Skip to content or view screen version

Blair faces war crimes suit

rikki | 26.05.2003 22:48

Greek lawyers say they are going to sue British officials - including Prime Minister Tony Blair - for their role in the Iraq war. The Athens Bar Association says it will file a suit
against Britain at the International Criminal Court - the recently created tribunal for cases of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide.

Greek lawyers say they are going to sue British officials - including Prime Minister Tony Blair - for their role in the Iraq war. The Athens Bar Association says it will file a suit
against Britain at the International Criminal Court - the recently created tribunal for cases of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide.

The lawyers call the attacks by the United States and British forces against Iraq "crimes against humanity and war crimes".

They have listed a number of international treaties they say the two countries have violated.


We have received more than 200 communications from different parts of the world ICC spokeswoman These include the United Nations Charter, the Geneva Conventions, the
Hague Convention and the International Criminal Court's statute.

Dimitris Paxinos, the head of the lawyers' association, told the BBC the lawsuit will be filed within a fortnight.

He said American officials could not be prosecuted as the US is not a signatory to the ICC's founding treaty.

Eighty-nine countries signed up to the treaty creating the court, which was formally inaugurated in March in The Hague.

Mr Paxinos, who was elected by a conservative majority, says he is confident that the evidence compiled by the lawyers is strong, adding that the case would be a test of the ICC's
credibility.

Anti-war Greeks

The ICC is not working yet. Last month it appointed an Argentine lawyer, Luis Moreno Ocampo, to be its first prosecutor.

A spokeswoman for the court told BBC News Online that only after Mr Ocampo was sworn in on 16 June would the court consider the Greek lawyers' case.

"We have received more than 200 communications from different parts of the world," she said.

The British Prime Minister's office has declined to comment on the announcement.

According to the BBC's Panos Polyzoidis in Athens, the move is also unlikely to go down well with the Greek Government as it will act as a reminder of the Greek public's strong
anti-war feeling, which cuts across party lines.

Story from BBC NEWS:  http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/europe/2933140.stm

Published: 2003/05/23 16:31:55 GMT

© BBC MMIII

rikki
- Homepage: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/2933140.stm

Comments

Display the following 7 comments

  1. bring it on! — oekdotis
  2. Sign the Blair War Crimes petition to the ICC — verity
  3. No WMD = Blair is a war criminal. — J. Briggs
  4. Where are the WMD? — John Briggs
  5. Realist - even dumber than Harlequin? — johnny_boy
  6. Hang on... — Thomas J
  7. also..... — oi!