism
- International Criminal Tribunal for Former Yugoslavia (ICTY)
- Name of accused
- Milan Milutinovic
- Charges
- Milutinovic was charged with sexual violence crimes: - Deportation as a crime against humanity and other inhumane acts (forcible transfer) as crimes against humanity under Article 7(1) and 7(3) for deliberately creating an atmosphere of fear and oppression through, inter alia, sexual assault of Kosovo Albanian women, in order to forcibly displace and deport Kosovo Albanian civilians; - Persecution as a crime against humanity under Article 7(1) and 7(3), which included sexual assaults by forces of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and Serbia of the Kosovo Albanian population.
- Trial chamber verdict
- Milutinovic was acquitted by the Trial Chamber on 26 February 2009 on all charges in the indictment, thus also the sexual violence charges.
- Status
- 2715
- Case number
- IT-05-87https://www.nurembergacademy.org/typo3/index.php?route=%2Frecord%2Fedit&token=a980ada95207a1920df6d05d7e5322130ee2577e&edit[tx_svdatabase_domain_model_record][441]=edit&returnUrl=%2Ftypo3%2Findex.php%3FM%3Dweb_list%26moduleToken%3Dd464a6b5c4cb9d38
-
Jurisprudence judicial mechanism
ICTY - Miroslav Kvocka (“Kvocka et al.”)
- Year
- 2005
- Issues
- Modes of Liability Definitions/Elements of Sexual Violence Crimes
- Country
- Former Yugoslavia
- Keywords
- Acquittal Akayesu Cumulative Conviction Extended Joint Criminal Enterprise Forced to watch Rape Forced Nudity Foreseeable Consequence Mental Harm Persecution on Sexual Grounds Kunarac
- Reference link
- http://www.icty.org/cases/party/722/4
- Type of mechanism
- International Criminal Tribunal/Court
- Name of mechanism
- International Criminal Tribunal for Former Yugoslavia (ICTY)
- Name of accused
- Miroslav Kvocka (“Kvocka et al.”)
- Charges
- - Persecution as a crime against humanity under Article 7(1) (JCE) for sexual assault and rape of Bosnian Muslims, Bosnian Croats and other non-Serbs detained in Omarska camp; - Inhumane acts as crimes against humanity and outrages upon personal dignity as a violation of the laws or customs of war as a war crime for sexual assault and rape of Bosnian Muslims, Bosnian Croats and other non-Serbs detained in Omarska camp.
- Trial chamber verdict
- Kvocka was found guilty by the Trial Chamber on 2 November 2001 of: - Persecution as a crime against humanity. Kvocka was found not guilty by the Trial Chamber of: - Inhumane acts as crimes against humanity and outrages upon personal dignity as a violation of the laws or customs of war as a war crime for sexual assault and rape of Bosnian Muslims, Bosnian Croats and other non-Serbs detained in Omarska camp.
- sentencing
- Kvocka was sentenced by the Appeals Chamber to 7 years’ imprisonment on 28 February 2005 (for other charges).
- Appeals chamber verdict
- Although Kvocka was initially found guilty by the Trial Chamber of persecution as a crime against humanity for the sexual violence crimes, this conviction was reversed by the Appeals Chamber on 28 February 2005.
- Status
- 2715
- Case number
- IT-98-30/1
-
Jurisprudence judicial mechanism
ICTY - Momcilo Krajisnik
- Year
- 2009
- Issues
- Modes of Liability
- Country
- Former Yugoslavia
- Keywords
- Acquittal Persecution on Sexual Grounds Sexual Slavery Specific Intent Common Objective of JCE
- Reference link
- http://www.icty.org/cases/party/709/4
- Type of mechanism
- International Criminal Tribunal/Court
- Name of mechanism
- International Criminal Tribunal for Former Yugoslavia (ICTY)
- Name of accused
- Momcilo Krajisnik
- Charges
- Krajisnik was charged with: - Persecution as a crime against humanity under Article 7(1) (JCE), which included rapes and sexual assault of Bosnian Muslims, Bosnian Croats and other non-Serbs; - Causing serious bodily or mental harm as genocide and deliberately inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about their physical destruction as genocide and/or complicity in genocide under Article 7(1) (JCE) and 7(3), which included subjecting Bosnian Muslim and Bosnian Croat detainees in various detention facilities to sexual violence.
- Trial chamber verdict
- Krajisnik was found guilty by the Trial Chamber on 27 September 2006 of persecution as a crime against humanity under Article 7(1) (JCE). Krajisnik was found not guilty by the Trial Chamber of causing serious bodily or mental harm as genocide and deliberately inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about their physical destruction as genocide and/or complicity in genocide under Article 7(1) (JCE) and 7(3), which included subjecting Bosnian Muslim and Bosnian Croat detainees in various detention facilities to sexual violence. He was found not guilty of genocide since the specific intent for genocide could not be established.
- sentencing
- Krajisnik was sentenced by the Appeals Chamber to 20 years’ imprisonment on 17 March 2009 (for other charges).
- Appeals chamber verdict
- However, the Appeals Chamber on 17 March 2009 reversed the sexual violence conviction – i.e. persecution as a crime against humanity – as it found that the Trial Chamber committed an error as persecution fell outside the original common objective of the JCE, which only encompassed the crimes of deportation and forcible transfer.
- Status
- 2715
- Case number
- IT-00-39
This is free software. Created with LinkAhead
and Django. Licenced under AGPL version 3.0 (Sources).