On April 5, the Prosecutor received the report of the UN International Commission of Inquiry together with a list of alleged authors of "mass killings of innocent civilians, systematic rape of girls and women, and the burning of family homes" [1] These massive and systematic acts were qualified by the Commission as "war crimes and crimes against humanity".
The preliminary analysis of the Commission’s documents and other sources of information allowed the prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo to "conclude that the statutory requirements for initiating an investigation were satisfied ".
"The opening of this investigation is a first answer to the Darfur victims. As provided by the ICC Statute, victims will finally be able to testify before an independent tribunal and to participate in the proceedings for justice to be done", said Sidiki Kaba, President of the FIDH.
FIDH and SOAT recall that the Court must guarantee an effective protection for victims and witnesses and ensure that they are fully informed of their rights to participate at all stages of the proceedings.
If "traditional African mechanisms" are to complement the efforts of the ICC - as mentioned in today’s ICC press release [2] - in order to achieve "local reconciliation", FIDH and SOAT urge that they fully respect the international Human Rights standards and do not end in a de facto impunity in Sudan.
FIDH and SOAT urge the Sudanese Government to accept the help of the international community in the fight against impunity for the crimes committed in Darfur, by fully cooperating with the organs of the Court, especially with the investigations teams of the ICC.
FIDH and SOAT denounce once more [3] the Security Council’s decision not to support part of the financial cost of the ICC investigations. FIDH and SOAT urge the States to cooperate with the organs of the Court and to give them the means to carry out the investigations and proceedings. In that sense, the Assembly of States Parties will have to significantly increase the 2006 budget of the ICC.
"The intervention of the international justice mechanisms in Sudan is essential on the way towards peace and security in the region", stressed Osman Hummeida, president of SOAT.
The FIDH and SOAT recommend :
To the Sudanese Government
To the International Community, the Security Council and the African Union
To the States Parties to the Rome Statute
To the International Criminal Court
to all the organs of the Court: not to use budgetary considerations limiting the number of situations which the Court can investigate annually, as a pretext for abandoning the current analyses of other situations which have been rightfully submitted to the Court.
A brief summary of the functioning of the ICC
The ICC has jurisdiction over war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide committed by the citizens or on the territory of a State party to the Rome Statute and committed after the 1st July 2002.
The Prosecutor of the ICC, the Argentinian Luis Moreno Ocampo, can be triggered in three ways:
1. By any State party
2. By the Security Council
3. On his own initiative on the basis of information received from a third party.
When the Security Council refers a situation to the ICC, the Court’s jurisdiction is truly universal, meaning that it is not necessary for the alleged perpetrator of the crime to be a citizen of a State Party or for the crime to have been committed on the territory of a State Party.
This is the situation with Sudan which is not one of the 99 States Parties to the Rome Statute.









