Is painting an anti-war message on the stern of a military supply vessel a crime?
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London, United Kingdom —
You cross a neighbour's lawn to stop a mugging. The police arrest you for trespass. In your defence in court, wouldn't you say the fact that you were attempting to stop a crime would be a relevant fact?
That's precisely the question before the UK Law Lords this week, as
they consider the fate of 20 individuals charged with activities in
defiance of the invasion of Iraq.
All of them chose to undertake non-violent civil disobedience at military sites, to try and stop the rush to war.
The six Fairford protestors - three independent groups of people - all
entered an RAF base at Fairford and attempted to immobilise B52
bombers. The planes they hindered would later be part of the
carpet-bombing of Baghdad.
The Marchwood 14 entered
Southampton's Marchwood Military Port and occupied tanks, locking
themselves with chains and padlocks. The occupation was part of a wider
week of actions at Marchwood, involving many other volunteers, which
aimed to stop the build up to war. Other actions included using our
flagship the Rainbow Warrior to blockade Marchwood military port and
stop military hardware leaving for the Gulf and boarding and conducting
a 'sit in' on a military supply ship bound for the Gulf with a cargo of
military hardware.
The tanks would later roll across Iraq
securing oil fields while UN-sealed nuclear facilities were left
unguarded, and participate in a futile search for weapons of mass
destruction. It was an invasion that broke every rule against
pre-emptive war and was based on intelligence that even former US
Secretary of State Colin Powell now admits was wrong.
The
invasion set a precedent under which India should be allowed to attack
Pakistan on suspicions of aggression, Israel should be allowed to bomb
Iranian nuclear facilities suspected of weapons activities, and
Israel's own nuclear arsenal could be cited as a justifiable cause for
invasion by any of its neighbours. If ever there was a slippery slope,
the invasion of Iraq was it.
Key legal points which will be considered by the Law Lords are:
1)Is
the crime of aggression, defined and last used by the International
Military War crimes Tribunal at Nuremberg in 1945-6, and enshrined in
UN law by the 1946 UN General Assembly, still part of international law?
2)If
a crime of aggression is illegal under international law is it a crime
in UK law? In his controversial legal advice the Attorney General
certainly believed so, he stated, "Aggression is a crime under
customary international law which automatically forms part of domestic
law".
3)Should UK courts have the authority to consider whether a crime of aggression has been committed?
4)Were
the Greenpeace defendants denied their right to a fair trial, contrary
to article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights, because they
were not allowed to argue issues which related to the legality of the
war?
In the courts last year, activists asked that the
legality of the war be considered in their defence, and sought the
release of the UK Attorney General's secret advice to Tony Blair about
the legal underpinnings of the invasion. But a district judge ruled
that "the lawfulness of the war and the Attorney General's legal
opinion are not relevant to issues in the case." The full advice was
only finally released to the public after being leaked to TV news.
One law for the leaders, a different law for the people.
Greenpeace UK Executive Director Stephen Tindale stated "These people
acted because they believed that the Iraq war was both illegal and
morally wrong. The majority of international lawyers have since agreed
the war was illegal. Yet our volunteers were prevented from arguing
this in court and were effectively denied a fair trial."
We're
appealing that double standard. We say the legality of the war is
central to the question of whether the activists themselves committed a
crime in stopping it.
Tindale concluded, "This case is crucial
as it could help ensure that the UK is never again dragged into an
illegal pre-emptive war, against UN wishes and based on dodgy
intelligence.
If we are to have a society where governments as
well as individuals can be held accountable for their actions and the
international rules of law are upheld, then it's crucial that the right
to this defence of preventing a crime of aggression is upheld."
The hearing ended on Thursday 23rd February. A conclusion is not expected for another month.