- Pam Spees, 2003(1) INTRODUCTION (a) About this Guide
Since the adoption of the Elements of Crimes, there have been a number of decisions by the ICTR and ICTY, including the recent judgment of the ICTY Trial Chamber in Prosecutor v. Kunarać, affirmed by the Appeals Chamber relating to the ways in which coercion can be applied to the victim in crimes of sexual violence. (36) In this judgment, the Trial Chamber states that it is not restricting in any way the scope of Akayesu, but addressing a potentially restrictive interpretation of another ICTY Trial Chamber judgment in Furundžija. The Trial Chamber in Kunarać saw rape as a violation of sexual autonomy and noted that such autonomy was "violated wherever the person subjected to the act has not freely agreed to it or is otherwise not a voluntary participant".(37) It was concerned that factors other than force, threat of force against the victim or a third person or coercion that would make the act non-voluntary or non-consensual. For example, the act could be not voluntary when the victim was particularly vulnerable or deceived.(38) The Appeals Chamber also provides examples of coercive circumstances used by perpetrators, including detention in prisons, military headquarters, detention centres and apartments maintained as soldiers’ residences, where there would be a presumption that the act was not voluntary or consensual.(39) It will be important for national legislation and the jurisprudence of national courts to ensure that the circumstances mentioned by the chamber in Kunarać will negate any apparent consent, unless freely given.(40) However, it will also be essential for national legislation and courts interpreting it not to make consent an element of the crime to be proved.
The Trial Chamber in the Akayesu judgment concluded that rape in certain circumstances could constitute genocide.(41)
Most national definitions of rape fall far short of these standards. Therefore, the Rome Statute and the elements of this crime in the Elements of Crimes, subject to the above caveats, can be used as an example of international best practice and as a way to call for changes in national definitions to reflect international best practice.
(b) Sexual slavery
(2) The perpetrator caused such person or persons to engage in one or more acts of a sexual nature.
* It is understood that such a deprivation of liberty may, in some circumstances, include exacting forced labour or otherwise reducing a person to a servile status as defined in the Supplementary Convention on the Abolition of Slavery, the Slave Trade, and Institutions and Practices Similar to Slavery of 1956. It is also understood that the conduct described in this element includes trafficking in persons, in particular women and children.
The Rome Statute is the first international treaty expressly to include the crime of sexual slavery. Women’s advocates lobbied for the inclusion of this crime independently from the separate counts of crimes of enslavement and enforced prostitution, in order to emphasize the sexual aspect of the crime of slavery, and to emphasize "the coercive element involved where women are forced to provide sexual services".(42) This crime is gender-based as it tends to exploit women’s traditional roles as domestic service providers.(43) It includes situations where women and girls are forced into "marriage", domestic servitude or other forced labour, including forced sexual activity.(44) Abuses amounting to sexual slavery have been committed in many armed conflicts, including in the former Yugoslavia,(45) Rwanda, Liberia,(46) the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Sierra Leone, Uganda and throughout Asia during World War II. The new Special Court for Sierra Leone has charged six people with acts of sexual slavery committed during the internal armed conflict.(47) Commentators have pointed out that the first element of the crime outlined above may lead to an overly restrictive interpretation of slavery.(48) The illustrative list used to demonstrate the types of activity that can amount to slavery are all largely commercial in nature, potentially limiting the scope of the crime unnecessarily. Therefore, it is important that states make it clear that there is no necessary commercial element in the crime of slavery. Sexual slavery can also involve individual acts outside the context of war. For example, the Elements of Crimes definition makes clear (in the accompanying footnote) that sexual slavery as a crime against humanity and a war crime includes the actions of people traffickers. The crime of trafficking relates to all labour sectors and not just the sex industry (see the next section for more general description of the crime of trafficking). However, it is clear that where women are recruited, transported, transferred, sold or purchased in order to work in the sex industry in conditions of servitude, this amounts to a crime of sexual slavery.(49) States must recognize these acts as a crime committed by the trafficker, and not prosecute the victim for immigration or other offences. The Japanese army was responsible for thousands of acts of sexual slavery during World War II, where "comfort women" were kidnapped and forced to serve as sexual slaves. They were raped, tortured, subjected to other forms of sexual violence and many were killed in the last stages of the war. It is estimated that at least 200,000 women were victims of this brutal crime, however no-one has ever been held criminally responsible. As more and more women came forward in the 1990s to speak of what had happened to them, several Asian women’s organisations decided to establish a "people’s tribunal" for the comfort women, to allow them to tell their stories and to establish the horrific scale of this crime against humanity. The Women’s International War Crimes Tribunal was not able to impose legal accountability, however it was successful in allowing over 75 women to share their stories, in finding Emperor Hirihito responsible for these crimes and in creating an historical record of the abuse and pain of the "comfort women".(50) (c) Enslavement, including trafficking