World Tribunal on Iraq: Difference between revisions
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The '''World Tribunal on Iraq''' ('''WTI''') was a people's court consisting of intellectuals, [[human rights]] campaigners and [[non-governmental organization]]s, and was active from 2003 to 2005. Set up following the [[2003 invasion of Iraq]] it sprung from the anti-war movement and is modelled on the [[Russell Tribunal]] of the American movement against the [[Vietnam War]]. |
The '''World Tribunal on Iraq''' ('''WTI''') was a people's court consisting of intellectuals, [[human rights]] campaigners and [[non-governmental organization]]s, and was active from 2003 to 2005. Set up following the [[2003 invasion of Iraq]] it sprung from the anti-war movement and is modelled on the [[Russell Tribunal]] of the American movement against the [[Vietnam War]]. |
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It was supported by [[India]]n leftist author [[Arundhati Roy]], by American international lawyer [[Richard Falk]] and [[United Nations]] Assistant General Secretary [[Denis Halliday]], but it consciously avoided a hierarchical structure. The WTI routinely found that the coalition forces in [[Iraq]] are guilty of [[war crimes]] and violations of the [[Geneva Conventions]]. |
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==Actions== |
==Actions== |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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* [[Genocide]] |
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* [[Crime against peace]] (international aggression) |
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* [[International law]] |
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* [[Laws of war]] |
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* [[War Crimes Law (Belgium)]] |
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* [[List of war crimes]] |
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* [[Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court]] |
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* [[Responsibility for the September 11, 2001 attacks]] |
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* [[State terrorism]] |
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* [[War on Terrorism]] |
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* [[Anti-American sentiment]] |
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* [[The UN Security Council and the Iraq war]] |
* [[The UN Security Council and the Iraq war]] |
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* [[Protests against the 2003 Iraq war]] |
* [[Protests against the 2003 Iraq war]] |
Revision as of 19:58, 11 July 2018
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The World Tribunal on Iraq (WTI) was a people's court consisting of intellectuals, human rights campaigners and non-governmental organizations, and was active from 2003 to 2005. Set up following the 2003 invasion of Iraq it sprung from the anti-war movement and is modelled on the Russell Tribunal of the American movement against the Vietnam War.
Actions
- Brussels, April 14–17, 2004 - the Brussels Tribunal hearings focused on the programs and policies of the Project for the New American Century (PNAC), its role in the war against Iraq, and the role of the war against Iraq as part of the PNAC's program of military domination of the Earth [1]
See also
- The UN Security Council and the Iraq war
- Protests against the 2003 Iraq war
- Governments' pre-war positions on invasion of Iraq
- The UN Security Council and the Iraq war
Publications
The most complete collection of the proceedings of the Tribunal has been collected in Sökmen, M. G. Roy, A., Falk, R. (eds.) 2008. World Tribunal on Iraq: Making the Case Against War. Northampton, MA: Olive Branch Press.
See also: Borowiak, C. 2008. 'The World Tribunal on Iraq: Citizens’ Tribunals and the Struggle for Accountability'. New Political Science, 30:161-186. Cubukcu, A. 2011. ‘On Cosmopolitan Occupations. The Case of the World Tribunal on Iraq’, Interventions. International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, 13:422-442.
References
External links
- The original website, http://www.worldtribunal.org[permanent dead link ], is no longer available. The internet archive preserves a copy of the site as of 2007/04
- Panel indicts US, UK over Iraq, al Jazeera, 28 June 2005