Background of the Study
International crime such as genocides,
war crimes, crimes against humanity and crime of aggression have always
presented serious threats to international peace and security. Such crimes
which often committed within a particular state always have a spill-over effect
in other states (by way of displacement of persons) and; such crimes also have
the potential to engulf an entire region in crises (by way of refugees) and
perpetration of more atrocities (such as rape, looting and etcetera). The
prevalence of these events is not new to the world. This is because events
before the advent of the United Nations Charter
in 1945, showed that conflicts
starting in a particular region of a particular continent can spread to engulf
the neighboring region or even the world at large because at that time wars are
considered to be the only solution of resolving conflicts.
Consequently, such wars paved way for
the commission of other crimes such as loss of life or injury to civilians,
wide spread and severe damage to the environment, attacking and bombarding by
whatever means to towns and villages, torture, persecution enslavement and
indirect transfer of civilian population all of which are considered to be
crimes in violation of the existing international law and in particular the
principles of the International Humanitarian Law (IHL) within the four 1949
Geneva Conventions and its two Additional 1977 Protocols together with the
Hague Regulations. Indeed, the concern of punishing the offenders for the
purposes of deterring further occurrence in the2 International Legal Order prompted the
researchers interest to delve into one aspect of these crimes, which is the
crime of genocide.
Genocide is generally considered one
of the worst moral crimes a government or a ruling authority be it a guerilla
group, a guise state terrorist organization etc can commit against its citizen
or those it controls it also refer to mass killing or murder with intent to
destroy a designed group of people1. This is because of the lesson learnt by
the form of holocaust which was the systematic attempt of German authorities during
the World War II to kill people and particularly every Jew no matter where
found destroyed groups estimated between 5-6 million. This murder of the Jews
became the paradigm case of genocide and underlies the origin of the word.
Alarmed by this spate of killing in both local and international conflict an
attempt was made finally by the international community through the UN to make
genocide an international crime and bring the perpetrators to justice. This
flagrant violation of humanity led to the adoption by the UN‟s General
Assembly, the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide 1948 and
most recently the signing into being of the International Criminal Court in
2002.
The event in former Yugoslavia and
Rwanda which led to the destruction of thousands of innocent lives further
strengthened the need for an international criminal court which had long been
under consideration.
TOPIC: AN EXAMINATION OF THE CRIME OF GENOCIDE IN INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 74
Price: 3000 NGN
In Stock

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