General

A couple of weeks ago, I discussed the ICTR's acquittal of Andre Ntagerura and Emmanuel Bagambiki, two high-ranking Rwandan officials charged with genocide and crimes against humanity. Rwanda has now announced that it intends to prosecute Bagambiki, the former governor of Cyangugu, for crimes against humanity involving rape and sexual violence — charges that were not part of...

For those of you who will be at the Annual Meeting of the American Society of International Law (or just in DC), Opinio Juris and the ASIL will sponsor a reception on Thursday evening, March 30th, from 7:30 pm to 8:30 pm in the Longworth Room of the Fairmont Hotel, 2401 M Street, NW (the location of the Annual Meeting). Besides...

I came across some interesting statistics regarding how Americans use the Internet. According to the Pew Internet Project, approximately 72 percent of all American adults (145 million Americans) use the Internet, and 94 million use it daily. Approximately 104 million adult Americans (72 percent) report that they have used the Internet to gather news, while 40 million...

The ICJ is holding witness testimony this week in its ongoing public hearings on the Application of the Genocide Convention to Serbia and Montenegro. As the ICJ's press release points out, there have only been nine cases involving witness testimony in the ICJ's entire 50-plus year history, so this is a rare event. It is also semi-removed from...

The U.S. government indicted 50 top members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (or FARC) yesterday on charges of conspiracy to manufacture and export illegal narcotics to the United States (the full indictment is here). FARC is a left-wing paramilitary group dedicated to the overthrow of the Colombia government. They have been battling the Colombian government since the 1960s and...

Cardinal Roger Mahony of the archdiocese of Los Angeles has poured new wine into the old wineskin of civil disobedience. If a proposed immigration bill becomes law, he announced he will instruct the priests in his archdiocese to disobey the law and face the prospect of criminal prosecution. He clarified his position in an op-ed in the New York Times. ...

I couldn't agree more with Roger about the CPT response. I'm particularly appalled by the verb the CPT uses to describe what happened to the hostages — "released." Not "rescued." Not "freed." "Released" — as if, like Roger says, the Brigades of the Swords of Righteousness simply had a change of heart and let them go. I understand being opposed to...

The remaining three members of the Christian Peacemakers Team ("CPT") who had been kidnapped by insurgents in Iraq are now free. As reported here, they were rescued by U.S. and British troops without firing a shot. The CPT's response? No mention of the efforts by the U.S. and British troops to free their colleagues. No word of...

The House of Lords has upheld the decision of a British high school to prohibit one of its students from wearing a head-to-toe jilbab dress to school. The full text of the House of Lords decision in R v. Headteacher and Governors of Denbigh High School is here. The House of Lords was interpreting Protocol 1 to the European Convention...