Report Supporting Transition en
Report Supporting Transition en
Report Supporting Transition en
Final Report
in conjunction with
______________________________________________
___________________________________________________
September 2009
Table of Contents
Executive Summary 3
Introduction 12
Research Stages & Methodology ................................................13
Additional Background ...............................................................14
Needs Assessment 24
General Commentary...................................................................24
Constituent Elements of the Justice System................................25
Recommendations 55
General Commentary ..................................................................55
General Recommendations .........................................................56
Recommendations by Topic........................................................60
Concluding Remarks 67
Annexes:
1. Terminology ............................................................................69
2. List of Interviewees.................................................................71
3. Methodology & Research Steps..............................................74
4. Overview of Past Knowledge Transfer ...................................77
5. Applicable Substantive Law....................................................83
6. Collected Best Practices in Witness Support ..........................87
7. Collected Best Practices in Outreach ......................................90
1
List of Abbreviations and Acronyms
2
Executive Summary
Introduction
As the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) approaches
the end of its “completion strategy”, the impetus to harness its institutional expertise and
make it available to legal professionals in the former Yugoslavia handling war crimes
(ICHL) 1 cases becomes increasingly important. In order to understand how such “knowledge
transfer” can be most effectively undertaken during the remaining life of the ICTY, the Office
for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights of the Organization for Security and Co-
operation in Europe (OSCE/ODIHR) 2 , the ICTY, and the United Nations Interregional Crime
and Justice Research Institute (UNICRI) 3 – supported substantially by the T.M.C. Asser
Instituut – initiated this project with the overall goal of identifying best practices in the
knowledge-transfer arena so as to improve greatly the delivery of future professional-
developmental and capacity-building programmes.
To achieve the above-stated aim, the project partners adopted a four-component
research process that combined a critical examination of past efforts with a current assessment
of the needs of legal professionals in the region. Those two components gave rise to a set of
“best practices”, i.e., knowledge-transfer techniques and methodologies with a successful
track record in delivering their subject matter. The research also generated several means to
improve existing knowledge-transfer practices as well as a number of innovative
methodologies. These latter practices do not necessarily boast a record of success –
precluding them from being labelled “best practices” – but their inclusion in this report
suggests a credible potential for enhancing future knowledge-transfer undertakings. In
addition to the established “best practices” and the suggested improvements, the Report
includes a wide range of recommendations (Section V). Set out in order of priority, these
recommendations match the best practices with the needs identified during the assessment.
They describe the context and means of employing the best practices in order to rectify the
identified shortcomings.
1
The acronym ICHL, as per the definition provided in Annex 1, is employed herein to describe war crimes,
crimes against humanity, genocide and the modes of liability found in International Criminal and Humanitarian
Law.
2
The governments of the Netherlands, Switzerland, Germany and the United States of America financially
supported the OSCE/ODIHR in this project.
3
In subsequent text, these three organizations are referred to as “Project Partners”.
3
A Research Team hired by ODIHR prepared this Final Report on behalf of the
organizations of the project partners. 4 The report is the culmination of the aforementioned
multi-stage research endeavour, which included an Expert Workshop in The Hague in
October of 2008, field interviews in five jurisdictions, 5 an Interim Report and a Regional
Workshop in Sarajevo in May of 2009, where the Interim Report and its preliminary findings
were discussed with local practitioners.
Given that the judicial system in any jurisdiction is manifestly broad and complex – as
are the core international crimes themselves – the Research Team chose to focus its efforts on
several distinct functions performed by different actors in the justice system. More
specifically, the team identified the following seven areas that were comprehensively
explored during the research process:
Knowledge and application of ICHL in the domestic legal context;
Investigations and Analysis;
Prosecutions;
Defence;
Trial and Appellate Adjudication;
Outreach; and
Victim and Witness Support.
The first of these areas is not given separate treatment in the text but, instead, is woven into
the discussion of the other six.
The international and local legal community in the region have been actively involved
in knowledge-transfer, capacity-building and professional-development activities for several
years. While a comprehensive examination of specific, individual knowledge-transfer
initiatives is beyond the scope of this research, analysis revealed readily identifiable
weaknesses in past approaches, providing no small collection of lessons to be learned. One
such affliction resulted when a poorly undertaken needs assessment – usually a perceived lack
of understanding of ICHL – was combined with the belief that foreign expertise could rectify
the shortcoming. An expert’s busy schedule and the financial constraints of a project usually
meant preparation time was insufficient to allow study of the local legal context. Such
4
The Research Team consisted of three researchers, Vic Ullom (team leader), William Wiley, and Ljiljana
Hellman (replacing Boris Mijatovic).
5
The jurisdictions that are the subject of this research are Croatia, Serbia, Kosovo (all references to Kosovo refer
to Kosovo under UNSC Resolution 1244. The OSCE is status neutral and thus do not take a stance on the issue
of Kosovo independence.), Bosnia and Herzegovina and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.
4
knowledge-transfer events usually resulted in participants continuing as before, with little
guidance on how to employ the content of the foreign expert’s presentation with fidelity to
their local legal regime.
More thorough needs assessments, when undertaken, exposed significant material and
human shortages, a lack of witness protection and support structures, a lack of trust in judicial
institutions and their independence, and a host of other structural weaknesses that, although
many were not specific to ICHL cases, impacted the processing of those cases in the region’s
courts. Another weakness of early capacity-building efforts was their lack of a systematic
approach, coupled with a tendency to approach knowledge transfer as a one-off event.
Knowledge-transfer measures in the ICHL arena tended to tackle a small number of topics
with a specific set of participants – usually judges and prosecutors. No effort was made by
any institution, local or international, to cover the entire gamut of ICHL-related capacity
building. Similarly, there appeared to be little recognition (and corresponding resource
allocation) that professional development in this field, like most professional fields, requires a
continual updating of knowledge and skills.
Early knowledge-transfer efforts often neglected to account for the complexity of war
crimes cases, and the fact that the prosecutor or judge worked on cases alone with little or no
support staff. Although certain electronic tools are now in place in limited areas, very few
training efforts addressed case-management techniques, caseload management techniques, or
other best practices to facilitate the handling of the enormous quantity of evidence typical in
complex war crimes cases.
In the outreach field, little has been done in knowledge transfer. So few staff have
outreach among their duties that there is literally no one to whom to transfer knowledge. Best
practices exist in conducting outreach itself (see Annex 7), but review of knowledge-transfer
efforts unearthed only activities targeting “why outreach is important”, not how best to teach
it.
Witness support, on the other hand, is increasing its profile as more legal professionals
become acquainted with the benefits. Knowledge transfer has a successful track record in the
region primarily through the use of study visits. Such visits occurred primarily among
victim/witness support units in the region as well as to the ICTY. That apart, research
revealed little formal training or professional development being provided to victim/witness-
support staff.
5
Needs Assessment by Topic
Crosscutting Needs
A small number of identified needs cut across all constituent elements of the justice
system, one example being legal-research materials. Where certain local-language materials
exist, they are rarely comprehensive or updated. Legal professionals tend either to rely on
commentaries, which may be outdated, or choose to limit their advocacy to factual disputes.
A second example is access to transcripts of proceedings at the ICTY. Currently, such
transcripts exist in searchable fashion only in English and French, thereby hindering access to
a wealth of case-specific information for practising legal professionals who do not speak
those languages. Interlocutors repeatedly indicated to the Research Team that local language
transcriptions of ICTY proceedings would be an indispensable knowledge-transfer tool.
In some or all of the examined jurisdictions there were three elements to the
foundation of the problems being experienced during the investigation of ICHL cases: (1) a
considerable divergence of opinion exists on key questions of substantive law; (2) only a
small minority of investigators, prosecutors and investigative judges in the said jurisdictions
have any experience investigating (and proving) modes of liability other than direct
perpetration, and (3) oftentimes insufficient capacity exists to access and manage the
frequently large quantities of materials relevant in cases where core international crimes have
been alleged.
For prosecutor-led investigations, problems arise at the investigative phase when the
presumed perpetrators include persons who are not believed to be involved directly in the
physical perpetration of the underlying acts, for instance, where command responsibility,
giving orders or some other form of complicity is at issue. The importance of using
documentary evidence to demonstrate linkage between the underlying criminal act and mid-
as well as higher-level perpetrators appears not to be sufficiently recognized. This is
particularly the case where investigative teams are confronted with complex political and
military structures. Modern, computer-based analytical tools could assist investigators in the
region. They are not currently available, however, due largely to the costs of making local-
language versions available, the expense of training users, and the need for continual system
maintenance. The Research Team also discerned a need for general updating of investigative
techniques, e.g., in the fields of forensics, ballistics and DNA technology.
6
Prosecution
The work by the research team has found that the primary function of an indictment –
putting the defendant on adequate notice of the charges against him or her – can suffer in the
complex intersection of international and domestic legal provisions. Professional
developmental opportunities should target this phenomenon, as well as the necessity that
prosecutors be capable of managing effectively the often large quantities of documentation,
witnesses and other materials that characterize most ICHL cases. The Research Team has
found that prosecutors in the region are experiencing difficulties in taking advantage of
currently-available ICHL resources due to language barriers, cost or simply not being aware
about their existence. As with investigators, exposure to electronic research, analytical and
case-management tools, made available in the local language and provided to prosecutors
along with sufficient training in their use, would be markedly beneficial.
Defence
Most defence lawyers in the region – save for those few that have practiced at the
ICTY – are unfamiliar with ICHL as it has been received into their domestic systems. The
disappearance of investigative judges, combined with other often radical changes to the
criminal-procedure codes in force in the jurisdictions under consideration, is having the effect
of placing the onus for the search for exculpatory evidence upon defence counsel – a role for
which they are neither professionally nor conceptually well equipped. Defence counsel would
benefit from professional-developmental schemes very similar to those that the Research
Team believes would assist prosecutors in the jurisdictions subject to this study, for example,
additional exposure to the manner in which documentary evidence is used to establish the
linkage, or in this case undermining the linkage, between alleged perpetrators and key
underlying acts. Additionally, the RT notes the suggestion of several interlocutors that
capacity building in the field of negotiating plea and immunity agreements – specific to ICHL
cases – would be welcome, particularly in light of similar training already offered to
prosecutors and judges. Adequate support from the bar associations of the region for defence
counsel undertaking these cases has not been forthcoming.
As has been noted above, the vast quantities of documentation, witnesses and expert
reports that ICHL cases tend to generate can overwhelm judges, particularly trial judges,
7
working without adequate assistance, such that capacity-building initiatives targeting complex
case and caseload management would be welcome. A second area of interest, brought to the
Research Team’s attention by native speakers of the local languages, is the tendency of trial
and appellate judgements to be opaque, that is, the reasoning found therein is frequently
inaccessible to laymen. Judgement-drafting techniques that emphasize clarity and structure –
so long as these techniques are respectful of the relevant procedural law and practice – should
prove beneficial. Finally, the judges interviewed by the team frequently noted that they would
welcome exposure to the manner in which ICHL is applied elsewhere. The goal of this
exposure would be to facilitate understanding of the types and quantities of evidence that
have proved sufficient (or insufficient) in other jurisdictions adjudicating ICHL-based cases.
The region is replete with instances of vulnerable witnesses being exposed to various
indignities, from logistical hardships, to lack of information, to confronting the defendant and
his or her family en route to the courthouse. With the exception of the specialized chambers in
Belgrade and Sarajevo (and even there, the caseload outstrips resources), jurisdictions across
the region are struggling to address the needs of witnesses and victims who testify in ICHL
cases. The most prominent concern is the absence of proper, institutionalized support
structures. Such structures, in addition to being sustainable, must be comprehensive and
encompass the before, during and after phases of a given witness’ engagement with the justice
system.
To varying degrees, the court systems in the jurisdictions of the former Yugoslavia do
not enjoy the confidence of their constituencies. The public remains poorly informed about
(or is otherwise indifferent to) the relevant institutions and their proceedings, particularly in
ICHL-related cases, with their legal peculiarities. There is a danger that politicians or the
media may exploit public ignorance in pursuit of narrow objectives, alternatively blaming or
praising the justice systems’ outcomes according to their agenda. It is the view of the
Research Team that outreach is the public-relations answer to the mischaracterization of
ICHL proceedings. However, little effort is being made – save by some specialized NGOs
6
See the definition of “outreach” provided in Annex 1, and the “Best Practices in Outreach” in Annex 6,
particularly as opinions vary as to the scope, priority and activities attributable to outreach.
8
and IGOs – to undertake outreach in a systematic manner. The difficulties appear to flow
from resource constraints, lack of (dedicated) personnel with appropriate skills, and the
tendency to be minimalist and reactive in interactions with the public.
Knowledge transfer being a complex issue, it is no surprise that research revealed best
practices operating on multiple levels. For purposes of clarity, this report reduces those
findings into two basic categories: the general and the specific. Best practices that were of a
general nature, applying to the field of capacity building as a whole or to knowledge transfer
in the abstract, comprise the first group. For example, the fact that most legal professionals
involved in ICHL cases are in large measure self-taught on the specific requirements of ICHL
cases led to the best practice that, regardless of any specific knowledge-transfer methodology,
capacity-building initiatives should allow for and facilitate this traditional process of self-
education. Of course, peer review and expert feedback are also core tenets of professional
development, so legal professionals are not advised to rely on independent study exclusively.
Other examples of best practices generally applicable include:
2. Knowledge-transfer interventions must account for, and be respectful of, local legal
traditions. 7 Interventions should be tailored to be maximally applicable, and new or
innovative approaches should be accompanied by sufficient prior research to ascertain
their viability in the local jurisdiction. This is especially the case where the complex
intersection of ICHL and domestic law is concerned.
7
This point assumes the local traditions are in compliance with international legal norms.
9
transfer practices collected from experienced organizers implementing programmes for the
region’s legal professionals. Included here are traditional knowledge-transfer mechanisms
such as seminars, study visits, internships, personnel exchanges and personal contacts. These
practices, however, only constitute best practices when undertaken within certain parameters,
i.e., by employing practices that maximize their impact. For example, a study visit is a best
practice when undertaken in accordance with the following principles:
1. The personality, expertise and authority of the presenters are considered key, and
the focus is on short presentations followed by ample time for discussion;
2. Both visitors and their hosts are well prepared in advance of study visits and
have clearly defined objectives. By thoroughly consulting the participants, the
hosts and the donor to ascertain expectations, the organizer can assist in defining
both the target group and the objectives;
3. The visit is specifically tailored to the group and the objectives, to ensure that
the presentations are relevant and that the agenda moves the visit towards that
objective. The topics to be addressed; places, departments and personnel to visit;
and the format of meetings, tours and briefings all require advance identification
and agreement. Such tailoring is time and labour intensive; and
4. An exercise at the end of the visit solicits evaluation and feedback generated by
the participants and hosts, which is shared with the organizer.
2. Victims’ Legal Aid Clinic: A clinical legal-education programme for law schools
where students represent victims in reparation proceedings.
10
3. Embedding, Mentoring and Experts-in-Residence: Locating an external expert inside
an office or institution to assist counterparts with individual cases and in capacity
building generally.
4. Dealing with Vulnerable and Traumatized Witnesses: A thorough training for (new)
staff in victim/witness-support structures who are in contact with vulnerable
witnesses and victims.
The best practices research lies at the core of this study, and the above examples are only a
portion of the findings. In any event, these practices are effective only when implemented,
and it is to implementation that this report turns next.
Recommendations
Make Available Transcripts from ICTY Proceedings that are searchable, in local
languages;
Foster Electronic Research and Improved Analytical e-Tools with the Case Matrix 8
and training in its use.
Increase the analytical capacity and trained support staff for judges, prosecutors and
investigators – including both political and military analytical capacity.
11
FINAL REPORT
I. Introduction
As the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) approaches
the end of its “completion strategy”, harnessing the institutional knowledge and expertise
developed during its tenure, and making it available to legal practitioners elsewhere, becomes
increasingly important. The three organizations involved here understand this imperative, but
seek as well to understand how best to conduct such “knowledge transfer”, particularly to
legal professionals in the former Yugoslavia still confronting a war crimes caseload. 10 ” The
Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights of the Organization for Security and
Co-operation in Europe (OSCE/ODIHR), 11 the ICTY and the United Nations Interregional
Crime and Justice Research Institute (UNICRI) – supported substantially by the T.M.C. Asser
Instituut 12 – initiated this study to assist their own efforts and the efforts of others who
endeavour to strengthen the capacity of legal systems in the former Yugoslavia operating at
the intersection of domestic and international criminal and humanitarian law (ICHL). In so
doing they seek to improve markedly the delivery of future professional-development and
knowledge-transfer programmes.
This Final Report is the culmination of a multi-stage research project that included an
Expert Workshop in The Hague in October of 2008, over 90 field interviews in five
jurisdictions, 13 an Interim Report, where findings and recommendations of the research phase
were compiled, and a Regional Workshop in Sarajevo in May of 2009, where the Interim
Report was discussed with local practitioners. The structure of the Final Report follows the
project’s methodological foundations in that it begins with a review and analysis of past
capacity-building efforts in the ICHL arena across the region. That review is followed by an
assessment of current knowledge and skills-related needs among the legal professionals
dealing with ICHL-related cases. From the successes and failures of previous capacity-
10
In further text, the acronym ICHL is employed as per the definition provided in Annex 1, to describe war
crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide and the modes of liability found in International Criminal and
Humanitarian Law.
11
The Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) is an institution of the OSCE based in
Warsaw. In further text, the acronym OSCE refers to both the OSCE and ODIHR, unless specified.
12
The T.M.C. Asser Instituut contributed to the development of the conception and design of the project and
hosted an Expert Workshop in The Hague to launch the project’s research phase.
13
The jurisdictions that are the subject of this research are Croatia, Serbia, Kosovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina and
the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. All references to Kosovo refer to Kosovo under UNSC Resolution
1244. The OSCE is status neutral and thus do not take a stance on the issue of Kosovo independence.
12
building initiatives, the authors distil a collection of best practices and means for improving
current initiatives. Finally, a set of recommendations is included that matches the identified
needs with the identified best practices, listed according to priority.14
Judiciaries in transitional and post-conflict countries frequently suffer a variety of ills,
many of which will bear to a certain degree on war crimes cases. The Research Team
reviewed relevant literature and used the Expert Workshop in The Hague 15 to identify
discreet topics that appeared repeatedly to be the target of ICHL-related capacity building and
knowledge transfer:
The knowledge and application of ICHL in the domestic legal context; 16
Investigation and Analysis;
Prosecution;
Defence;
Trial and Appellate Adjudication;
Outreach; and
Victim/Witness Support 17
After receiving validation at the Experts Workshop, these seven topics formally became the
backdrop against which the methodology described below was applied.
14
A Research Team hired by ODIHR prepared both the Interim and Final Report on behalf of the partner
organizations. The team consisted of three researchers, Vic Ullom (team leader), William Wiley, and Ljiljana
Hellman (replacing Boris Mijatovic).
15
The Expert Workshop, hosted by the T.M. Asser Institute, took place in The Hague in October 2008.
16
This topic did not receive separate treatment in the Report. Rather, the Research Team wove it into the
discussion of investigation, prosecution, defence and adjudication. The team was of the view that the knowledge
of ICHL, and the ability to apply it, were critical to, but inseparable from, the six remaining topics.
17
Although closely related to victim/witness support, witness protection is not included in this study. It was the
view of the project team that addressing the topic of witness protection adequately required a separate research
initiative.
18
See annex 3 for further details on the methodology and research stages of the project.
13
improvements, the report includes a wide range of recommendations (Section V). Set out in
order of priority, these recommendations match the best practices with the needs identified
during the assessment. They describe the context and means of employing the best practices
in order to rectify the identified shortcomings.
B. Additional Background
A fundamental premise of this study is that sufficient differences exist between ICHL-
related crimes and what are referred to as “classic” crimes, such that the former merit special
consideration in capacity-building initiatives. Yet this perspective is not necessarily obvious.
While interviewing in the former Yugoslavia, project researchers were frequently told by
practitioners that they treat war crimes cases the same way they treat every other crime. Of
course, one would not expect either preferential or discriminatory treatment by state
authorities towards individuals suspected of involvement in war crimes. The point is that, due
to their specificities, war crimes stand apart from “classic” crimes in ways that justify specific
capacity-building approaches, in particular:
Substantive law: ICHL is not typically a priority in traditional legal education; most legal
professionals will not have had significant exposure to it prior to working on their first
case. Sorting out the “international” aspects of the substantive law that are domestically
applicable is no straightforward exercise, as section D below illustrates.
Complexity: Not every ICHL case is necessarily complex, and certainly not all “classic”
crimes are straightforward by comparison. However, given the context, the law, the
scope, the actors, the quantum of evidence, the necessity (often) for inter-institutional
and interstate co-operation, the need (often) for witness protection and support, the time
elapsed since the underlying acts took place, and the fact that the accused are frequently
not the physical perpetrators of the underlying act, such cases tend to be more
complicated than “classic” criminal cases. Particularly complex is the necessity of
securing, as well as effectively presenting (or defending against), evidence linking the
underlying act(s) to mid- and high-level perpetrators.
Potential for politicization: By their nature, war crimes cases frequently reflect political and
military outcomes, or even inter-ethnic relations, giving rise to allegations of “victor’s
justice” or ethnic bias. Political leaders and the public, undoubtedly with the help of the
media and interest groups, will have formed specific notions about the groups and
individuals that they believe have perpetrated such offences. These notions translate
into expectations, indeed pressures, directed towards the justice system. 19
19
As noted, the issue of societal and political pressures is not a focus of this report, but is mentioned here to
illustrate the salient differences between a typical ICHL and a typical “classic” crime. It is worth noting that such
a societal climate is one of the key motivations for bolstering outreach activities. Successful outreach is meant to
decrease politicization while increasing confidence in the judiciary.
14
Victims: Victims of ICHL-related crimes are also specific in comparison to those of
“classic” crimes. In addition to the gravity of the harm inflicted upon them, they will
frequently have been targeted due to their nationality, gender or religion. Often, they
will have been targeted or have suffered en masse. Victims may form groups that can
have significant influence over public perceptions of the effectiveness of justice
institutions.
Accused/Suspect: Unlike “classic” crimes, although not exclusively so, persons suspected of
ICHL-related crimes frequently hold positions of power, typically of political and
military authority. Suspects in such cases will at times have a public profile, a support
base and access to instruments of the state, such as the police and military forces, which
might be used to undermine the exercise of justice. Also, accused or suspects often
enjoy national and collegial solidarity behind them.
These factors, at times operating in concert, suggest approaches to capacity building that
account for the unique character of the crime, the law and the context. It is also true that
successful efforts at strengthening capacity, particularly when skills based, benefit the justice
system beyond ICHL-related crimes, positively affecting other categories of complex and
sensitive cases. 20
Another issue concerns the target of the study. A primary focus here is on building the
skills of legal professionals working with international crimes. But a second category of
practitioners – capacity builders themselves (trainers and organizers of events, etc.) – has as
much to do with the research. In so much as legal professionals require regular updating of
their skills, so too those who plan, sponsor, organize and deliver such activities require
modernization of their techniques and upgrades in their methodology. This study is as much
about legal practitioners and how they learn as it is about trainers and organizers and how
they educate.
The well-documented material and human-resource shortages within the prosecutorial,
investigative, witness support, outreach and adjudicatory structures of the region already
render it difficult to address contemporary crimes, let alone those perpetrated a decade or
longer ago. But, with certain notable exceptions, these considerations lie outside the scope of
this report and the project. Here, the focus is primarily upon questions of skills, knowledge
and, in particular, substantive law and its application in ICHL cases.
20
Certain crimes, for example trafficking in human beings or other categories of organized crime, often bear
characteristics similar to those of war crimes. It follows that capacity building efforts in ICHL can reinforce
capacity building in those areas, and vice versa.
15
II. Review and Analysis of Past Efforts
A. General Commentary
With wide-reaching goals, the international and local legal communities have
undertaken a multitude of knowledge-transfer, capacity-building and professional-
development activities in the sphere of ICHL over the past decade. Yet there is a
perception – providing in part the impetus for this project – that the results of these
initiatives are inconsistent, and the reasons for such inconsistency are not immediately
clear. Knowledge transfer was successful in some areas and on some topics, but less so
in others. Regardless of the outcome, feedback given by participants in questionnaires
was usually positive, but, the fact that such evaluations were generally conducted
immediately upon completion of the event meant they were ill-suited to the
identification of lasting impact. Genuine efforts to assess whether a given training
methodology or a particular approach to knowledge transfer actually achieved its
learning objectives, enabling the participants to actually apply the knowledge they
received, must necessarily take both a longer and deeper view. And while a
comprehensive examination of specific, individual knowledge-transfer events is beyond
the scope of this research, the analysis that follows identifies both positive and negative
aspects of the various approaches applied in the region.
B. Analysis
21
Judges, prosecutors, defence counsel and investigators/analysts.
responsibility and various forms of criminal liability, including “joint criminal
enterprise”. These were legal concepts that had not been articulated in the domestic
legal code, or at least not in the manner that the ICTY was employing them. Typically,
at such events, a domestic legal expert would follow the foreign expert and describe the
ICHL-based provisions that had been incorporated into the domestic code at the time of
the alleged crimes. With regard to jurisprudence, practitioners were generally told that,
while developments at the ICTY and elsewhere were interesting, the domestic legal
regime did not entertain foreign jurisprudence and, in any event, the domestic criminal
code in effect at the time contained the only applicable law. Such training events
resulted in participants continuing as before, with little guidance on how to employ the
content of the foreign expert’s presentation with fidelity to their local legal regime.
Clearly not all ICHL-related training in the early days suffered from the above
mentioned shortcomings, yet interlocutors repeatedly described instances to the
Research Team where material presented at training events could not be reconciled with
the local legal framework. 22 It was not until the needs became better identified that the
character of capacity-building events evolved from training towards more public
professional debate on the contours of ICHL, whether the manner that the ICTY and
other tribunals were employing it was applicable and, particularly, whether the more
complicated theories of liability could be applied domestically.
A second shift in capacity building came with the understanding that the
problems facing domestic legal professionals were much larger and more complex than
simple unfamiliarity with ICHL. More thorough needs assessments exposed significant
material and human shortages, lack of witness protection and support structures,
dubious legal cultural norms, a lack of trust in judicial institutions and their
independence, and a host of other structural weaknesses that, although not all specific to
ICHL cases, impacted the processing of those cases in the region’s courts. 23 The extent
to which any of these lacunae, or their sum total, would result in unacceptable judicial
outcomes was not immediately clear, but the lesson for capacity building was that the
needs of legal professionals were complex, interconnected with the needs of the justice
system overall, and steeped in the local legal culture.
22
The Research Team was told that the same mistake was repeated later when experts from the Court of
BiH provided training to cantonal level members of the judiciary, who are applying a different code.
23
Certainly, there were other problems confronting domestic judiciaries as well. As mentioned, these
considerations, for the most part, lie outside the scope of this report, but the authors are well aware that
their existence also impacted capacity building to varying degrees.
17
As the closure of the ICTY was determined and cases began returning to the
region, the United Nations Security Council expressly called on the international
community to strengthen further the capacities of the local jurisdictions. Although many
of its initiatives were already underway, the ICTY responded by bolstering programmes
designed to enhance personal and professional contacts between its practitioners and
those of the region. Internship programmes, for example, started to focus increasingly
on bringing young legal professionals from the region to the Tribunal for several
months of practical, mutually beneficial work experience. The ICTY Outreach section
began facilitating study visits to The Hague where, as noted in more detail below,
personal contacts flourished in a model that provided local practitioners’ insight into the
functioning of the Tribunal. Fellowships and “job-shadowing” visits contributed to
these exchanges and, by a recent accounting, nearly 1,000 people have passed through
the institution in some form or another. 24
Although difficult to assess specifically, the personal contacts and professional
relationships that developed over the years between ICTY professionals and their
counterparts in the region clearly served a number of knowledge- and capacity-building
ends. Anecdotal exchanges brought to the attention of the Research Team included
clarification of legal points, learning to conduct legal research on the international level,
assistance in tracking down evidentiary material, advice on prosecutorial strategy, and
exchange of information concerning incidents, to name but a few. It was clear to the
team that both parties stood to benefit from exposure to the other’s perspective and
experience. And such contacts were not limited to those between the ICTY and
professionals from the region. As relations between the states improved – helped in part
by political initiatives aimed at fostering regional co-operation in war crimes cases25 –
exchanges of professional experience at the regional level steadily increased. Several
interlocutors pressed upon the Research Team the continuing need for, and substantial
24
Interview with ICTY official in February 2009, notes on file with the authors.
25
The most significant effort taken in this area was the so-called Pali Process – a series of meetings with
relevant judicial and political authorities from the region on judicial co-operation in war crimes
proceedings, initiated by the OSCE in 2004. Those meetings helped trigger certain improvements in
regional co-operation that resulted in a number of bilateral agreements on information and evidence
sharing among the prosecutors in the region, (e.g. February 2005, Memorandum on Agreement on
Regionalization and Promotion of Co-operation in Fighting All Forms of Grave Crimes, between the
Serbian and the Croatian Prosecutors Offices; April 2005, Memorandum on Co-operation between the
BiH and the Serbian Prosecutors’ Offices; 2005 and 2006, a series of memoranda of co-operation in
prosecuting war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide, between Croatia, Serbia and
Montenegro).
18
benefit from, such regional interactions to facilitate information, best practices and,
most concretely, evidence-sharing. 26
Another weakness of early capacity-building efforts was their lack of a
systematic approach, coupled with a tendency to approach knowledge transfer as a one-
off event. As is often the case with donor-driven capacity building, funding cycles
dictated the scope of a training scheme and its methodology as much as actual needs or
quality pedagogical approaches. Knowledge-transfer measures in the ICHL arena
largely reflected this dynamic by tackling a small number of topics with a specific set of
participants – usually judges and prosecutors. Defence was often disregarded entirely,
and investigators were provided with little ICHL-specific tools or training. No effort
was made by any institution – local or international – to cover the entire range of ICHL-
related capacity building for legal professionals with no prior experience with ICHL.
Similarly lacking was an awareness that professional development in this field (with a
corresponding resource allocation) requires a constant updating of knowledge and
skills.
In fairness to those who offer capacity building to defence counsel, due to the
right of the accused to the counsel of their choice, the target group for capacity building
is difficult to identify. Moreover, well-known or high-profile defence counsel often
called upon by high-profile accused, appear reluctant to participate in events as trainees.
Still, unlike judges and prosecutors from the region, a significant number of defence
lawyers actually received on-the-job training by working – defending clients – in the
ICTY. Some of these would have received a foundational training course for new
counsel organized by the Office of Legal Aid and Detention Matters (OLAD) and/or the
Association of Defence Counsel (ADC-ICTY). 27
More recently, weaknesses in prior efforts have been countered – although not
alleviated altogether – with the emergence of judicial and prosecutorial training
academies, 28 as well as with “continuing legal education” (CLE) requirements now in
effect in most jurisdictions. The academies’ central role in formalizing the professional
26
Examples of cross-border contacts include Serbian court guards visiting counterparts in BiH; the Bar
Association of the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia visiting OKO, and the Belgrade War Crimes
Chamber and the Ministry of Justice organizing a meeting in Belgrade for judges from the region,
including two from the ICTY. Such visits have also been beneficial in the witness-support area, where
staff in the newly created units in Croatia and Serbia visited their counterparts in the Court of BiH.
27
Note that neither of these training initiatives is still operating.
28
Throughout the region, judges and prosecutors are frequently trained together, in one institution.
19
development of judges and prosecutors has been a welcome move away from ad hoc,
purely donor–driven training. They combine local ownership of the education process
with local subject matter expertise. The involvement of such institutions in ICHL
knowledge transfer, however, is not a panacea for systemized knowledge transfer in the
ICHL arena. On the one hand, the academies provide a centralized, legally mandated
institution with responsibility for legal education that includes ICHL. On the other,
however, their comprehensive mandate means ICHL training must take its place among
other priorities. 29 Capacity building in ICHL requires a layered process, with each
examination of the substantive law building upon the previous one, and it must access a
broad range of actors – such as victim- and witness-support personnel, investigators,
defence counsel and outreach professionals – none of whom are under such an
academy’s purview.
Additional lessons garnered from early knowledge-transfer efforts are that they
often neglected to account for the complexity of war crimes cases, and that the
prosecutor or judge often worked on cases alone with little or no support staff. Although
certain electronic tools are now in place in limited areas, very few training efforts –
particularly concerted ones – address case-management techniques, caseload-
management techniques or other best practices to facilitate the handling of the
enormous quantity of evidence typical in complex war crimes cases.30
Early efforts in knowledge transfer would also have benefited from including
practical training materials, such as templates, handbooks and forms that could be
employed by the participants upon their return to the office. The production of manuals,
guides, bench books and similar literature is not commonplace in the region, and what is
available usually consists of translation of texts based on international practice — again
with little effort to ensure applicability to the specific legal context of national
judiciaries. 31 In light of the developing interregional war crimes expertise, materials of
29
Academies must not only provide comprehensive coverage across the wide range of training topics, but
also across all judicial and prosecutorial participants. The Research Team is aware of past occasions
where, for example, persons not dealing with war crimes have participated in war crime training with
limited interest but in order to receive the required credits, while practitioners involved in ICHL cases
who would have benefited have not participated.
30
Although not the focus of this report, at least two events with trial management as a topic were
included as part of an event focusing on judgement drafting at the War Crimes Chamber in the Court of
BiH.
31
A notable exception is the Ekspertski vodi kroz Haški tribunal/Expert guide through the ICTY. This
publication provided Serbian legal professionals a guide to ICTY jurisprudence, adapted to local legal
terminology and the local legal framework.
20
this type developed today could not only be based on emerging local practice, but could
benefit a larger group of practitioners region-wide. 32
Outreach
Outreach and public-information professionals were only rarely the target of
early capacity-building initiatives in the ICHL sphere. This was due primarily to the
lack of personnel, particularly specialized personnel, undertaking outreach, as well as
the low priority given to their efforts. More recently, however, Bosnia and Herzegovina
(BiH) and Serbia have become the exception. In Serbia, for example, tackling the lack
of comprehension in the legal community about the value of outreach, OSCE and the
Youth Initiative for Human Rights (YIHR) sponsored a seminar that gathered senior
judicial figures from Croatia, BiH and Serbia, as well as representatives of the ICTY
and the Special Court for Sierra Leone, as panellists. The OSCE also sponsored
numerous publications, documentaries and public-opinion surveys, 33 a number of public
panels and a particularly successful series of outreach events. The War Crimes
Prosecutor’s Office in Belgrade and the OSCE Mission to Serbia arranged study visits
for Serbian journalists to the ICTY in 2005, and then to judicial institutions in BiH and
Croatia. While the lasting impact of these specific efforts is difficult to assess, it was
clear to the Research Team that the climate in which domestic ICHL cases are being
processed in Serbia is improving somewhat. While innumerable factors influence the
social atmosphere, some of the positive shift is must be considered as attributable to
these and other outreach efforts.
Victim/Witness Support
32
Apart from the OKO Reporter and ad hoc reports of organizations on specific issues, no legal reviews
exist covering national jurisprudence with a focus on war crimes. Practitioners must rely on their own
initiative and resources to research, obtain, read and analyse decisions issued by other courts.
33
Examples include: “Hag medju nama” (The Hague Among Us), October 2005 – in co-operation with
the Humanitarian Law Center; A Perception Study of Justice Operators in Serbia – in co-operation with
the Solidaridad-Impunity Watch (the Serbian branch of the Netherlands-based international NGO); Public
opinion research on the general public’s attitude toward the ICTY (2005, 2006, 2007 and 2009) – in co-
operation with the NGO Belgrade Centre for Human Rights.
21
thus playing an important role in the early stages of the Victim-Support Unit in the
Court of BiH. In Serbia, the OSCE organized training on various witness-related themes
for members of the judiciary, court guards, defence attorneys and court staff to support
the inception of the country’s victim/witness-support unit. In Croatia, fragmented
witness-support services were provided for the first time in 2006. Since then, support
programmes have been continuously extended but are still not available in a
comprehensive form to all courts, including two of the specialized War Crimes Courts
(Rijeka, Split). 34
Knowledge-transfer mechanisms in the victim/witness-support arena are not
numerous, but the clear preference is for study visits. The OSCE and the United States
Embassy (separately) organized such visits for Serbia’s victim/witness-support officers
to the ICTY and the Court of BiH. For their part, ICTY officials visited the support
structures in the region, providing practical, first-hand advice from the Tribunal’s
perspective. Participants in these visits found them useful, with many considering them
as the first – and in some cases only – formal training they received in their new
profession. Similarly, Croatia’s victim/witness-support staff visited both Serbia and the
Court of BiH’s witness-support units in 2007, again praising the opportunity to absorb
best practices from more experienced offices. While it is clear that the field of witness
support requires a level of specialized knowledge, according to an official at the ICTY
“the needs of victim/witness-support practitioners in the region do not concern lack of
knowledge, only lack of resources”. 35
Capacity-building efforts in this field were not limited to staff working in
victim/witness-support units. Stories of re-traumatization of vulnerable
victims/witnesses in various courts in the region prompted a series of training for
judges, prosecutors and a few that included defence counsel, such as in Serbia and
Kosovo 36 in 2006, in an effort to raise awareness among these legal professionals, who
contact such witnesses. Throughout 2008, the OSCE Mission in BiH organized a series
of meetings between judges, prosecutors, civil society organizations and members of
the press at the local level, designed to provoke debate on the multifarious issues facing
traumatized witnesses and victims in the ICHL context.
34
The OSCE Office in Zagreb began a project to sponsor this extension of the service in July, 2009.
35
Interview with ICTY official, 13 October 2008, notes on file with the authors.
36
All references to Kosovo refer to Kosovo under UNSC Resolution 1244.
22
Although no formal support structures exist in Skopje’s courts, an
OSCE/OPDAT/ICTY training regime there placed witness-support and witness-
protection concerns high on the agenda, where legal professionals confronted these
topics both in seminars and study visits to the Tribunal and the Court of BiH.
Such sensitization initiatives have raised awareness among legal professionals,
the media and the public. Still, the significant inroads made region-wide in the
victim/witness-support arena are only the first steps in a long process aimed at
achieving the level of support appropriate for the serious cases in which the
victims/witnesses are expected to testify.
23
III. Needs Assessment
A. General Commentary
24
B. Constituent Elements of the Justice System
37
The various jurisdictions, as noted elsewhere in this report, are in the midst of revising their criminal
investigative procedures. The roles of investigative judges, prosecutors and police investigators already
vary significantly.
38
For a discussion of the manner in which ICHL is being implemented in each of the jurisdictions under
discussion, see Annex 5.
39
The Research Tem often did not receive formal access to the relevant police officials – although access
to investigative judges and prosecutors was obtained without difficulty. The team casts no aspersions
however; such occurrences may have had any number of causes, including time constraints. The remarks
in this section are based largely upon the statements offered to the Research Team by other actors in the
justice system, primarily defence counsel, prosecutors and judges.
40
This view was supported by at least one newly hired police investigator, who stated that she and her
colleagues would benefit greatly from training on elements of ICHL crimes, as well as on how to take
statements from victims to support the required elements. The officer also sought to learn how to
approach vulnerable witnesses and gain their trust.
25
police staff appeared (according to one trial judge) to themselves be manifestly
complicit in the crimes alleged by the prosecutor. 41
Turning to the investigative capacity of the prosecutors and (in the jurisdictions
where they still exist) investigative judges, a number of the personnel holding these
positions clearly had a firm grasp of the fundamentals of a successful investigation of
ICHL-based crimes. As a general rule, prosecutors and investigative judges displayed
the most confidence in their abilities where the requirements of an investigation into
ICHL-related crimes overlapped with the expertise that must be demonstrated in the
investigation of domestic crimes of a non-international nature, i.e., “classic” crimes. For
instance, there have been a number of cases dealt with by Croatian authorities where
murder, as a war crime, has been alleged to have taken place in and around Vukovar in
1991 and 1992. As far as the Research Team has been able to determine, the relevant
Croatian prosecutors and investigative judges have approached these allegations in a
piecemeal basis, as they would with “classic” murders, i.e., as if they were dealing with
multiple killings with no nexus to a state of armed conflict. Although convictions of
direct perpetrators were secured, evidence relating to the perpetrator’s direct superior
was often ignored or not followed up sufficiently.
Several prosecutors and investigative judges with whom the Research Team met
understood the importance of documentary evidence generated contemporaneously by
the suspect and the organization of which the suspect was a part at the time of the
commission of the alleged crimes. But region-wide, investigators tended to rely almost
exclusively on witness-based evidence to make their case, rendering it vulnerable to
human error. The practical and conceptual ability to put together pieces of documentary
evidence – combined with witness evidence – to build a complex case against a mid-
level perpetrator case was thought to be wanting.
Legal professionals were quick to add that their investigations would greatly
benefit from dedicated analytical personnel, particularly for political and military
structures, something that appeared not to exist in any of the jurisdictions that were the
subject of this study. 42 Also, modern, computer-based analytical tools, such as
Analyst’s Notebook, have been successfully utilized in international tribunals to aid
41
The Research Team has observed that, even after the police vetting process in BiH, there have been
instances of serving police officers being indicted for war crimes.
42
It should, however, be noted that, at least in Serbia, dedicated military and political analysts were not
deemed necessary when said expertise could be made available on an expert-witness basis during
investigation and trial.
26
analytical capacity and may provide some degree of assistance for investigators across
the region if language and technical obstacles were to be overcome. The correction of
these serious shortcomings in analytical capacity should be viewed as a priority for the
region’s legal community.
Prosecutions
43
The Research Team found that, while caseload-management tools were available to officials in the
Belgrade District Court as well as the Zagreb Country Court, case-management tools were for the most
part nowhere to be found. A case-management tool (i.e., the Case Matrix) is available to counsel and
judges at the Court of BiH, although the team did not find that this or a similar case-management tool was
available to prosecutors, defence counsel and judges practising elsewhere. Where the Case Matrix is
concerned, a BCS version will be available to legal professionals in the region at no cost to practitioners
from November 2009. Prosecutorial offices (and chambers) would benefit from expert advice on the array
of potential management tools, their functionality, their cost and their compatibility with existing tools.
27
provisions. For example, it has been noted that practitioners in Serbia generally agree
on the scope of the law, but there did not appear to the Research Team to be any
consensus on the question of how a given offence or mode of liability should be broken
down into its constituent parts. The initial indictment in the so-called “Scorpions”
case 44 has many positive features. For instance, Article 142(1) of the 1976 Socialist
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Penal Code is linked explicitly to the provisions of
international law and, in particular, to Article 3 common to the 1949 Geneva
Conventions. Additionally, the modes of liability relevant to each of the five persons
accused are more or less clearly set forth in the indictment. 45 Neither the alleged
offence nor the modes of liability constitute in any way a departure from the commonly
accepted interpretation in Serbian legal circles of the relevant provisions of the 1976
code. Nonetheless, the indictment in question nowhere proffers a clear indication
through the pleading of pertinent material facts of what the prosecution considers to be
the legal requirements or “elements” of the alleged crime or of those of “ordering” as a
mode of liability. While it is apparent that the Scorpions indictment – in line with
Serbian procedural law – must include a complete recitation of all alleged facts, the
Research Team observes that it is not the alleged facts themselves that put a defendant
on notice. Rather, proper notice includes a demonstration that those facts operate to
satisfy the necessary requirements, i.e., the elements that constitute the alleged crime.
Defence
Despite the oft-cited criticisms of defence counsel in the literature, the Research
Team has been left with a somewhat more positive impression. This is not to suggest
that the defence counsel interviewed did not highlight their experience of innumerable
difficulties in the execution of their duties. The practitioners interviewed by the team
were of the view that, save for the few who had appeared in The Hague, most lawyers in
the region were unfamiliar with ICHL as it has been received into their domestic
systems. This situation was compounded, in their view, by the fact that most trial
judges, with the exception of those from specialized courts, also had limited familiarity
with ICHL. Consequently, even if defence counsel were to assist the bench by making
reference at trial to the manner in which similar law is applied in foreign jurisdictions
44
Republic of Serbia, War Crimes Prosecutor’s Office, Case No. KTRZ-no. 3/05, dated 10 July 2005.
45
Four of these accused are alleged to have been present during the perpetration of the underlying acts (in
this case, the killing of a number of prisoners). A fifth accused is alleged to have ordered the killings.
28
and international tribunals, these references would not be welcome and might be
misconstrued. There appears little incentive at the moment for defence counsel to
familiarize themselves with international praxis. However, one interlocutor with
extensive ICTY experience suggested that a slow and careful injection of foreign
jurisprudence into defence arguments would, over time, bear fruit.
Where defence representation is concerned, the Research Team is aware that,
with the exception of the Court of BiH, defence counsel are not required to undergo
specific training or to possess specific experience in order to represent persons accused
of war crimes. The region’s bar associations are becoming more active on this front. In
Croatia in late 2008, for example, the Croatian Bar Association, together with the
Ministry of Justice, compiled a list of attorneys willing to be appointed by courts as
counsel in war crimes cases. Listed attorneys either had experience or willingness to be
trained. But improvement is needed to ensure that ICHL foundations are in place for
those lawyers accepting such cases. In this context, the Research Team notes the rapid
disappearance of investigative judges from the jurisdictions being examined in this
study. In particular, the disappearance of investigative judges, combined with other
oftentimes radical changes to criminal-procedure codes in force in the jurisdictions
under consideration, is having the effect of placing the onus for the search for
exculpatory evidence upon defence counsel – a role for which they are neither
professionally nor conceptually well equipped. 46 In addition, the current structure of
compensation for the representation of indigent clients, where counsel is compensated
at a flat rate for submissions and appearances but not for preparation time, does little to
encourage diligence, a particular concern for the complex nature of ICHL-related
crimes.
The same holds true for the defence during trial and appellate proceedings.
Counsel would benefit from professional-development schemes very similar to those for
prosecutors. These could include, for example, additional exposure to the use of
documentary evidence to establish – or in this case to undermine – the linkage between
alleged perpetrators and key underlying acts. The Research Team also noted the
suggestion by several interlocutors that capacity building for defence counsel in the
field of negotiating plea and immunity agreements in ICHL cases would be welcome,
particularly in light of similar training already provided to prosecutors and judges.
46
And in BiH at least, also “legally” ill-equipped. The code does not endow defence counsel with a status
that foresees defence-led, independent investigations.
29
Trial and Appellate Adjudication
The Research Team met with a number of trial and appellate judges, including
Supreme Court justices, in each of the jurisdictions subject to this study. The consensus
view of the interlocutors was that sitting judges in the interviewees’ jurisdictions would
benefit from professional-advancement initiatives in the ICHL field, in particular from a
more detailed examination of the relationship of the local substantive law to
international criminal law and practice. The judges with whom the team spoke indicated
that they would take special interest in any examination of the manner in which foreign
jurisdictions (in particular the one of the ICTY) meet the evidentiary requirements of a
given element or mode of liability. As noted, the occasional reference to international
case law can be found in trial and appellate judgements, a development both welcome
and to be encouraged. However, the paucity of such references and their limited scope
illustrate the need for improvement. 47
The Research Team received substantial comment from interlocutors –
particularly laymen, but not exclusively so – concerning the accessibility of the legal
reasoning in the judgements rendered across the region. Senior judicial interlocutors
suggested that judgements drafted in sophisticated grammar and “legalese” are a
tradition in the region, and are generally unclear to laypersons. However, they also
acknowledged that some colleagues mask insufficient analysis and poor legal reasoning
with opaque language. The team admits its own difficulty in comprehending the
reasoning in certain verdicts it read, although it was unclear what role translation might
have played. In any event, clear, concise and “accessible” verdicts – length
notwithstanding – are an indispensable attribute of the rule of law. ICTY judgements
are known generally for their clear structure and readability, and some recent positive
interactions indicate that knowledge transfer from the ICTY may inspire local
jurisdictions to adopt certain drafting methods.
Another area where trial judges in the region, in particular, might benefit from
ICHL-related capacity-building initiatives is in the management of complex cases. As
has been noted, the vast quantities of material, exhibits, witnesses and expert reports
ICHL cases generate the risk of overwhelming judges working without adequate
47
A couple of examples available in English that might support this assertion include the Supreme Court
of the Republika Srpska, Appellate Judgement in the case of Dragoje Radanovi, dated 22 March 2007;
and Cantonal Court Novi Travnik, Trial Judgement in the case of Mato Mileti, dated 29 March 2005.
30
assistance. Being able to take advantage of and having undergone training in the use of
the electronic tools available for such purposes would provide benefits ranging from the
proper organization of evidence to assisting in structuring the final verdict. In a region
where case backlogs reach very high numbers, and particularly in BiH, where the
volume of ICHL cases is only set to increase, caseload management is an increasingly
important skill, the development of which would clearly benefit from further best
practices and/or electronic tools. 48
Victim/Witness Support
In most jurisdictions, Centres for Social Work are responsible for providing or
co-ordinating support for vulnerable witnesses. However, interlocutors described these
centres as not having the organizational structures, specific training or human and
material resources to meet these responsibilities. In certain pilot courts in Croatia, in the
War Crimes Chamber in Belgrade and the Court of BiH, witness-support structures
exist. Either alone or with assistance from volunteers or NGOs, such as the
Humanitarian Law Center in Belgrade, these structures are providing assistance to
witnesses and victims who come before the courts. These efforts suffer from significant
resource limitations relative to their caseload.
48
To this list of necessities demanding better caseload management, one might add assistance in
managing court time appropriately, ensuring the preparation of the parties for hearings, being aware of
other similar cases and ascertaining when joinder is appropriate, or whether to relinquish jurisdiction to
another court, and the like. While most of these topics are not ICHL specific, the unique context of war
crimes cases in the former Yugoslavia means they are relatively prominent vis-à-vis “classic” crimes.
49
While this example is illustrative of a need for witness support, it often originates from the procedural
problem of admissibility of evidence from another or even the same jurisdiction.
50
The Research Team notes that these incidents did not occur in the Court of BiH or the War Crimes
Chamber in Belgrade.
51
The Research Team is aware that these instances reflect also upon a justice system’s ability to protect
witnesses, not only to provide them psychological, logistical and similar support. However, witness
protection is not taken up in this report, in part because the breadth and depth that would be required to
address the topic properly requires a specific effort.
31
It is clear that there is a need for sustainable support mechanisms for witnesses
testifying in war crimes cases; indeed, it is the primary need across the region in this
field. It is also clear that one size does not fit all, particularly considering the fact that
institutionally housed victim/witness-support programmes follow the subject matter
jurisdiction of the court to which they are attached. 52 In the entity courts of BiH, no
formal witness-support services exist, although such services have been taken up in
places by committed NGOs. In Skopje, no organized service, not even one provided by
volunteers or NGOs, is available to witnesses – in ICHL cases or otherwise. In Kosovo
a witness-support structure created by the OSCE in 2002 is currently not employed in
ICHL cases.
Whichever model for witness support is selected, it must not only be sustainable,
but also comprehensive, encompassing the “before, during and after” phases of a
witness’ engagement with the judicial system. Current programmes, including that of
the ICTY, succeed to a greater or lesser degree in providing support to witnesses prior
to and during their testimony. However, after testifying – rare cases of relocation aside
– the support offered or available (in the form of post-testimony follow-up calls, visits
to witnesses or referrals to NGOs or other local institutions) is limited. For its part, the
ICTY has identified the need for more systematic follow-up to further enhance the
support. 53 For the region’s existing structures, witness follow-up remains more an
aspiration than a practice.
Interlocutors across the region also noted gaps in “prior” witness support.
Witness support prior to testifying appeared limited to those measures offered upon a
victim/witness’s arrival at the courthouse to testify. Instead, it should begin with the
initial contact with the victim/witness during the investigation stage and continue
throughout. Transport to and from the courthouse during initial interviews and during
52
In Croatia, for example, although originally created exclusively to support witnesses in war crimes
cases, recent legislative changes broadened the scope of the (pilot) Witness Support Programme to
witnesses of all crimes, regardless of character. Conversely, in the Court of BiH and the Belgrade War
Crimes Chamber, where the witness-support apparatus extends to all witnesses, those covered will
necessarily testify exclusively in ICHL (or organized crime) cases.
53
As of February 2009, the ICTY implemented its “Follow-up Policy” for witnesses that aims: (i) to
ensure the well-being of witnesses upon their return home, by assessing their situation and taking action
in order to minimize any negative impact stemming from their testimony before the ICTY, and to provide
the witnesses with a sense of closure; and (ii) to locate resources within and outside the International
Tribunal to address the needs of witnesses and create a support network.
32
the trial was singled out as particularly problematic. 54 Some witnesses were said not
even to know why they were being called to testify, a fact explained to the Research
Team as due either to the length of time that had passed since initial contact or to the
fact that some persons may be have been summoned without prior contact with the
justice system. Summons provide little information about the case itself and nothing
about support services potentially available to witnesses. To the extent that those gaps
are the result of resource considerations such as shortages of staff, vehicles and fuel,
they lie beyond the scope of this project. However, it is noteworthy that, when asked
bear logistical and financial burdens, a significant number of witnesses will choose to
abandon the effort, especially when they are psychologically vulnerable.
54
According to interlocutors, witnesses are generally reimbursed for the cost of a bus or train ticket from
their home to the city where the court is located. How they travel from their home to the bus/train, and
from the station to the court, is at their own expense.
55
The reader is reminded to view the definition of “outreach” provided in Annex 1, particularly as
opinions vary as to the scope, priority and activities attributable to outreach.
56
Unpublished public opinion research carried out for OSCE Mission to BiH, July 2008.
57
E.g., Kosovo, see OMiK: “Background Report: Human Rights, Ethnic Relations and Democracy in
Kosovo,” Summer 2007 – Summer 2008, pgs 3-6. See also UNDP: “Early Warning Report: Kosovo,”
January-June 2008, available at <http://www.kosovo.undp.org/repository/docs/EWR20_eng_press.pdf>,
pgs 17 and 47.
58
“Public Opinion Survey Prior to the Rule of Law Public Information Campaign, Key Findings,” OSCE
Mission to Skopje. Survey conducted by “Strategic Marketing and Media,” 2007.
33
what outreach is exactly; and 2) why it is important. Only a few judicial bodies are
engaged in activities properly characterized as outreach, a reflection of the low priority
afforded to it in a resource-constrained judicial system, combined with disagreement
about who, if anyone, should undertake outreach activities. Even interlocutors
appearing to understand the benefits of outreach lamented their inability to do it, citing
limited resources.
Resource constraints are clearly to blame, in part, for the modest engagement in
outreach. Few institutions have sufficient staff resources for existing needs, and a lack
of understanding of the importance of outreach leads to inappropriate resource
allocation. The public continues to be poorly informed or indifferent about the structure
of the institutions and their proceedings, particularly in ICHL-related cases, with their
legal peculiarities. Politicians and media have been known to step into and exploit this
gap, alternatively blaming or praising the outcomes of the justice systems according to
their respective agendas.
With the above noted, the Research Team did appreciate an increasing
understanding within court bodies of the need to improve communications with the
public and that convincing steps in that direction have been made. Many, if not most
courts, for example, now operate websites, on which the public can access schedules,
staff profiles, rules, judgements and similar information in the public domain. Court
spokespersons (often judges) appear in the media both on their own initiative and in
reaction to events. 59 Journalists and the public are generally allowed to visit courthouses
and attend hearings freely – although instances of requirements for “permission in
advance” persist in some areas. 60 These are important public-information measures that
no doubt serve their purpose, but they are not outreach. Outreach is pro-active, seeking
opportunities to raise the profile of the court and to build confidence in its institutional
capacities, its competence and its decisions. A significant increase in outreach activities
is required to overcome the weak public perception of the region’s ICHL-related
judicial competence.
59
Spokespersons for the prosecution services are less frequently visible, when they exist, again with the
exception of Serbia.
60
The reader should note that traditional courtrooms in the region are very small, often no larger than an
office. Space limitations are often the explanation given for excluding or limiting the presence of the
public.
34
IV. Best Practices & Lessons Learned
A. General Commentary
The preceding two sections set out the unaddressed professional requirements
for those engaged with ICHL-related cases in the region’s courts, as well as a general
assessment of efforts undertaken to date to tackle these needs. This section builds upon
that research by encapsulating what the previous decade of knowledge-transfer and
capacity-building experience in the region has to offer in terms of best practices and
lessons learned. The intention is to digest the collective experience of those experts,
trainers, organizers, practitioners, observers and administrators involved in capacity
building in the region and to bring both the well–known and the innovative to light.
As noted previously, the Research Team identified best practices in ICHL
knowledge transfer operating at multiple levels. 61 For clarity, the authors have reduced
this spectrum to two primary categories. The broadest level includes practices
applicable to knowledge transfer in general, without regard to any particular
methodology, technique or intervention. For example, it is an identified best practice at
the broadest level to ensure co-ordination among members of the donor community (see
below) when sponsoring ICHL-related training events. This and the other generally
applicable best practices are set forth in Section B below.
The second level of best practices consists of specific methodologies or
techniques, such as seminars, electronic tools or study visits. These are operational,
serving as vehicles for knowledge transfer. As will be seen, however, these methods are
only “best practices” when undertaken within certain parameters or when following
context- and practice-specific tips and techniques. 62 Section C, below, contains a
description of four such practices, followed immediately by the additional tips and
techniques that make them most effective. Where research generated suggestions as to
how even these best practices might be improved, a discussion of such enhancements
follows thereafter.
The practices below apply to capacity building and knowledge transfer quite
61
See the definition of Best Practice in the Terminology Annex (1).
62
This might include, for example, ensuring that translations are of sufficiently high quality and provided
in advance of an event, or that participants are selected according to transparent criteria.
35
apart from any particular tool or methodology chosen. They derive primarily from the
experience of experts, organizers and donors operating at the policy level. While their
general nature means some of them will appear obvious, particularly to those who have
been involved in capacity-building efforts for some time, it also means they are ill-
suited to prioritization. Therefore, the best practices below are set out in no particular
order.
x Most legal professionals involved in ICHL cases are, to a large measure, self-
taught. Best capacity-building practices allow for and facilitate the process of
self-education. That noted, self-education undertaken in isolation is insufficient;
feedback from experts and peers is an important component of professional
development.
x Quality needs assessment is the sine qua non of all knowledge transfer. Unless
36
the need is properly identified, activities aimed at addressing the need will be in
vain. In a complex system such as criminal justice, and a complex arena such as
ICHL, accurate assessments are not easily produced. Quality assessments collect
input from as many relevant sources as feasible, including the potential
recipients.
63
For a considered treatment of adult learning methodologies see, “Building Blocks for Building Skills:
An Inventory of Adult Learning Models and Innovation,” Prepared by the Council for Adult and
Experiential Learning (CAEL) for the U.S. Department of Labor, June 2006. Available at:
<http://www.cael.org/pdf/publication_pdf/BuildingBlocksforBuildingSkills.pdf>.
64
To illustrate, building the capacity of legal professionals with little previous exposure to ICHL would
begin with substantive legal topics, including, for example, how the Geneva Conventions have been
written into the domestic code and how the ECHR affects ICHL cases procedurally. Initial training would
be followed by an opportunity to apply the law in a realistic setting, either via moot court, an internship or
37
x Where legal professionals are specifically concerned, the knowledge-transfer
process ideally takes into account and builds upon the jurist’s existing
experience, employing mechanisms that are directly relevant to the participant’s
actual or anticipated tasks.
The above list is not exhaustive, but it does contain key best practices that, where
implemented, operate at the policy level to benefit capacity-building and knowledge-
transfer efforts in the ICHL context. Where these are broadly applicable, the discussion
next turns to lessons and practices geared towards specific techniques and knowledge-
transfer mechanisms.
working on actual cases with a “mentor”. More advanced training, employing a different methodology,
would follow, for example a study visit, followed by another opportunity to apply the knowledge, and so
forth. The programme would be cumulative and increasingly advanced, allowing for specialization in the
later stages. The Research Team is convinced that implementing such a programmatic approach would
generate a quantum leap in the effectiveness of ICHL capacity building in the region.
38
C. Best Practices: Methodologies, Mechanisms and Techniques
1. Knowledge-Transfer Events
65
The four most common knowledge-transfer methods are the seminar, the study visit, the professional
exchange (including internships) and personal contacts/networking.
39
material. 66 Selected finalized cases and their supporting materials provide relevant
material for mock trials.
3. One-off training events are of limited use and are best employed for a specific
audience, with, for example, colleagues from the same office or department
collectively examining a particularly advanced, problematic or discreet topic.
4. Trainers/Experts: 67
5. Participants:
66
The Research Team noted during its research the innovative methodology employed by the UNDP in
this regard. See UNDP Bosnia and Herzegovina, “Final Project Review Report,” May 2008, concerning
the project titled: “Support to the Establishment of the War Crimes Chamber (WCC) in BiH – Training of
Legal Professionals.”
67
The use of a Roster of Experts, i.e., a list of “good” trainers who would be invited back for future
events – has generated considerable discussion between the Research Team and interlocutors. The logic
of such a practice is clear, but so are its pitfalls. One must be prudent in managing any such list by
considering, inter alia: 1. Who decides which trainers will be on the list, and which will not, and
according to what criteria?; 2. Who maintains the list – maintaining up-to-date contact information? If
someone is removed from the list, may he or she be reinstated, and how?; and 3. How can trainers get
their first opportunity to be on the list? In the view of the Research Team, such rosters are best kept
informally.
40
b. Peer-to-peer training is best for judges, with a leader setting the
parameters of the debate or presenting a proposed solution to a given,
common problem and leading a discussion between equals. Practical and
concrete issues arising at trial, as opposed to arcane theoretical points,
are ideal for this forum. Best practices include trial and appellate judges
learning together at a jurisdictional level, but separately at a regional
level. In both instances it is helpful to have a judge from the ICTY and/or
a respected international expert in the margins.
f. Defence counsel may also receive training through their bar association,
especially where the association in question forms a sub-group or
“section” specializing in ICHL. As has been done in certain jurisdictions
(e.g., Croatia), the Bar should consider negotiating a memorandum of
understanding with the local judicial training academy, or other training
entity in order to take advantage of trainers and materials already
developed, tailoring them to a defence perspective. 69
68
OKO offers a certification course for lawyers seeking to appear at the Court of BiH.
69
The authors are cognizant of the fact that a classic legal education qualifies lawyers to undertake any
and all types of cases. However, in light of the seriousness and the complexity of war crimes cases, the
authors also suggest that rules are reviewed as to whether a certification or experience requirement (as
OKO has in the Court of BiH) should not be mandated elsewhere in war crimes cases.
41
A number of suggestions bear consideration with regard to enhancements
collected by the Research Team during the research phase, For example, within
resource constraints, training institutions should systematically update and modernize
both their methodology and training materials. Providing professional development
opportunities for instructors, such as “training of trainers” courses, is important both for
keeping abreast of modern pedagogy and for updating content, i.e., both knowledge and
skills-based development. The training institution should include these
courses/opportunities in its long-term planning. When the trainers are foreign, they
should adapt their presentations to the local legal context and ensure that their advice is
both appropriate and applicable. This advice applies a fortiori in the ICHL context,
especially when discussing the manner in which foreign jurisprudence and evidence
collected outside of the jurisdiction might be used. In addition to the ICTY and other
tribunals, the International Committee of the Red Cross, with its specific mandate in
IHL, is a valuable source of ICHL trainers and experts.
The expanding pool of potential trainers from the region, and particularly those
that have practiced international criminal law, should be utilized more efficiently. Alone
or with an international expert, such trainers are an invaluable resource and will
invariably help to close the gap between international expertise and local professionals.
The above-noted “train the trainers” programmes can assist such experts in delivering
their knowledge through a pedagogically sound approach.
“Struni saradnici” (translated as “legal officers” or “legal advisors”) are a very
important but often neglected target group for knowledge-transfer activities. Struni
saradnici often draft judgements, interview witnesses and conduct important research.
A large number of them go on to become judges, prosecutors and defence lawyers.
Training such staff on the use of electronic databases (e.g., ICTY Court Records Online,
the ICTY Appeals Chamber Case Law Tool and the Case Matrix) 70 might well have
more impact upon the broader administration of justice than the training of the senior
staff.
Similarly, “Pripravnici” (often translated as “legal trainees”) exist in nearly
every chambers and prosecutor’s office in the region, depending on resources and
jurisdiction. In light of the short-term nature of their appointments (two years, usually
rotating between departments), pripravnici are not often the target of knowledge-
70
See the recommendation on electronic, analytical and research tools in Section V below.
42
transfer events at the international or domestic levels. However, knowledge-transfer
resources are well spent on this group because this cadre of young legal professionals
includes future judges, lawyers and prosecutors.
To improve participation, appellate and senior-level legal professionals should
be offered “advanced” ICHL courses, even when they have little previous ICHL
experience; they will be more inclined to attend such events. Also helpful is the
provision of the CVs of the trainers or experts in advance, allowing invitees to make an
informed choice about their participation.
What: A closed meeting of colleagues, usually from the same office, court or
jurisdiction, with an external expert in the margins. 71
2. Study visits
Study visits to the ICTY and within the region have become an increasingly
common knowledge-transfer practice over the past several years. A typical visit to the
Tribunal would include a small group of practitioners from the region – prosecutors or
judges, and sometimes both – that spends three or four days receiving briefings from
staff, attending meetings with counterparts, discussing points of law, touring the facility
and/or observing a trial. Research revealed near unanimous praise for study visits as a
useful knowledge-transfer tool. These visits to the ICTY served a valid outreach
71
With modification, this practice is also effective across jurisdictions (i.e., regionally) when obstacles
common to the profession appear.
72
The agenda should be developed locally, but could include access to and use of evidence gathered by
the ICTY, organizational tips in complex cases, witness protection and support, adjudicated facts, crime-
scene reconstruction in ICHL cases, status conferences, plea-bargaining, judgement drafting, leading
investigations (new role) and a host of other salient ICHL-related issues.
43
function, that is, visitors saw the human faces behind the Tribunal, saw their offices, the
mix of men and women and the various ethnic backgrounds and nationalities of its staff.
Visitors noted the professional approach the staff of the ICTY took to investigations,
prosecutions and judging – an approach devoid of ethnic or national prejudice. The
inherent objectivity of the institution (usually) left the impression that the rule of law
stands above narrow national interests.
Additional considerations merit the inclusion of study visits among the list of
best practices in knowledge transfer, not least the opportunity to observe a functioning
institution in practice that provokes comparisons with one’s own. Participants from
weak or dysfunctional institutions are often unaware of the procedures that should be in
place to facilitate an effective operation. Security procedures, communication protocols,
case-flow practices, archiving, IT, logistics and research facilities are on display during
visits to The Hague and can impact visitors as much as discussions of troublesome legal
topics or issues affecting institutional co-operation. The briefings also assist with issue
and topic identification for future knowledge-transfer interventions. As one participant
who had participated in a study visit told the Research Team, “I didn’t know what I
didn’t know, until I saw it at the Tribunal.”
The best practices set forth below derive primarily from the experience of visits
undertaken at the ICTY by practitioners from former Socialist Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia jurisdictions. However, these practices apply equally to visits to the
International Criminal Court (ICC) or to individual countries that have created war
crimes departments, e.g., Norway and Canada, 73 as well as to neighbouring countries in
the region where specialized structures are in place.
1. Such visits are most successful when both visitors and their hosts are well
prepared in advance for the visit and have clearly defined objectives. By
thoroughly consulting the participants, the hosts and the donor to ascertain
expectations, the organizer can assist in defining both the target group and the
objectives.
2. The visit must be specifically tailored to the group and objectives to ensure that
the presentations are relevant and that the agenda moves the visit towards that
objective. The topics to be addressed; places, departments and personnel to
73
Canada’s programme is described at: <http://www.justice.gc.ca/eng/news-nouv/nr-cp/2007/doc_32020.
html.>. Visited on 17 Feb 2009.
44
visit; and the format of meetings, tours and briefings all require advance
identification and agreement. Such tailoring is labour and resource intensive,
requiring, for example, the translation of PowerPoint slides in advance, the
harmonization of speakers’ presentations, and the facilitation of complex
logistical and financial arrangements.
4. Evaluation and feedback generated by the participants and hosts, and shared
with the organizer, have proven to be worthwhile exercises at the end of each
visit.
5. Participants:
c. It is best when the size of the group is kept relatively small, in order
to facilitate the engagement of each individual participant.
45
undermine the potential value of the visit for the sending, receiving and sponsoring
institutions. While the length of the visit is often restricted by time and budget,
consideration should be given to combining study visits with work visits. Such dual-
purpose visits would provide participants with the opportunity to internalize knowledge
and gain a deeper understanding of their counterpart’s professional role. 74
As with seminars, participants in study visits should, upon their return to work,
impart the substance and lessons learned during their visit to colleagues who did not
participate. Such information-sharing should be a condition of participation, and
superiors should ensure that it takes place. The evaluations and feedback generated by
participants and hosts at the end of the visit should be shared with others who may be
interested in organizing future visits or follow-up events. Distribution of this
information will help avoid duplication and allow future visits to build upon the lessons
learned in previous ones.
Consideration should also be given to providing law students the opportunity to
visit international and domestic war crimes tribunals as a way of enhancing their core
legal education, including participation in “job shadowing”. As with all participants in
study visits, selection of law students should be transparent and, in this case, also be
based on merit (scholarship).
What: Extending the traditional study visit and assigning the participant to
work alongside a counterpart in the host institution.
74
See Best Practice text box: “Enhanced Study Visits – Job Shadowing”, this page
46
3. Fellowships, Internships and Personnel Exchanges
75
Beneficial topics include, inter alia: introduction to co-workers, tour of the building, dress code,
organogram, the mission or mandate, office machines and technical equipment, where to get assistance,
working hours, emergency procedures, organizational policies and project timeframes.
47
wide a net as possible will gather the highest quality and most diverse pool of
candidates. 76
3. Providing both short- and long-term tasks helps ensure that participants are
always engaged.
4. Participants work best when they feel vested in the outcome. The best
supervisors accomplish this by providing tasks that require appropriate
professional responsibility and that are important to the team’s objectives.
There were not many suggestions for enhancing exchange programmes and
internships, most probably because the practices are relatively well-established. It was
noted that selecting the appropriate length for such programmes could be difficult.
Research suggested that – where resources allow – a minimum period of four months,
76
This holds true even when targeting specific groups, such as young practitioners from the region. The
net should be cast as widely as possible within the region.
48
and preferably six, is necessary for participants to acquaint themselves fully and take
maximum advantage of the time spent in their host institution. Scheduling overlap
between departing and arriving participants provides the latter with the opportunity to
ask questions of the former, thereby improving the speed and quality of their
introduction.
To maximize knowledge-transfer benefits, successful participants who are not
already employed should be provided with recommendation letters and contacts in order
to increase their opportunities to be hired by institutions engaged in ICHL.
49
beneficial. Similarly, study visits by individuals and groups touring the Tribunal to meet
with and be briefed by its staff have led to personal contacts that, with time, have
developed into co-operative professional relationships. In a society that puts tremendous
stock in personal contacts, such networks can be an effective method of knowledge
transfer – with some professionals, the only effective method. For those individuals
fortunate enough to benefit from such contacts, they have proved a ready source of
professional development.
Equally important is the steadily improving atmosphere in relations between
jurisdictions, and concomitantly, relations between individual legal professionals in the
region. Interlocutors described in strikingly positive terms their increasing co-operation
with counterparts working elsewhere on similar cases. This is not to say that legal and
practical obstacles like jurisdictional disputes, parallel investigations, the “extradition
issue”, 77 and the like do not, at times, limit direct personal contacts in specific cases.
However, knowledge-transfer organizers should rely increasingly on regional expertise
and the development of such networks in their capacity-building planning, despite the
fact that, until recently, lingering ethnic tensions posed obstacles to initiatives of this
type.
Research of the best practices in generating personal contacts revealed little
apart from the need to create the circumstances where counterparts come into contact,
e.g., at training events or during visits. Thus, the few techniques listed below have a
record of facilitating the organic emergence of personal contacts when implemented
during knowledge-transfer events or study visits:
x For smaller events, facilitating introductions at the outset gives each participant
the opportunity to speak. This “ice-breaking” is necessary, but it is best when
77
The “extradition issue” refers to the constitutional prohibition on extraditing citizens that exists in the
constitutions of former Yugoslavia’s successor states. The prohibition hinders progress on war crimes
cases because suspects who are citizens of neighbouring countries (and who might be arrested there)
cannot be compelled to stand trial in the country where the crime occurred. Judicial co-operation has
allowed, in some instances, a trial to take place in the suspect’s country of citizenship, although
transferring evidence and witnesses can be burdensome. Removal of the prohibition on extradition is seen
by most observers as a critical step forward in regional confidence building.
50
such measures are commensurate with the collective comfort level of the
participants.
x Employing break-out groups during a regional event ensures that the participants
are mixed and that they interact with one another.
x During breaks and in the margins, organizers, leaders and facilitators can make a
conscious effort to link (introduce) professional counterparts. To maximize
contacts in the margins (at meals, after hours) knowledge-transfer events are best
held at a location away from the office or a city centre.
x Prior to the closing of the event, circulate a list of names and voluntarily
composed contact information. Have participants leave a business card at the
time of their registration.
x Ensure that correctly spelled nametags of a sufficient size are available during
larger events. Include the participant’s title and jurisdiction on the nametags.
Personal contacts can be developed on any number of occasions and over many
levels of hierarchy. Experience from the region has shown that study visits,
personnel exchanges, training events, conferences and one-on-one meetings are just
a few of the forums where such contacts develop. Maintaining them may be more
difficult, especially where distance and language barriers intervene, but efforts to
that end have clearly borne fruit in ICHL- related capacity building and knowledge
transfer. Findings suggested that bar associations should expend more effort in
fostering personal contacts across the region, perhaps by organizing periodic
meetings.
51
5. Other Best Practices
78
“Introductory-level” refers to legal professionals that have not previously been involved in an ICHL
case and is not indicative of rank or years of experience.
79
The investigation phase can include visits to exhumation sites or forensic laboratories with examination
of the salient issues on site, as well as training on accessing the EDS.
80
For example, the “ICTY Manual on Developed Practices” contains an excellent section on judgement
drafting in war crimes cases that could likely be used as training material.
81
Each topic can be delved into to the depth that time allows, or tailored to the participants. For example,
witness-support/protection training could examine psychological assessment, expert vs. eyewitness,
protective measures, questioning/cross-examination, eye contact and body language, etc.
52
Another knowledge-transfer practice gaining traction among capacity builders is
offering “in-residence” experts to host institutions or offices. Providing such an expert
has multiple advantages, the first of which is the direct assistance to their
hosts/counterparts on specific, individual cases. An added advantage is in identifying
professional and institutional weaknesses from the inside, with a view to crafting
tailored capacity-building solutions. These “embedded” experts can be nationals or
internationals, 82 but they must have extensive and recognized ICHL experience. In
addition to expertise in the field of ICHL, the expert, whether international or national,
must possess exceptional interpersonal skills, the highest ethical standards and absolute
discretion. The personal qualities of the visiting expert are a key factor for success
because those selected must avoid intervention and never be seen as directing their
counterparts. In addition, they must be able to assess needs in order to facilitate bespoke
knowledge-transfer events. The unqualified support of the head of the institution is also
necessary.
The best practices presented above were chosen from the many experiences of
practitioners and capacity builders operating in the former Yugoslavia. They share a
number of common characteristics, the most important of which is demonstrated
effectiveness in transferring knowledge from those with expertise to beneficiaries. The
practices have a proven track record, and the additional suggestions offer the potential
82
A foreign expert need not necessarily have language skills, as translation can be provided (at additional
cost) with vetted, full-time interpreters.
53
to further increase their effect. The following chapter sets out recommendations on how
these same best practices can be most effectively applied to address the ICHL-related
needs of the region’s legal professionals.
54
V. Recommendations
A. General Commentary
55
their manifest importance:
These two factors require considerable additional research, consultation and co-
ordination among the potential implementers, both domestic and international, of these
recommendations.
56
liability and, with a click, access relevant jurisprudence to view what other courts have
accepted (or not) as sufficiently probative on that element. Users can map the evidence
they have on a certain point in a matrix, which the tool provides specifically for that
purpose. Stated otherwise, the tool assists users in their evidentiary and, in some
instances, legal analysis, while simultaneously assisting in their organization of case-
relevant material.
What: Training for ICHL practitioners who contact witnesses and victims.
57
trial. Trainees practice with a mock witness in front of peers and/or a video
camera, implementing learned techniques and reacting to issues that emerge.
Both experts and peers provide feedback. Specific training topics include:
87
The resource should also be available periodically on CD-ROM, particularly as it was observed that
many judges and prosecutors in BiH entity level jurisdictions do not have Internet access in their offices.
88
Of existing publications, the “OKO Reporter” comes the closest to serving this function.
89
<http://www.icty.org/sid/9991>.
58
interrelation of various documents; how to refer to the various texts, for example
judgements; and how to submit requests for interviewing detained persons, would be a
helpful inclusion for all practitioners. In this vein, legal professionals should be made
aware of the “ICTY Court Records Online” database, its availability in local languages,
and how to access its contents.
Training Trainers: There is a need to bolster the training capacity and expertise of
existing ICHL trainers to improve their delivery of the above curriculum, especially in
line with the best practices in this report.90 The pedagogy of skills transfer with regard
to electronic research and analytical tools should be included in their education. Skills
enhancement for trainers should be conducted as a matter of course.
Legal Materials
Commentaries: To overcome the dearth of up-to-date legal reference materials in the
region, it is important to provide legal professionals with an updated, locally authored
ICHL commentary. Commentaries of this type are considered the most authoritative
source of legal interpretation in the region. They carry substantial weight in the legal
community and generally guide practice within their subject matter. Ensuring that such
90
A further assessment of the pioneering UNDP programme in this vein is warranted.
59
commentaries contain accurate and updated ICTY jurisprudence – alongside local
practice – would ensure their place among effective knowledge-transfer tools. Similarly,
translation (where necessary) and distribution of existing, internationally authored texts
on ICHL should be considered, 91 with the aforementioned caveat as to their
applicability. 92
Personnel Exchanges
In-house training at the ICTY and elsewhere should be provided for legal professionals
from the region, particularly legal officers (struni saradnici), analysts, legal
apprentices (pripravnici) and other support staff. 93 Formats should include visiting
‘professionalships’, enhanced internships and job-shadowing study visits in line with
the best practices set out in Section 4 above. Training on electronic-analytical and
research tools should be included as part of the induction or in-service training.
Consideration should be given to continuing (or expanding) such programmes at the
Court of BiH, the Serbian War Crimes Chamber, elsewhere in the region and
internationally as the ICTY’s programmes wind down.
Investigators
Research revealed the need for a wide range of training targeting legal professionals
responsible for investigating ICHL-related crimes in the region. Basic/introductory
training in the foundations of ICHL is needed primarily for investigators from police
structures. Investigating judges and prosecutors who carry out the function of
investigator in such cases would benefit from advanced ICHL training, particularly
covering the modes of liability pertinent to mid-level perpetrators (See best-practice
example “Advanced ICHL” above). Both groups of investigators would benefit from
the “Interacting with Witnesses and Victims” training described above on page 58 as
well as a familiarity session on drafting and addressing RFAs to the ICTY. Trainers
providing the expertise in these events should be included in the training-of-trainers
component (see “Support to Training Academies” above).
The updating of investigative techniques and technology is necessary for all legal
professionals involved in ICHL cases, but this is particularly the case for investigators.
Topics should include DNA, forensics, crime-scene analysis, interviewing and
exhumations. Workshops that include tips and techniques for investigating old cases, as
well as courses in the use of electronic analytical tools such as Case Map, are also
necessary for investigators.
91
For example, “The Law of Command Responsibility” by G. Mettraux (2009), which is being translated
and should be available in autumn 2009 funded by BiH Soros Foundation. A second practice casebook,
The practice of the International Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, by John
RWD Jones, 1999, has been translated into Croatian. Guides such as the “Expert Guide Through the
ICTY” described in footnote 31 should also be considered.
92
See page 21, and text accompanying footnote 31.
93
The recently launched “Joint European Commission and ICTY Training Project for National
Prosecutors and Young Professionals from the Former Yugoslavia” is set to cover the need for said
activities with respect to the prosecution. See <http://www.icty.org/sid/10176>.
60
Judges/Adjudication
Regional Appellate Judges Meetings: These are peer-to-peer meetings employing the
format described on page 44, with ICTY judges participating. 94 As noted, the agenda
should be developed locally and include topics suggested by participants. Potential
topics identified in this research include judgement drafting, the intersection of
international and domestic law with regard to cases involving mid-level perpetrators, the
utility of foreign (particularly ICTY, but also regional) jurisprudence, a judge’s role in
outreach and using electronic legal-research tools.
Regional Trial Judges Meetings: These are peer-to-peer meetings employing the format
described on page 44 above, with ICTY trial judges participating. Topics suggested by
the research include mutual assistance in procurement of evidence; admissibility of
evidence; usage of ICTY-garnered evidence; facts adjudicated elsewhere; 95 a judge’s
role in witness support; 96 a judge’s role in outreach; best practices in case and caseload
management (including e-tools); and the creation of bench guides for specific topics, 97
such as witness protection measures, pre-trial conferences, crime-scene visitation and
crime scene reconstruction. 98
Consideration should also be given to mixed panels of trial and appellate judges, with
topics adjusted accordingly.
Prosecution
Regional prosecutors meetings: These are peer-to-peer meetings, with senior ICTY
prosecutors participating, with a view to complementing ongoing efforts of the OTP vis-
à-vis prosecutors in the region. 99 Research for this report suggested topics should
include: leading war crimes investigations, new legal frameworks facilitating inter-
jurisdictional co-operation and evidence sharing, the benefits and pitfalls of adopting a
team-based prosecution approach, best practices in case and caseload management
(including e-Tools), mutual assistance in procurement of evidence, and admissibility of
evidence garnered at the ICTY and in other jurisdictions.
94
Advantage should be taken so long as this resource is available, however this is not to suggest that
current and former ICTY judges are the only possible resource. The key qualifications are substantial
ICHL experience and the demeanour to assist less-experienced colleagues without condescension.
95
The Research Team notes that a lex specialis exists in BiH addressing this topic.
96
While most judges appeared to comprehend fully their role in witness protection and support, others
appeared to believe that such responsibility lies elsewhere.
97
See page 89, and the text accompanying footnote 141, for an example guide covering video
conferencing in Croatia.
98
For BiH specifically, a series of peer-to-peer meetings addressing pertinent issues with regard to
“strategy” implementation would be beneficial. Example topics could include dealing with the anticipated
caseload, substantive legal hurdles, complexity criteria, and usage of ICTY-garnered evidence, and
adjudicated facts. One prosecutor and one judge, respectively, from the BiH Court and from the ICTY
should be invited as observers. Ideally, meetings between the Chief Prosecutor of the BiH Prosecutors
Office and the entity prosecutors should take place regularly, such as every three months, with the
purpose of exchanging experiences, stratagems and perspectives.
99
The OTP of the ICTY has, together with the war crimes prosecution department of the Court of BiH,
created structures for regular consultation between those entities.
61
External Expertise: External expertise would be provided to support prosecutors
appearing in ICHL cases. The expert(s) would serve as collegial, professional resources
on ICHL matters, offering individualized support in specific cases. In addition to case-
specific assistance, the expert(s) would assist in the organization and implementation of
advanced training, electronic-tools and database training, and in the identification of
additional professional-development needs.
Defence
100
OKO currently organizes an annual event of a similar nature. This best practice is a combination of
OKO’s conference and that of the California Attorneys for Criminal Justice, along with the California
Public Defenders Association, an event that focuses on defending in capital crimes cases in the United
States.
101
See “Interacting with Witnesses and Victims” training on page 58..
102
In accordance with current international practice, only judicial and state authorities can request
assistance from the OTP or the Registry of the Tribunal. Thus, in most countries, defence counsel should
work with the judicial authorities in accordance with the national/local criminal procedures.
103
In Kosovo, the CDRC (see footnote 138 on page 87) seems an appropriate host for external expertise.
62
professional-development needs. Experts could be based in local bar associations,
NGOs or independent offices, as appropriate. 104
104
For BiH specifically, external expertise is more likely suited to assisting lawyers working in the entity
level courts in light of OKO’s existing mandate at the State Court. Whether OKO could host an entity-
level expert, however, raises questions concerning the organization’s jurisdiction, mandate and transition
to be resolved.
105
The Research Team notes that the Ministry of Justice and the Croatian Bar Association have already
compiled a list of defence counsel willing to be court appointed to indigent war crimes defendants and
indicated that they would train these lawyers.
63
intervene on behalf of witnesses and which matters it is appropriate to
discuss. If appropriate under the existing legal regime, participants learn
how to explain the often-complex legal processes the witness may be
involved in and the witness’ legal rights in the judicial process. Identifying
“secondary trauma” and learning methods for coping with its deleterious
effects is also a core training module. Mock witnesses assist the participants
to practice the techniques in front of peers and to react to issues that emerge.
Both experts and peers offer feedback.
Continuing Professional Development: Study visits to the ICTY and elsewhere in the
region will prove invaluable to personnel and volunteers, as evidenced by those support
services created in Croatia and Serbia in the recent past. Periodic peer-to-peer meetings
with witness-support colleagues in the region have also served well as a format for
exchanging best practices and fostering personal contacts, in turn assisting newcomers
in overcoming obstacles common in the field. Also important for those seeking to build
victim/witness-support capacity is the practice of self-teaching which has been
substantially enhanced by making victim/witness-support-relevant materials available to
practitioners in a language they understand. Translation of additional texts should be
considered. 106
106
Many helpful texts exist. A few examples are:
1)World Health Organization. Guidelines for medico-legal care for victims of sexual violence. 2003.
<http://www.who.int/violence_injury_prevention/publications/violence/ med_leg_guidelines/en/>.
2) Brewin CR, et.al. “Brief Screening Instrument for Post-traumatic Stress Disorder,” British Journal of
Psychiatry. 2002, 181.
3) Nicola Henry, “Witness to Rape: The Limits and Potential of International War Crimes Trials for
Victims of Wartime Sexual Violence,” International Journal of Transitional Justice, 2009 3(1):114-134.
4) Sarah Hustache, et.al. “Evaluation of psychological support for victims of sexual violence in a conflict
setting: results from Brazzaville, Congo,” International Journal of Mental Health Systems, 2009; 3: 7,
online April 1, 2009 at http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=2669041.
107
See text box page 58 for a description.
64
delivering constructive feedback, teaching the signs and symptoms of
“secondary trauma”, and configuring mock witness exercises. Participants
practice delivering training in front of peers and/or video and receive
coaching and feedback.
108
It bears mentioning that judges and prosecutors are properly included among those involved in
outreach, either because personnel resources require it or because of their (ethical) responsibility to
promote public confidence in the work of their office.
65
» Example: Film Screening & Discussion
What: Screening of documentary films on outreach, followed by
discussion.
109
A documentary-style film produced by the OSCE Mission to BiH demonstrating the positive impact of
outreach activities in ICHL cases.
110
A documentary-style film produced jointly by the War Crimes Prosecutor’s Office in Serbia and the
OSCE Mission to Serbia that follows Serbian journalists visiting the judicial institutions of BiH and
Croatia in 2005 and 2006.
111
See “War-Crime Trials ‘Bore’ Public in Bosnia, Published by BIRN, available at
<http://www.bim.ba/en/155/10/17022/?tpl=58>. Last visited 2 March 2009.
112
Many argue that, because the courts are creating a historical record, those determined events should
form part of the public discourse. The public should know what acts have been proven, not just who was
found guilty and their sentence.
113
See Annex 6 “Best Practices in Outreach”.
114
See e.g., the “Conference of Court Public Information Officers,” <http://www.ccpio.org/index.htm>
offering one such course.
66
issues that emerge at each stage of a case, would be of significant benefit in this vein.
Further training covering the ethical and legal parameters of outreach and PI is also a
necessity. And, as with every profession, regular professional-development
opportunities should be integrated into the career path. Periodic study visits by outreach
staff to the Court of BiH, ICTY and Belgrade War Crimes Chambers/Prosecutor’s
Offices, including meetings with counterparts at these locations to exchange best
practices, are recommended.
The above recommendations may not exhaust the potential for co-operative
interventions by the local and international legal community, but two factors set them
well apart from previous efforts: First, they are based squarely on extensive research of
best practices; and, second, they were subject to thorough consultation with experts and
practitioners, both from the region and abroad. Their implementation should bring about
substantial progress in the region’s ICHL – related caseload.
67
The ICTY has amassed an enormous quantity of information, knowledge and
expertise during its tenure. Now that its closure is on the horizon, harnessing that
knowledge and expertise, which comprises many of the same topics confronting the
region’s legal professionals today, is of paramount importance. The successes and
failures of past initiatives hold many lessons for those whose task is to ensure that the
relevant knowledge and experience is transferred to those in the region who can best use
it.
There undoubtedly remains much to be done region-wide, as remaining war
crimes cases are numerous and their high profile places them on the judicial centre stage
in most jurisdictions of the former Yugoslavia. The needs assessment undertaken here
generated no shortage of significant weaknesses that should be addressed through a co-
operative undertaking of the above recommendations. Ensuring that the tremendous
quantity of information, knowledge and expertise that tribunals like the ICTY amass
during their tenure is transferred to those domestic jurisdictions who can best use it is a
challenge, but one that can be met. It is, indeed, the next stage of the development of
international law; what is coming to be known as “proactive complementarity” –
sharing the expertise that has been developed on the international level, both actively
and systematically, with the domestic jurisdictions involved in confronting these crimes.
The methodology undertaken here, and the findings and recommendations it has
produced, should be seen as a potential framework for undertaking this
complementarity.
International tribunals need not, and should not, undertake this process alone.
Indeed, a particularly good “best practice” is a closely co-ordinated, co-operative effort
among organizations with complementary mandates – like the OSCE, UNICRI, and
ICTY – working in concert with the local legal community.
VIII. Annexes
68
Annex 1
Terminology
Definitions:
69
5. “Specific to ICHL cases:” As employed in this text, specific aspects of ICHL
cases are those that distinguish ICHL cases from “classic” crimes. These
include aspects without which ICHL cases cannot be processed effectively. For
example, knowledge of the Geneva Conventions is specific to ICHL cases,
whereas knowledge of pre-trial-detention standards is not — the latter being
equally important for “classic” crimes. This study focuses on criminal-justice
aspects specific to ICHL cases, leaving aside, to the extent feasible, aspects
applicable to crimes generally.
70
Annex 2
List of Interviewees
BiH:
Croatia:
71
Ms. Renata Milievi, Judge, County Court Zagreb
Mr. Leo Andreis, President, Croatian Bar Association, Zagreb
Mr. Stipe Vrdoljak, Sisak County State Attorney
Mr. Zorko Kostanjšek, Lawyer, Sisak
Mr. Domogoj Rupi, Lawyer, Sisak
Ms. Dubravka Turkalj Dragosavac, Deputy County Prosecutor of Zagreb
Ms. Vesna Teršeli, Documenta, Zagreb
Ms. Katarina Kruhonja, Centre for Peace, Osijek
Mr. Mladen Stojanovi, Centre for Peace, Osijek
Mr. David Hudson, EC Delegation, Zagreb
Ms. Jasmina Dolmagi, Deputy County State Attorney, Zagreb
Ms. Tanja Temelkovska, Executive Director, Judicial and Prosecutorial Training Academy
Mr. Sedat Redzepagi, Court Spokesperson, Investigative Judge, Skopje Court I
Ms. Vesna Bosotova, Investigative Judge, Skopje Court I
Mr. Goran Boševski, Trial Court Judge, Skopje Court I
Mr. Jovan Ilievski, Public Prosecutor, Skopje
Mr. Vladimir Rakoevi, Lawyer, Skopje
Mr. Agim Miftari, Justice, Supreme Court, Skopje
Serbia:
Mr. Janko Lazarevi, Judge, President of War Crimes Chamber, Supreme Court of Serbia
Mr. Siniša Vazi, Judge, President of the War Crimes Chamber, Belgrade District Court
Ms. Marijana Santrac, Senior Legal Specialist, U.S. Embassy, Belgrade
Mr. Donald Lizotte, Senior Police Advisor, U.S. Department of Justice
Ms. Sandra Orlovi, Deputy Executive Director, Humanitarian Law Center
Mr. Rajko Jeluši, Lawyer, Belgrade
Mr. Milan Dilpari, Investigative Judge, War Crimes Department, Belgrade District Court
Mr. Andrej Nosov, President, Youth Initiative for Human Rights
Ms. Slavica Pekovi, Support Officer, Victims/Witnesses Support, Belgrade District Court
Mr. Novica Pekovi, Judge, Supreme Court of Serbia
Mr. Dragoljub Stankovi, Deputy War Crimes Prosecutor, Belgrade
Mr. Bruno Vekari, Senior Advisor, War Crimes Prosecutor’s Office, Belgrade
Ms. Tatjana Vukovi, Judge, War Crimes Chamber, Belgrade District Court
Mr. Vojin Dimitrijevi, Director, Belgrade Center for Human Rights
Kosovo 115 :
115
Kosovo refers to Kosovo under UNSC Resolution 1244. The OSCE is status neutral and thus do not
take a stance on the issue of Kosovo independence.
72
OSCE
Mr. James Rodehaver, Director of the Human Rights Department, OSCE Mission to Bosnia and
Herzegovina
Ms. Pipina Katsaris, Legal Adviser, Head of the Rule 11bis Monitoring Project, OSCE Mission to
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Ms. Stephanie Barbour, Legal Adviser on War Crimes, OSCE Mission to Bosnia and
Herzegovina
Mr. Donald Bisson, Head of Rule of Law, OSCE Spillover Monitor Mission to Skopje
Mr. Luis Carnasa, Senior Rule of Law Officer, OSCE Spillover Monitor Mission to Skopje
Ms. Mary Wycoff, Head of Rule of Law Unit, OSCE Office in Zagreb
Mr. Ivan Jovanovi, War Crimes Advisor, OSCE Mission to Serbia
Mr. Jan Assink, Law Enforcement Department, OSCE Mission to Serbia
Ms. Milena Joji, Law Enforcement Department, OSCE Mission to Serbia
Mr. David Christopher Decker, Director, Department of Human Rights & Communities, OSCE
Mission in Kosovo
Ms. Sebiha Mexhuani, Coordinator, Criminal Monitoring, OSCE Mission in Kosovo
Mr. Harold Dampier, Advisor to the Director of the Kosovo Judicial Institute, OSCE Mission in
Kosovo
Various OSCE trial monitors in Zagreb, Skopje, Sarajevo, Belgrade and Pristina
ICTY:
Mr. Refik Hodzi, Registry Liaison Officer, Sarajevo
Mr. Ken Roberts, Senior Legal Officer, The Hague
Mr. Tony Hawke, Victims & Witnesses Section, The Hague
Ms. Catherine Marchi-Uhel, Head of Chambers, The Hague
Mr. Amir engi, Associate Legal Officer, The Hague
Ms. Evelyn Anoya, Legal Co-ordinator, Court Management & Support Services, Registry, Hague
Ms. Magdalena Spalinska, Information Officer, The Hague
Ms. Rebecca Cuthill, Information Assistant, The Hague
Ms. Nerma Jelaci, Spokesperson for Chambers and Registry, The Hague
Mr. Matias Hellman, Legacy Officer, Office of the President, The Hague
ICTY-affiliated:
73
Annex 3
A. Methodolgy
The first two of these took place simultaneously: the look backward (review) to harvest
the lessons that past knowledge-transfer efforts had to offer, and the examination of the
current state of affairs with regard to the ICHL-relevant skills and knowledge of the
region’s legal practitioners (needs assessment).
In the third step, those two components gave rise to a multi-layered collection of
best practices and lessons learned. The Research Team identified a number of practices
that had proven effective at the strategic/policy level as well as several practices
operating at the level of specific methodology or techniques. As will be seen, whether
any particular practice was included in the list of “best practices” often depended on the
manner in which it was employed. For example, a study visit is a best practice in
knowledge transfer, but only when it follows certain guidelines or employs specific
steps; otherwise such visits can waste both time and resources. Thus, what emerged
from this study was not only a set of best practices, but of the “best ways” of
implementing said practices. For the sake of simplicity, this compilation is referred to
collectively as “best practices” in subsequent text, until Section IV parses the notions in
greater detail.
The fourth step in the R.A.I.D. process involved both designing new knowledge-
transfer methodologies and enhancing existing ones. A significant number of
suggestions for improving existing methods arose from the research, primarily
involving ideas, tips and practices that were either in the process of being tested in the
region or were described by practitioners as having significant potential. 116 Some of the
116
The most crucial element of the research process was the interview phase. Arranged by the OSCE field
operations in the region, the Research Team spoke at length with 90 practitioners and capacity-building
professionals in the region and at the ICTY (see Annex 2 for the list of interviewees). The team inquired
about their interlocutors’ knowledge of ICHL, and their experience of applying ICHL in practice. The
tools, capacities, skills and, in limited instances, resources all came under the needs-assessment purview.
Furthermore, the Research Team examined the interlocutors’ involvement in, and experience with,
capacity building and professional development in general. Questions explored the manner in which
practitioners acquired the skills to handle ICHL-related cases, the methodologies that assisted them in that
process, how they interacted (or not) with outside expertise, and whether they participated in any
particular professional-development programmes, exchange programmes, study visits, etc.
74
suggestions would lead to a substantial revamping of existing practices, while others
would require only small adjustments; others still were simply good ideas employed in
another context that could equally apply to ICHL-related knowledge transfer. 117 To the
extent the Research Team agreed that these innovations warranted further consideration,
they have been included in the text or otherwise incorporated into the recommendations
in Section V.
The final step brought the R.A.I.D. process full circle. The Research Team
revisited the needs assessment with a view to matching the identified needs with the
collected best practices. Where appropriate and within the overall project framework,
each identified shortcoming was paired with a corresponding best practice – or series of
practices – that in the opinion of the Research Team would, upon implementation,
address that need.
B. Research Steps
Upon the finalization of the project methodology by the project design team, the
Research Team organized its work in three stages. The table below depicts the
interaction between these three stages, the four-component R.A.I.D. process, and the
specific steps undertaken in the course of the research.
117
For example, an identified best practice is transferring knowledge to inexperienced legal professionals
via internships and visiting ‘professionalships’. An innovative approach now being tried in the region is
“enhanced internships”, i.e., adding a number of features to the existing internship model to bolster its
effectiveness. In this report, the former is an identified best practice, and the latter is offered as a
recommendation.
118
The databases contain all activities and relevant texts known to the OSCE, the ICTY and certain other
organizations that provided input. Relevant texts and activities known by others but that have not yet been
included are welcome. It is envisioned to make the database available in an online version at the end of
this project.
75
Table of Research Stages and Methodology
Best Practices Development
Review of Past Needs & Lessons of Improved
Activities Assessment Learned Practices
Stage
I Literature Review * *
Topic Identification &
Preliminary Analysis * *
Preliminary Findings
Stage Expert Workshop: The
II Hague * * * *
Interviews * * * *
Interim Report
Stage Regional Workshop:
III Sarajevo * * * *
Final Report
76
Annex 4
Throughout the project, the Research Team has collected information about
knowledge-transfer activities, compiling that data into a searchable electronic database.
ODIHR intends to maintain the database and keep the information updated. As was
discussed at the Regional Workshop, some professions and some topics received
significant attention, and were the subject of repeated interventions, while there was less
focus on others. Below is a historical overview by jurisdictions.
119
For detailed treatment of this dynamic, see “Final Report of the International Criminal Law Services
(ICLS) experts on the Sustainable Transition of the Registry and the International Donor Support to the
Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Prosecutor’s Office of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 2009,”
Submitted on behalf of the International Criminal Law Services by David Tolbert and Aleksandar Konti,
15 December 2008.
120
For example, UNDP BiH organized “Training for BiH Prosecutors on the Implementation of the Law
on Witness Protection” held in December of 2006, albeit this event was not exclusive to ICHL matters.
77
up the Victims Support Unit in the Court of BiH. The State Investigation and Protection
Agency (SIPA), the newly established agency responsible for the ICHL investigations
and witness protection in BiH, saw its first capacity-building activities in 2007,
primarily undertaken by international actors, but later via an internal training regime.
Specific training for prosecutors on witness protection was first organized in 2006. In
2008, the OSCE sponsored training on plea-bargaining, plea agreements and psycho-
social-support techniques, and sponsored study visits to the ICTY’s OTP.
Defence counsel received training organized by the Criminal Defence Section of
the Registry of the Court of BiH (OKO). OKO offers the only recurrent defence-
orientated education in ICHL in the region.
Turning to outreach, capacity-development activities were rare until recently.
The OSCE BiH Mission carries out continual advocacy with national counterparts to
enhance court transparency, media responsibility and community engagement in ICHL-
related cases. Since 2007, the OSCE has organized screenings of “Justice Requires
Outreach”, a documentary film on the need for outreach in BiH in the ICHL context.
Throughout 2008, the OSCE organized a series of meetings between judges,
prosecutors, civil society organizations and members of the press at the local level,
designed to provoke debates about enhancing transparency, outreach and support to
victims and witnesses. In addition, the OSCE supports an NGO that provides assistance
to entity-level prosecutor’s offices in the area of outreach and witness support and
sponsors the production of regular radio news bulletins about war crimes trials produced
by the a specialized war crimes reporting agency (BIRN).
Croatia
Although actively prosecuting war crimes cases since 1993, the Croatian
judiciary had few, if any, ICHL-specific training events prior to 2004. Then, with the
substantial assistance of ICTY Outreach and ABA/CEELI, ICTY experts joined a
training programme for Croatian judges and prosecutors who might handle war crimes
cases coming back from the ICTY under Rule 11bis and Category II. Topics included
the classification of crimes under international and local laws, forms of criminal
liability, means of proof, investigations, indictment drafting and witness protection. 121
These events were accompanied later by study visits to The Hague. In 2007, the newly
established Training Academy, together with the OSCE Mission and the Croatian
Supreme Court, devised and implemented two IHL-specific training events that covered
fair-trial rights, witness protection, investigations, presiding over the main hearing,
video conferences and evidentiary matters. In 2009, national prosecutorial staff
participated in a programme supported by the European Commission that allows
integration into the OTP/ICTY.
121
ICTY Press release of 20 May 2004.
122
“Category II” refers to case files returned to the jurisdiction from which they originated, but without
an indictment by the ICTY (as opposed to cases returned under Rule 11Bis, where an already confirmed
indictment accompanies the returning case, ensuring the case is prosecuted domestically).
78
all potential actors in the four cases, and covering a broad array of legal and practical
ICHL-related topics. A series of study visits to the ICTY began in 2006 for judges and
prosecutors, and continued into 2008 with prosecutors alone. In 2007, legal
professionals took part in what was by then a regional trend of experience exchange – a
study visit to the BiH Court in 2007 and again in 2008.
As in the other jurisdictions in the region, training was organized jointly for
judges and prosecutors. Perhaps the most specific event exclusively targeting
prosecutors was sponsored by the OSCE Mission to Skopje, “Workshop with
Prosecutors on forms of co-operation in the cases handed over from the ICTY”, in
December of 2007. As with other jurisdictions, ICHL training for investigators occurred
only as part of broader institution and capacity-building activities within police
structures. A training event in 2007 on investigative techniques touched upon ICHL-
relevant topics.
For defence, the bar association, together with the OSCE, organized a series of
activities that included basic training in IHL and war crimes defence techniques. That
group also organized a visit of defence attorneys from the country to OKO in BiH in
2006. As has been noted elsewhere, determining precisely which lawyers to target for
such initiatives is a challenge in light of the right of the accused to counsel of his or her
choice.
No formal witness-support services exist in the courts anywhere in the country,
nor are NGOs active in the field of supporting witnesses involved with war crimes
cases.
Serbia
ICHL-related training in Serbia, organized primarily by the HLC, Inter Bar
Association and the ICTY, began in 2001. Methodology included a combination of
lectures and work on hypothetical scenarios and problem analysis. This training
included judges, prosecutors, investigators (police officers) and defence counsel.
Between 2001 and 2003, there were occasional visits by the heads of the Serbian
judiciary (e.g., President of the Supreme Court, President of the Belgrade District Court
and the Republic Public Prosecutor to the ICTY), as well as to other foreign and
international judicial institutions. From 2003, other members of the judiciary began
study visits to The Hague – despite the hostile domestic atmosphere to both the Tribunal
and war crimes prosecutions in general. During those study visits, the various groups of
legal and other professionals were targeted separately by specific programmes. Also in
2003, ICHL-related training in Serbia began more intensive targeting of specific,
problematic topics, such as command responsibility, 123 joint criminal enterprise and
crimes against humanity. Also, a small number of regional events took place in Serbia
on IHL-related matters. Conducted primarily by the HLC, these events involved either
direct capacity-building training or roundtables aimed at resolving problematic legal
points.
123
A series of debates on the issue of command responsibility was organized in Belgrade and Zagreb by
the HLC, the ICTY and the OSCE. In the course of those events, it was generally concluded that the
domestic legal provisions could accommodate all forms of “command responsibility” as it was known in
the ICTY statute and elsewhere in international law, with one exception: The “should have known”
mental state is not foreseen in the domestic code and, as such, it remained an open question, with
opinions divided on the possibility of direct application of the Geneva Conventions and Additional
Protocols in domestic proceedings.
79
For its part, the OSCE began a programme in 2003 supporting accountability for
war crimes in Serbia. Under its aegis, the OSCE organized a broad range of capacity-
building activities, 124 regional and international co-operation initiatives, public
awareness raising (public outreach campaigns) and trial monitoring.
In 2005, the focus of international interventions in Serbia switched from direct
capacity building for those processing war crimes cases towards a broader transitional-
justice discussion. Led primarily by the UNDP, 125 ICHL-related prosecutions shared the
spotlight with the right to truth, the right to reparations and guarantees of non-
recurrence. By 2006, topics further extended into diverse areas such as victim/witness
support and protection, as well as outreach and enforcement-related activities.
Significant effort was put into the establishment and then the education of a witness-
protection apparatus in 2003, and victim support since the creation of the
victim/witness-support office in the Belgrade District Court’s War Crimes Chamber in
2006. To support these efforts, the OSCE organized training on stress management and
dealing with vulnerable and traumatized witnesses for members of the judiciary, support
staff and court guards, as well as defence attorneys. The OSCE and the U.S. Embassy
(separately) organized study visits for victim/witness-support officers to the ICTY and
the Court of BiH.
A cluster of activities targeted the outreach capacities of relevant judicial
institutions. Among others, the YIHR and OSCE organized a series of seminars and
issued a related publication on the transparency of war crimes proceedings. 126 The
OSCE supported the creation and maintenance of the website and magazine of the war
crimes prosecution offices, funded the recruitment of outreach staff into the partner
institutions, 127 and sponsored numerous publications and documentaries. 128 Although
not specifically part of capacity building of outreach personnel, the WCPO and the
OSCE Mission to Serbia arranged study visits for journalists to the ICTY in 2005, and
followed these with a workshop for journalists reporting on war crimes trials in
domestic courts. In 2005 and 2006, study visits for journalists from Serbia to the
judicial institutions in BiH and Croatia were notably successful, at least in forming
personal contacts, although a lasting impact on media and reporting was difficult to
assess.
Few activities targeted war crimes investigators. Among those, the OSCE
Mission to Serbia is currently implementing a project entitled “Enhancing the capacity
124
Examples include seminars for judges, prosecutors, investigators, witness-protection and witness-
support services, and assisting in drafting ICHL–related domestic legislation.
125
At the end of 2004, UNDP in Serbia started a regional transitional-justice program. A year later, three
local NGOs from Serbia (HLC), Croatia (Documenta) and BiH (The Research and Documentation
Centre), supported by the ICTJ, initiated a broad consultation on the establishment of a regional truth
commission (“RECOM Initiative”).
126
The seminars featured senior judicial figures from Croatia, BiH and Serbia, as well as representatives
of the ICTY and the Special Court for Sierra Leone, as panellists.
127
Public Information Consultant assigned to the National Council for Co-operation with the ICTY;
Public Information Assistant assigned to the Serbian War Crimes Prosecutor’s Office; Public Information
Assistant assigned to the War Crimes Chamber of the Belgrade District Court.
128
E.g. “Hag medju nama” (The Hague among Us), October 2005, in co-operation with the Humanitarian
law Center; “Ekspertski vodi kroz Haški tribunal/Expert guide through the ICTY” ; Perception Study of
Justice Operators in Serbia – in co-operation with the Solidaridad-Impunity Watch (Serbian branch of the
Netherlands based international NGO); Public opinion research on the general public attitude toward the
ICTY (2005, 2006, 2007 and 2009), in co-operation with the NGO Belgrade Center for Human Rights.
80
of the Serbian Ministry of Interior’s War Crimes Investigation Service”, which includes
the organization of conferences, trainings, and the publication of a handbook. 129
Kosovo 130
The earliest ICHL-related training in the entire region took place in Kosovo,
between 1999 and 2000, when national and international judges and prosecutors, as well
as defence attorneys, received core training in ICHL, human rights and rule of law
standards. The training, then organized by the OSCE Mission in Kosovo, was largely
theoretical, covering the entire field of IHL in a lecture-based seminar. The OSCE,
ABA/CEELI, the CoE, KFOR, and the DJA, 131 were the primary sponsors of
educational events for the judiciary until 2000, when the training apparatus of the
Kosovo Judicial Institute (KJI) was born. International judges in Kosovo also received,
upon their arrival, induction courses that included basic instruction in the core elements
of the national legal system. Beginning in 2001, training moved from the theoretical to
the practical, as presenters began addressing the application of ICHL within the local
judicial system and within the local penal and procedure code. This focus was kept
through 2002 and into 2005.
In 2002, defence attorneys, as well as international judges and prosecutors,
joined the local judges in the training. At the same time, judges, prosecutors and
defence counsel from Kosovo began to visit the ICTY. 132 Later, study visits were
organized to other judiciaries, including the Norwegian and Danish national offices in
charge of the prosecution of serious crimes and the Special Court for Sierra Leone.
Defence lawyers were also trained at the Criminal Defence Resource Centre, an NGO
set up by the OSCE Mission and mandated to provide ICHL case assistance to lawyers
(see footnote 106). From 2006, the intensity of training decreased and focus turned to
more specific topics such as victim/witness-support and protection (for judges and
prosecutors, organized in 2006 by the KJI), or war crimes reporting (for journalists,
organized by BIRN and the ICTY in 2007). Concerning investigators, law enforcement
training in the whole region was normally included in broader institution and capacity-
building activities, such as 2006 training on investigation techniques for police and
judiciary investigators. Only occasionally was this training related specifically to war
crimes investigations, such as training in forensics organized by the KJI in 2001.
Regional Exchanges
In 2008, Serbian court guards visited BiH; in 2006, the Bar Association of the
former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia visited OKO, and in 2007 and 2008, the
judiciary of that same country visited the Court of BiH; the Belgrade War Crimes
Chamber and the Ministry of Justice organized a 2008 meeting in Belgrade of judges
from the region, including several from the ICTY. Since 2007, witness-support units in
Croatia and Serbia have visited the Court of BiH. A number of meetings between
judicial officials from the region, including exchange visits, have been organized, either
129
‘Investigator's Handbook - How to Investigate Human Rights Violations”, written by Dermot Groome,
a Senior Trial Attorney at the ICTY, published by the OSCE in co-operation with the Humanitarian Law
Centre.
130
Kosovo refers to Kosovo under UNSC Resolution 1244. The OSCE is status neutral and thus do not
take a stance on the issue of Kosovo independence.
131
See accompanying “List of Acronyms” for any of these that are unfamiliar.
132
E.g. 2002 working visit for Kosovo judges, prosecutors and defence counsels to ICTY hosted by the
ICTY Outreach Programme; Study visit of leading judicial officials to ICTY organized by UNDP and
ICTY in 2007.
81
by the OSCE through the Pali 133 process or by other actors. Since 2007, a Brijuni
process has begun which focuses on co-operation between prosecutors. ICTY officials
participated in each meeting as observers, contributing their experience and expertise to
the process.
133
See Pali process page 19, footnote 25
82
Annex 5
134
Here, the authors refer, in particular, to the differences within each of the jurisdictions studied on the
question of the provisions that exist in the domestic penal codes for the application of individual criminal
responsibility.
135
Although well known, it bears mentioning that such problems are not unique to the former Yugoslavia.
In the United States and the United Kingdom, for example, apart from certain core principles, legal
practitioners frequently clash over the scope of applicability of international legal norms in domestic
courts.
83
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Efforts to determine which legal regime is in effect in BiH are complicated by
jurisdictional divisions and lingering political factors. At the time of writing, four
distinct jurisdictions are currently handling allegations of ICHL-related crimes, that is,
the Federation, the Republika Srpska (RS), Brko District and the Court of BiH. These
jurisdictions are not employing the same substantive law to offences with a nexus to the
1992-1995 armed conflict.
The 2003 BiH Criminal Code (amended) sets forth in a comprehensive manner,
in Chapter XVII, the core international crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity and
war crimes. The same penal code sets forth, at Article 180, the provisions for individual
criminal responsibility found in customary international law. The Research Team found
that legal professionals differ markedly on the question of whether the 2003 BiH
Criminal Code may be used to prosecute and punish offences perpetrated during the
period from 1992 to 1995 in entity courts. These concerns revolve, in the main, around
the interpretation of the principle of legality that prevails in BiH (and, indeed, in most
civil law jurisdictions). The BiH Constitutional Court considers the fact that the
problems created by the application of different criminal codes at state and entity level
remain unresolved is due to the lack of a central-level court capable of harmonizing the
case-law throughout BiH. In line with that view, the OSCE Mission, in its public report
“Moving Towards a Harmonized Application of the Law”, not only recommended
training on ICHL for entity-level judges and prosecutors, but also urged the BiH
authorities to consider the establishment of a state-level judicial institution that would
have the final say in the interpretation and application of the relevant law by all courts
in the country. In an evident effort to assuage concerns that such a retroactive
application of the 2003 law would violate the principle of legality, Article 4(a) of the
BiH Criminal Code permits “the trial and punishment of any person for any act or
omission which, at the time when it was committed, was criminal according to the
general principles of international law”. In short, provision is made for the application
in BiH of customary international law, as it was (for instance) during the period from
1992 to 1995.
Taken together, the relevant provisions of the 2003 BiH Criminal Code – in
particular Article 180, but also Articles 29 and 31 on Accomplices and Accessories,
respectively – ought to preclude the opening of an impunity gap between direct
perpetrators and high-level offenders. The said law ought likewise to serve as the
foundation for a BiH-wide professional-development programme designed to strengthen
the capacity of investigators, prosecutors, defence counsel and judges to address
allegations of war crimes. Any such programme would be in a position to draw heavily
upon the law applied by the ICTY and, by extension, the experience of current and
former ICTY practitioners.
The current difficulty is that the provisions of the 2003 BiH Criminal Code
relevant to international criminal law during the period from 1992 to 1995 are not being
applied consistently in any jurisdiction other than the Court of BiH. The Federation, the
RS and Brko District courts continue to apply the 1976 Socialist Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia Penal Code to cases where war crimes are alleged. The relevant provisions
of the Penal Code, if interpreted narrowly, give prosecutors (and, by extension, trial and
appellate judges) a much narrower range of modes of liability within which allegations
of international offences might be viewed. On the basis of interviews with legal
professionals uncertain about the applicability of the 2003 BiH Criminal Code in their
84
jurisdictions, it became clear that this limited range is not helpful for overcoming the
impunity gap through which mid-level offenders escape prosecution.
Seen from the mandate of this project, the point is that the continued reliance
throughout BiH (save in the Court of BiH) upon the 1976 Socialist Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia penal code creates a situation where the professional-developmental needs
of investigators, prosecutors, defence counsel and judges in Brko, the RS and the
Federation differ markedly from the professional-developmental needs of persons
working for (or appearing before) the Court of BiH. Future capacity-building schemes
directed at legal professionals in the entities should be cognisant of this fact unless and
until the legal systems in BiH are harmonized.
Croatia
Croatian legal professionals are in agreement that the substantive law to be
employed for offences perpetrated during the period from 1991 to 1995 is the Basic
Criminal Code of the Republic of Croatia (1993). 136 The 1993 Basic Criminal Code
follows closely the provisions made for war crimes in the 1976 Socialist Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia Penal Code; in this respect, the 1993 Basic Criminal Code
would appear to serve as an easily understood instrument in cases where the accused is
alleged to be the physical author of the underlying act or, conversely, where it is alleged
that the suspect is complicit in the perpetration of the underlying act by means of
“ordering”. However, the Research Team noted that questions arise within Croatia as to
whether the 1993 penal code can be used to prosecute crimes against humanity.
The 1993 Basic Penal Code makes no explicit provision for criminal command
and superior responsibility (hereinafter “command responsibility”). Nonetheless, in
Ademi/Norac (an 11bis case referred to Croatia by the ICTY), Glavaš et. al. and several
others, prosecutors have alleged criminal command responsibility as “omission
liability” by reference to Articles 28 and 43 of the 1993 law, where provision is made
for the perpetration of crimes by omission. These arguments succeeded at trial in
Ademi/Norac and Glavaš et. al; appeals of both convictions are pending. The trials in
the remaining cases were ongoing at the time of writing.
At this point, the question is whether the appeal court will adopt the particular
view of the law as that accepted by the trial panel in Ademi/Norac and Glavaš et. al.
136
The application of the 1993 Code to crimes perpetrated prior to its adoption is the more favourable law
for the defendant.
85
OSCE) might be made to assist the domestic legal system to handle the four cases to
which it is committed.
Serbia
The legal foundation for allegations of wartime (from 1991 to 1995 and 1998
and 1999) criminality is not subject to serious dispute within the legal profession,
notwithstanding (or perhaps owing to) its narrow provisions for individual criminal
responsibility. The Research Team found clear signs of willingness on the part of a
number of key actors in the Serbian legal system to undertake such cases, despite socio-
political pressures that continue to resist the prosecution and conviction of mid- and
higher-level perpetrators, in particular. Perhaps most importantly, efforts to deal with
war crimes cases are centralized within the specialized departments of the Belgrade
District and Serbian Supreme Courts, with no possibility that other jurisdictions within
the country will be permitted to take on cases where war crimes are alleged.
Serbian investigations and legal proceedings dealing with underlying acts that
occurred during the period from 1991 to 1999 are in every case rooted in the 1976 Penal
Code of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. As has already been suggested,
this instrument provides for the prosecution of the crime of genocide and war crimes,
but not crimes against humanity. Individual criminal responsibility is clearly provided
for in the event of direct perpetration, certain accomplice liability, instigation/incitement
and ordering, although legal professionals in Serbia signalled clearly to the Research
Team that the situation is less certain with respect to command responsibility, in
particular. For the most part, however, the Research Team found general agreement
among the relevant practitioners as to what the existing law would permit in the way of
prosecutions, and what it would not.
Kosovo 137
Allegations of criminal acts with a nexus to the internal armed conflict in
Kosovo, in particular where the underlying acts took place during the period 1998-1999,
are addressed by international prosecution offices and trial chambers, situated in the
jurisdiction of Kosovo and applying either the 1976 Socialist Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia Code or the 2003 Provisional Criminal Code, whichever is the more lenient.
The breadth and depth of the latter law is considerable, that is, it incorporates the core
international crimes as well as modes of liability recognized by, inter alia, customary
international law. The difficulty in assessing professional-developmental needs in
Kosovo (for Kosovars) is that Kosovars only recently started playing a role in
prosecuting and trying core international crimes, through their participation in the
Kosovo Special Prosecution Service and on trial panels presided over by EULEX.
Numerous commentators observed that the capacity of Kosovar-based counsel to defend
clients accused of international crimes is consistently below the necessary standard. 138
137
Kosovo refers to Kosovo under UNSC Resolution 1244. The OSCE is status neutral and thus do not
take a stance on the issue of Kosovo independence. .
138
With a view to providing immediate legal expertise on international human rights standards in
individual cases and strengthening the capacity of local defence lawyers, the OSCE Mission in Kosovo,
in collaboration with the Kosovo Bar Association, established the Criminal Defence Resource Centre
(CDRC). The CDRC began providing services out of OSCE’s offices in April 2001 and received NGO
status on 3 May 2001. Currently, CDRC functions within the structure of the Kosovo Bar Association and
has one staff member. According to its statute:
“[T]he CDRC will act as a resource and support centre for the defence, initially focusing its
support on the defence of persons suspected or accused of international humanitarian law offences and
serious ethnic or politically motivated crimes. The CDRC will also focus on cases involving breaches of
86
Annex 6
Witness support is often viewed more as a luxury than a necessity, although that
perception is changing as the content of its remit becomes better known, as does the
state’s legal obligation to organize its judicial system and criminal proceedings in order
to limit infringements upon the rights of witnesses. Equally emergent are the
consequences on the human psyche for witnesses/victims in interacting with the justice
system. Court personnel are increasingly cognizant of the toll that testifying in court –
in front of the accused and a panel of strangers – takes on a witness. Support structures
designed to ease this burden have been created and are developing practices that have
proven effective. What follows is an effort at collecting such practices.
Best Practices
87
brought to the attention of the relevant organ of the court. Similarly, information
about potential protective measures is conveyed to the witness.
Familiarization visits: Support services can arrange a visit to the courthouse and
the courtroom prior to the witness giving testimony. By explaining the various
roles, procedures, equipment (especially if it will be used in protecting the
witness), seating arrangements and similar issues, witness-support staff provide
the witness with an opportunity to familiarize him/herself with the surroundings
and raise questions.
Legal procedures: Properly trained victim/witness-support staff explain the
procedure of examination the witness will face in the courtroom, even if the
party calling the witness has already done so.
Assistance available during testimony: victim/witness-support staff explain how
the witness might seek help from the judge, including taking breaks, if
necessary.
Avoidance of discussing evidence or testimony: Witness support staff are
familiar with the applicable legal constraints and avoid discussing the content of
the evidence itself.
Logistics: victim/witness-support staff explain how accommodation, board and
transport to the courthouse are provided.
“After” testifying:
Post-testimony support: This is a critical but often neglected step, in part
because the witness has “served his/her purpose” to the state apparatus. Victim-
witnesses are left feeling (re)exploited, discouraging other witnesses from
coming forward.
Follow-up: Best practices favour assigning a psychologist or social worker to do
follow-up calls to all witnesses and, if necessary, to conduct follow-up visits to
vulnerable witnesses upon their return home. A contact telephone number is
provided to all witnesses to call for any post-testimony support, including safety
and security concerns.
Police protection: To support witnesses returning home, awareness training for
mid- and senior-level police leadership on the issues facing witnesses and the
role of police in their post-testimony protection is a necessary step.
141
For an example of such texts, see “An Outline for the Practical Use of Video Conference for the
Crossborder Hearing of Witnesses”, written by Judge Marin Mrcela, Judge of the Supreme Court of the
Republic of Croatia, et. al. for the Croatian Ministry of Justice’s Judicial Academy for use at a Workshop
entitled “Video Conference in International Legal Assistance” in September of 2008. Or see the Court of
BIH’s “Book of Rules for Use of Protective Measures”, issued in 2008.
88
5. Prosecutors have had success in building trust with potential witnesses by fostering
relationships with victim-support NGOs – the latter acting as intermediary until a bi-
lateral relationship is established.
89
Annex 7
The techniques and strategies of outreach are many and varied. For the
profession as a whole, activities are limited only by ethical and legal boundaries on one
hand, and by the creativity, skill (and budgets) of the persons involved on the other.
Outreach personnel – which include, but are not limited to spokespersons – must be
confident of their ability to safeguard the integrity of trial proceedings as they
endeavour simultaneously to boost the public’s confidence in the institution. Within
those parameters, personnel should know how to develop a comprehensive outreach
strategy that differentiates between target groups, employs a diversity of techniques,
utilizes modern forms of communication, and engages a range of media. No small
measure of political acumen is also necessary. Clearly, such personnel must have a keen
interest in the media, understand how to relate to it, and be attuned to the respective
editorial policies. Moreover, they must have the ability to frame the public discussion to
the benefit of the court, arrange and conduct successful interviews, organize small and
large events, follow the public discourse, use modern IT and multimedia tools, and
generally understand how best to educate the general public, keeping in mind its
divergent communities and groups. 142
Best Practices
2. Outreach staff assist judges and prosecutors in comprehending their critical role in
outreach and facilitate their participation.
142
Other valuable qualities include a keen interest in war crimes and developments in the field; a
thorough knowledge of the legal system and substantive law, and particularly ICHL; a solid
understanding of the political context; high quality drafting skills; high quality public speaking abilities,
including a grasp of non-verbal messages; the highest of ethical standards; a sensitivity to victims needs
and rights; and an awareness of European Court of Human Rights standards, procedural law and rights of
the accused.
90
3. Successful outreach staff appear regularly in the media in different formats (for
example, interviews, panel discussions, or phone-in programmes), different times,
different stations and targeting different audiences (for example youth, religious
groups). In addition to the traditional media – television, radio and print – modern
outreach professionals are increasingly on Internet forums such as podcasts, blogging,
and “social sites” – depending on local usage, access, and trends.
4. Best practices include programmes that address/access the public directly, not only
via media:
Inviting individuals and groups from across the societal spectrum to take
courthouse tours, particularly schools/universities, NGOs, political
parties/politicians, religious groups, and clubs;
Organizing “town hall meetings”, where senior judges, prosecutors or outreach
staff present briefly the work of the court to a group in a target community and
then answer questions or lead a discussion; and
Arranging for senior judges, prosecutors or outreach staff to speak at events in
schools, clubs and organizations.
5. Work with politicians and state officials. Outreach professionals generally consider
politicians as a specific target group while being aware that it would be inappropriate
for a judge or prosecutor to so engage. Their goal is twofold: first, to instil in politicians
an understanding of the impartiality and accountability aspects of the justice system
and, second, to assist them in distributing positive messages about the court to their
constituencies.
6. Partnerships with civil society assist outreach activities. Carefully selected NGOs 143
can help:
a. Undertake joint activities, for example a publication or a conference;
b. Identify additional target groups;
c. Disseminate information among their members; and
d. Advocate on behalf of the institution.
7. Successful outreach staff make it easy for journalists to report positive and accurate
information by making such information digestible and easily accessible. Some may
even offer readily useable texts, where appropriate.
143
Civil society partners must be selected carefully. Protecting the integrity of proceedings being of the
utmost importance, the relationships with NGOs must be evaluated also in terms of their accountability.
91
8. By periodically publishing a magazine or newsletter addressing compelling topics,
outreach practitioners have a tangible vehicle for delivering their key messages,
involving court personnel in the process, and informing their readers of important
developments. The periodical might include summaries of recent cases.
9. A fact sheet or briefing package with key factual information, personnel profiles,
history and statistics on the court has proven useful as a handout to court visitors and
journalists.
10. Making a documentary film about the court or, for example, “life as an
investigator”, has offered outreach practitioners a useful mechanism to raise the profile
of the court and to underline the importance of the institution’s work. Using video
footage from actual trials and interviews with defence, prosecution, judges and/or others
with interesting roles in the process contributes to the viewers’ overall understanding, as
does using existing documentaries about actual wartime events.
11. Successful outreach practitioners maintain a “contact list” or database of names and
addresses to which they send press releases, invitations and advisories.
12. Live-streaming broadcasts of trials on a website, as done at the ICTY, allows the
public real-time access to proceedings that might otherwise be inaccessible due to
distance or travel costs. Other ways to make the court proceedings available to the
public include, for example, delayed broadcasts or the offering of excerpts to media
outlets. 144
14. Outreach personnel have successfully demonstrated how the judicial process
individualizes guilt by connecting the adjudicated facts with “truth-telling conferences”,
or otherwise publicizing facts that are established at trial. Likewise, ensuring that
adjudicated facts are available to the Ministry of Education can ensure history textbooks
are accurate.
144
The Research Team understands that certain regulatory adjustments may be required for such
broadcasts.
92