Criminal Responsibility arising from a Breach of the Course of Justice before International Criminal Courts

  • Mahdi Saleh Abbas Hussein,
  • Qahtan Barbar Al-Jubouri and Ali Abdul Amir Al-Jubouri
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  • Mahdi Saleh Abbas Hussein

    Lecturer at Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research, Al-Qasim Green University, Iraq

  • Qahtan Barbar Al-Jubouri

    Assistant Lecturer at Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research, Al Qasim Green University, Department of Biotechnology, Iraq

  • Ali Abdul Amir Al-Jubouri

    Assistant Lecturer at Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research, Al Qasim Green University, Department of Biotechnology, Iraq

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Abstract

International criminal responsibility has now become an established fact that does not accept any doubt at this time and within the known rules of public international law, for the purpose of reducing the existing and diagnosed criminal tendency among some individuals who commit this type of bad and dangerous crimes at the international level and the nature and state of the effects. The known consequences of such types of crimes. The definition of individual international criminal responsibility in accordance with the provisions and law of the Rome Statute and main statute of the Permanent International Criminal Court will clearly and significantly limit the impunity of those people who actually commit this type of crime. This exact same thing applies to crimes and abuses related to the administration of justice before the various well-known international criminal courts, including the Permanent International Criminal Court, in that these aforementioned crimes are included within the Rome Statute and in the form of a direct and clear definition of the types of disruption of the course of justice. The path of international criminal justice before this Court makes it very difficult for those individuals who commit such crimes to escape punishment due to the definition of this category of crimes, and the punishment assigned to them under the Rome Statute of the Criminal Court, factors that may be deliberately put in place in order to Obstruction of international justice, whether by individuals or states, which amounts to committing crimes that could violate the course of this justice, will clearly and well-known affect the original cases filed before the International Criminal Court due to concealment of the international criminal truth. It is clear that determining real international criminal responsibility when committing certain crimes that represent a violation of the course of international criminal justice clearly requires severe punishment for these crimes in order for criminal justice to be established and so that individuals are not able to commit such crimes, such as cases of giving false testimony or falsifying evidence that is presented to the court.

Type

Research Paper

Information

International Journal of Law Management and Humanities, Volume 7, Issue 1, Page 617 - 633

DOI: https://doij.org/10.10000/IJLMH.116443

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