Published on How does law protect in war? - Online casebook ( Yemen

Similar documents
EU GUIDELINES on INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW

Attacks on Medical Units in International Humanitarian and Human Rights Law

Dear students: This presentation is a text version of the presentation that was given in lecture # 1, since presentations with certain animations

Chapter 3: The Legal Framework

THE LAW OF LAND WARFARE

COUNCIL OF DELEGATES SEOUL, NOVEMBER 2005 RESOLUTIONS

Implementation of International Humanitarian Law. by Antoine Bouvier Legal Adviser, ICRC Geneva

InternationalHumantarianLawIhLandtheConductofNonInternationalArmedConflictNiac

Less-Lethal Weapons Legislation

MODEL LAW ON THE EMBLEMS

Model law 1 concerning the use and the protection of the emblem of the red cross, the red crescent and the red crystal 2

The University of Edinburgh. From the SelectedWorks of Ray Barquero. Ray Barquero, Mr., University of Edinburgh. Fall October, 2012

Implementation of International Humanitarian Law. Dr. Benarji Chakka Associate Professor

Iraq, Forced displacement and deliberate destruction

International Humanitarian Law

UNITED NATIONS OFFICE OF LEGAL AFFAIRS

DIRECT PARTICIPATION IN HOSTILITIES

1. 4. Legal Framework for United Nations Peacekeeping. L e s s o n

Asymmetric warfare and challenges for international humanitarian law

Targeting People: Direct Participation in the Conduct of Hostilities DR. GENTIAN ZYBERI NORWEGIAN CENTRE FOR HUMAN RIGHTS UNIVERSITY OF OSLO

A. Yugoslavia/Croatia, Memorandum of Understanding of November 27, 1991

Guidelines for Assessing the Compatibility between National Law and Obligations under Treaties of International Humanitarian Law

INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE SYRIAN CRISIS

SUMMARY TABLE OF IHL PROVISIONS

-1- Translated from Spanish. [Original: Spanish] Costa Rica

EDUCACIÓN EN DERECHO INTERNACIONAL HUMANITARIO

INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE OF THE RED CROSS: INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW WORKSHOP

Explosive weapons in populated areas - key questions and answers

ACT ON THE PUNISHMENT OF CRIMES WITHIN THE JURISDICTION OF THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT

THE MARTENS CLAUSE AND INTERNATIONAL CRIMES IN ESTONIA

Draft U.N. Security Council Resolution September 26, The Security Council,

Israel, Ayub v. Minister of Defence

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly. [without reference to a Main Committee (A/67/L.63 and Add.1)]

WHY THE CONFLICT IN UKRAINE IS A REAL WAR, AND HOW IT RELATES TO INTERNATIONAL LAW.

United Nations conference to negotiate a legally binding instrument to prohibit nuclear weapons, leading towards their total elimination

SECOND PROTOCOL TO THE HAGUE CONVENTION OF 1954 FOR THE PROTECTION OF CULTURAL PROPERTY IN THE EVENT OF ARMED CONFLICT

CASES & DOCUMENTS. Published on How does law protect in war? - Online casebook (

CHAPTER 1 BASIC RULES AND PRINCIPLES

The Permanent Mission of Peru to the United Nations presents its compliments to the

Establishment of National IHL Committee by High Contracting Party under Geneva Conventions of 1949: Case of Pakistan and the Islmic outlook

Non-international Armed Conflicts (NIACs) and Combatant Status. Cecilie Hellestveit NCHR/UiO

By Jean-Philippe Lavoyer *

Global Human Rights Challenges and Solutions THE LAW OF WAR

NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT: AN OVERVIEW OF CUSTOMARY INTERNATIONAL LAW

Sixty years of the Geneva Conventions: learning from the past to better face the future

Published on How does law protect in war? - Online casebook (

Overview of the ICRC's Expert Process ( )

FACT SHEET STOPPING THE USE OF RAPE AS A TACTIC OF

INTERNATIONAL LAW AND ANTI-PERSONNEL LANDMINES

RUSSIA & UKRAINE: INTERNATIONAL LAW AND SELF DETERMINATION. Patrick McGuiness

INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT

Appraising the Core Principles of International Humanitarian Law By Dr. Arinze Abuah

INTERNATIONAL LAW AND INSTITUTIONS Law Regarding Protection of the Environment During Wartime - Aaron Schwabach

Internment in Armed Conflict: Basic Rules and Challenges. International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) Opinion Paper, November 2014

Issue: Measures to ensure continued protection of civilians in war zones

30 YEARS FROM THE ADOPTION OF ADDITIONAL PROTOCOLS I AND II TO THE GENEVA CONVENTIONS

THE ICRC'S CLARIFICATION PROCESS ON THE NOTION OF DIRECT PARTICIPATION IN HOSTILITIES UNDER INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW NILS MELZER

The legality of Targeted Killings in the War on Terror

International humanitarian law and the protection of war victims

SECOND PROTOCOL TO THE HAGUE CONVENTION OF 1954 FOR THE PROTECTION OF CULTURAL PROPERTY IN THE EVENT OF ARMED CONFLICT

Nato in Kosovo: operation allied force viewed from the core principles of jus in bello. Introduction. Abstract

Teaching International Humanitarian Law

Detention in Peace Support Operations. Dr. Tristan Ferraro Legal Adviser ICRC Geneva

Seventy years after Hiroshima and Nagasaki: Reflections on the consequences of nuclear detonation

ACCESSION TO THE GENEVA CONVENTIONS OF 1949 AND THEIR ADDITIONAL PROTOCOLS BY JAPAN EMPIRE 8 MARCH 2014

Act of 5 August 2003 on serious violations of international humanitarian law

The International Committee of the Red Cross

TOWARDS CONVERGENCE. IHL, IHRL and the Convergence of Norms in Armed Conflict

Published on How does law protect in war? - Online casebook (

Memorandum. I. Accession to international instruments on international humanitarian law

ILC The Environment in Armed Conflicts Draft Principles by Stavros-Evdokimos Pantazopoulos*

The evolution of the biological weapons threat and the BTWC

PROVISIONS OF THE SPANISH CRIMINAL CODE CONCERNING INTERNATIONAL CRIMES

From Good to Bad: The Threat Posed to International Law by the Draft CCW Protocol on Cluster Munitions

Identifying the Enemy: Civilian Participation in Armed Conflict

Irregular Armed Conflicts and Human Rights. Mokbul Ali Laskar*

EXPLOSIVE REMNANTS OF WAR

PROGRAMME OF WORKSHOPS AND SIDE EVENTS TO BE HELD. 30 th INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE DURING THE 30 TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE. 30IC/07 Original: English

D R A F T. Interpretive Guidance on the Notion of Direct Participation in Hostilities

OBSERVATIONS ON THE LEGAL ISSUES RELATED TO THE USE OF CLUSTER MUNITIONS

The updated ICRC Commentary on the Second Geneva Convention: Demystifying the law of armed conflict at sea

A compliance-based approach to Autonomous Weapon Systems

PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE RESPONSE TO THE HUMANITARIAN HARM RESULTING FROM THE USE OF EXPLOSIVE WEAPONS IN POPULATED AREAS

MARCO SASSÒLI & ANTOINE A. BOUVIER UN DROIT DANS LA GUERRE? (GENÈVE : COMITÉ INTERNATIONAL DE LA CROIX-ROUGE, 2003) By Natalie Wagner

Jurisdiction and scope of the powers of the Court

Towards a compliance-based approach to LAWS

Published on How does law protect in war? - Online casebook (

A. Interim report to the General Assembly on the use of remotely piloted aircraft in counterterrorism

EN CD/17/3 Original: English Adopted

ANNEX I: APPLICABLE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL FRAMEWORK

Address by the Soviet Representative (Andrei Gromyko) to the United Nations Atomic Energy Commission June 19, 1946

INSTITUTE OF INTERNATIONAL LAW Bruges Session Sixteenth Commission. Humanitarian Assistance RESOLUTION

Table of Contents. Protocol I. Preamble Part I General Provisions. Part II Wounded, Sick And Shipwrecked. Section I: General Protection...

Objectives To explore the meanings of conflict and war. To make deductions and practise reasoning skills.

Published on How does law protect in war? - Online casebook (

Explosive weapons in populated areas - key questions and answers

INTRODUCTION DEFINITION OF KEY TERMS

PART 1 : RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE ICRC PART 2 : RECOMMENDATIONS AND COMMENTARY

The Syrian Conflict and International Humanitarian Law

Art. 61. Troops that give no quarter have no right to kill enemies already disabled on the ground, or prisoners captured by other troops.

Transcription:

Published on How does law protect in war? - Online casebook (https://casebook.icrc.org) Home > ICRC Report on Yemen, 1967 ICRC Report on Yemen, 1967 [Source: Annual Report 1967, ICRC, pp. 15-17] Yemen The ICRC?s medical activity in North Yemen. Giving medical assistance to the wounded and sick in the part of the Yemen under Royalist control was the ICRC?s main action in that area during 1967. [...] This mission?s work was, however, rendered extremely difficult by several incidents. First of all there was that of Ketaf in the Jauf in January, when about 120 persons, many of them women and children, were killed as a result of an air raid on the village on January 5, 1967. As a result of this attack, the ICRC made the following appeal on January 31 to the belligerents: [?]The International Committee of the Red Cross in Geneva is extremely concerned about the air-raids against the civilian population and the alleged use of poisonous gas recently in the Yemen and the neighbouring regions. In view of the suffering thereby caused, the ICRC earnestly appeals to all authorities involved in this conflict for respect in all circumstances of the universally recognized humanitarian rules of international morality and law.

The ICRC depends on the understanding and support of all the powers involved in order to enable its doctors and delegates in the Yemen to continue under the best conditions possible to carry out their work of impartial assistance to the victims of this conflict. The ICRC takes the opportunity to affirm that, in the interest of the persons in need of its assistance, it has adopted as a general rule to give no publicity to the observations made by its delegates in the exercise of their functions. Nevertheless, these observations are used to back up the appropriate negotiations which it unfailingly undertakes whenever necessary.[?] A further raid on May 12 having caused 75 deaths, an ICRC medical mission went to give its aid there, after having itself been attacked from the air. On June 2 a report, drawn up by the doctors of the ICRC, was sent to the governments parties to the conflict giving their observations and engaging them in no circumstances to resort to methods of fighting prohibited by the Geneva Protocol of 1925. Since then, no further incident of this kind has been reported to the ICRC. At the end of June, one of the ICRC delegates was the victim of a serious accident. Mr. Laurent Vust who was accompanying a consignment of medicines in the aircraft on the Najran-Gizan line was seriously hurt after a crash landing. He was the only survivor and suffering from bad burns. Mr. Vust was still undergoing treatment at the end of December 1967. Another accident befell this mission. On August 26 an ICRC convoy was ambushed by Bedouins in the Jauf desert. A young doctor, Dr. Frédéric de Bros was hit by a bullet in the left arm causing an open fracture and resulted in partial paralysis in that limb. In the autumn, as a result of agreements concluded in Khartoum, the ICRC had, in principle, arranged to terminate its medical action by the end of the year.

However, in December fighting again broke out around Sanaa. Consequently, the medical action had to be continued in the rear of the Royalist positions. After a journey of 600 kilometres on tracks between Najran and Jihanah with all the difficulties involved, an ICRC medical team was installed in the town of Jihanah which worked at night and took cover in case during the day. In Jihanah where it expected to find only a small number of wounded, the ICRC team discovered some thirty wounded abandoned and in indescribable conditions of distress of whom about twenty were seriously wounded, most of them women and children, and savagely mutilated. In such conditions, it can be understood that the task of the ICRC doctors was one of the utmost difficulty, if one adds the fact that medical teams protected by the red cross emblem were twice bombed and attacked during the course of 1967. The courage of their members deserves high praise for risking their lives for others. Finally, in view of the renewal of the fighting, a second appeal made by the ICRC in the last days of 1967 to the two parties in conflict for them to respect the fundamental humanitarian principles contained in the Geneva Conventions. Discussion 1. a. Does every attack wilfully killing and wounding civilians violate IHL? If not, in which cases is IHL violated? Are the conditions different under the IHL of international conflicts and the IHL of non-international conflicts? What if such attacks are designed to scare the civilian population? (P I, Art. 51(2); P II, Art. 13(2); CIHL, Rule 2) Does every attack directed at civilians violate either Protocol I or II? (HR, Art. 25; P I, Art. 51; P II, Art. 13) b. Must not women and children be given special protection under the IHL of noninternational armed conflicts? (P II, Art. 4(2)(e) and (3); CIHL, Rules 134 and 135) Is this protection relevant in the present case? 2. a. What protection does the IHL of non-international conflict provide to the sick and wounded? To what care are they entitled? (GC I-IV, Art. 3(2); P II, Art. 7; CIHL, Rules 109-111) Does the IHL of non-international armed conflicts offer

as extensive protection and care to the sick and wounded as does the IHL of international armed conflicts? b. Which findings by the ICRC delegates in Yemen concerning the wounded correspond to clear violations of IHL? If only Art. 3 common to the Conventions is applicable? If the IHL of international armed conflicts is applied? c. What protection does IHL provide to those caring for the sick and wounded or those providing relief? (P II, Arts 11 and 18; CIHL, Rules 25-30) If hospitals and medical personnel are frequently attacked, as were ICRC units and personnel here, when should a humanitarian organization pull out? Particularly when it is clear that the emblem is not respected? (P II, Art. 12) What if that means that no one remains to aid the victims? 3. a. Was the use of chemical weapons in 1967 prohibited by customary international law? Or purely through treaty-based law? (HR, Art. 23(a) and (e); P I, Arts 35 and 51; Protocol for the Prohibition of the Use in War of Asphyxiating, Poisonous or Other Gases, and of Bacteriological Methods of Warfare [See The Geneva Chemical Weapons Protocol]; CIHL, Rule 74) Yet do those provisions apply in this situation? Why is the IHL of non-international armed conflicts so vague regarding prohibited weapons? Because customary IHL prohibits such weapons? Because this prohibition can be derived from the Martens Clause and somehow through Art. 3 common to the Conventions? Or does Protocol II expect reference to be made to the IHL of international armed conflicts? In all respects? If only in some respects, which ones? (HR, Art. 23(a) and (e); GC I- IV, Arts 63(4)/62(4)/142(4)/158(4) respectively; P I, Arts 1(2) and 35(2); P II, Preamble, para. 4) b. Regardless of the origin of the rule, is not Yemen as a State party to the 1925 Protocol for the Prohibition of the Use of Asphyxiating, Poisonous or Other Gases, and of Bacteriological Methods of Warfare [See Document No. 9, The Geneva Chemical Weapons Protocol] prohibited from using chemical weapons? 4. a. Does a public ICRC appeal mean that in certain situations the normal and specific mechanisms for the implementation of IHL do not function? b. What criteria would you suggest to the ICRC for deciding whether to issue a public appeal to the parties to a conflict on violations in a specific situation? Is such an appeal in fact an appeal to all States Parties to?ensure respect? for IHL?

c. Did the appeal in this case respect the Red Cross principles of neutrality and impartiality? Was it necessary for the ICRC under those principles to criticize the belligerents? Because of continuing violations? Under those two principles, may the ICRC never criticize only one side in an armed conflict? d. Why has the ICRC, as a general rule, adopted the policy of not publicizing the observations made by its delegates? Does it stem from the Red Cross principles of neutrality and impartiality? Or is it simply a working modality? Source URL: https://casebook.icrc.org/case-study/icrc-report-yemen-1967