STATEMENT


ICTR/INFO-9-3-02.EN
Arusha, 13 June 2001

STATEMENT BY THE REGISTRAR, MR. ADAMA DIENG, ON SOME ISSUES RELATING TO THE DEFENCE OF ACCUSED PERSONS


Cognizant of the need to ensure fair trials, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda through the Registrar, assigns defence counsel to accused persons who cannot afford the costs of their own defence and remunerates such lawyers for their services.  Extensive additional support, such as offices, faxes, telephones, transportation, library facilities, visa referrals for official travel, etcetera is provided to defence teams in a systematic and consistent manner whenever they are present in Arusha for trial or related proceedings.  The independence of the Defence has been scrupulously respected by the Tribunal’s Chambers and Registry.

Several defence lawyers and other members of defence teams have exhibited high professional standards in their dealings with the Tribunal.  However, indications that there may be abuses of the legal aid regime led to investigations by the United Nations Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS) and the subsequent report of the OIOS on the investigation into possible fee-splitting arrangements between defence counsel and indigent detainees at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda and the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia.

The OIOS investigation found evidence of abuse of the legal aid system of the two Tribunals: Some defence teams at both Tribunals have hired friends or relatives of their clients as defence investigators; some defence teams at the ICTR have given gifts to their clients’ relatives and other forms of indirect support; and several former defence counsel at both Tribunals have been solicited and have accepted requests for fee-splitting between them and their clients.  While the OIOS found credible information about possible on-going fee-splitting arrangements, enough evidence has not yet been produced to substantiate this information.

In view of a recent development involving the arrest of a suspect, Siméon Nshamihigo, who was a defence investigator, and having given due consideration to the findings and recommendations of the OIOS report, the ICTR Registry adopted a series of measures to prevent abuses of the legal aid system and to protect the integrity of the Tribunal’s judicial process.  Some of these measures include:

There have been attempts by some interests to wrongly depict these measures as an assault on the independence of the Defence.  They are not.  These measures are necessary to ensure that the financial resources provided by Member States for the provision of legal aid to ensure a fair trial are not abused, and that persons who should not be involved in the work of a Tribunal established to seek justice for the Rwandan genocide are not so involved in any manner.  Further measures will be taken in this connection as and when required.  Obviously, defence teams that are professional in their conduct and individuals with nothing to hide have nothing to be worried about in this context.

It is pertinent, in this whole context of the defence of accused persons, to recall some recent decisions by Judges of the Tribunal which have clarified aspects of the legal/judicial work and policy of the Tribunal that have been the subject of misconceptions or deliberate distortions.

These decisions have reaffirmed and clarified basic legal principles on which the work of the Chambers and Registry stand: fairness, impartiality, equality of the parties before the law of the Tribunal, the presumption of innocence of accused persons until proof of guilt is established beyond a reasonable doubt, and respect for the right of an indigent accused to be assigned counsel while firmly recognizing that there is no right of such an accused to be assigned the lawyer of his or her choice.

The Registrar has very much appreciated the support and cooperation so far extended to the Registry by the defence counsel, through their official representatives with whom he has held very constructive and positive discussions over all these issues.  The Registrar recognizes the vital role and contribution of all Defence counsel to the trial proceedings and intends to always rely on their understanding in order to assist the Registry in the discharge of its mandate.


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