CR 2019/20
International Court
Cour internationale
of Justice
de Justice
THE HAGUE
LA HAYE
YEAR 2019
Public sitting
held on Thursday 12 December 2019, at 10 a.m., at the Peace Palace, President Yusuf presiding,
in the case concerning Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime
of Genocide (The Gambia v. Myanmar)
VERBATIM RECORD
ANNÉE 2019
Audience publique
tenue le jeudi 12 décembre 2019, à 10 heures, au Palais de la Paix, sous la présidence de M. Yusuf,
président,
en l’affaire relative à l’Application de la convention pour la prévention et la répression du crime
de génocide (Gambie c. Myanmar)
COMPTE RENDU
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Present: President Yusuf Vice-President Xue
Judges Tomka
Abraham Bennouna Cançado Trindade Donoghue
Gaja Sebutinde Bhandari Robinson Crawford Gevorgian Salam Iwasawa
Judges ad hoc Pillay
Kress Registrar Gautier
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Présents : M. Yusuf, président
Mme Xue, vice-présidente MM. Tomka
Abraham Bennouna Cançado Trindade
Mme Donoghue
M. Gaja Mme Sebutinde MM. Bhandari
Robinson Crawford Gevorgian Salam Iwasawa, juges
Mme Pillay
M. Kress, juges ad hoc
M. Gautier, greffier
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The Government of the Republic of The Gambia is represented by:
H.E. Mr. Abubacarr Marie Tambadou, Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Republic of The
Gambia,
as Agent;
Mr. Paul S. Reichler, Attorney-at-Law, Foley Hoag LLP, member of the Bars of the United States
Supreme Court and the District of Columbia,
Mr. Philippe Sands, QC, Professor of International Law at University College London,
Barrister-at-Law, Matrix Chambers, London,
Mr. Payam Akhavan, LLM, SJD (Harvard), Professor of International Law, McGill University, member of
the Bars of New York and the Law Society of Ontario, member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration,
Ms Tafadzwa Pasipanodya, Attorney-at-Law, Foley Hoag LLP, member of the Bars of New York and the
District of Columbia,
Mr. Pierre d’Argent, professeur ordinaire, Catholic University of Louvain, member of the Institut
de droit international, Foley Hoag LLP, member of the Bar of Brussels,
Mr. Andrew Loewenstein, Attorney-at-Law, Foley Hoag LLP, member of the Bar of Massachusetts,
Mr. Arsalan Suleman, Attorney-at-Law, Foley Hoag LLP, member of the Bars of New York and the
District of Columbia,
as Counsel and Advocates;
H.E. Mr. Cherno Marenah, Solicitor General, Ministry of Justice, Mr. Hussein Thomasi, Ministry of
Justice,
Ms Bafou Jeng, Ministry of Justice,
Mr. Amadou Jaiteh, Permanent Mission of the Republic of The Gambia to the United Nations,
Mr. Peter Tzeng, Attorney-at-Law, Foley Hoag LLP, member of the Bars of New York and the District
of Columbia,
Ms Yasmin Al Ameen, Attorney-at-Law, Foley Hoag LLP,
Ms Jessica Jones, Barrister-at-Law, Matrix Chambers, London,
as Counsel;
H.E. Mr. Omar G. Sallah, Ambassador and Permanent Representative of the Republic of The
Gambia to the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation,
H.E. Mr. Youssef Aldobeay, Assistant Secretary General for Political Affairs, Organisation of
Islamic Cooperation,
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Le Gouvernement de la République de Gambie est représenté par :
S. Exc. M. Abubacarr Marie Tambadou, Attorney General et ministre de la justice de la République de
Gambie,
comme agent ;
M. Paul S. Reichler, avocat, cabinet Foley Hoag LLP, membre des barreaux de la Cour suprême des
Etats-Unis d’Amérique et du district de Columbia,
M. Philippe Sands, QC, professeur de droit international à l’University College de Londres, avocat,
Matrix Chambers (Londres),
M. Payam Akhavan, LLM, SJD (Université de Harvard), professeur de droit international à
l’Université McGill, membre du barreau de l’Etat de New York et du barreau de l’Ontario, membre de
la Cour permanente d’arbitrage,
Mme Tafadzwa Pasipanodya, avocate, cabinet Foley Hoag LLP, membre des barreaux de New York
et du district de Columbia,
M. Pierre d’Argent, professeur ordinaire, Université catholique de Louvain, membre de l’Institut de
droit international, Foley Hoag LLP, membre du barreau de Bruxelles,
M. Andrew Loewenstein, avocat, cabinet Foley Hoag LLP, membre du barreau du Massachusetts,
M. Arsalan Suleman, avocat, cabinet Foley Hoag LLP, membre des barreaux de New York et du district
de Columbia,
comme conseils et avocats ;
S. Exc. M. Cherno Marenah, Solicitor General, ministère de la justice,
M. Hussein Thomasi, ministère de la justice, Mme Bafou Jeng, ministère de la justice,
M. Amadou Jaiteh, mission permanente de la République de Gambie auprès de l’Organisation des
Nations Unies,
M. Peter Tzeng, avocat, cabinet Foley Hoag LLP, membre des barreaux de New York et du district de
Columbia,
Mme Yasmin Al Ameen, avocate, cabinet Foley Hoag LLP, Mme Jessica Jones, avocate, Matrix Chambers
(Londres),
comme conseils ;
S. Exc. M. Omar G. Sallah, ambassadeur et représentant permanent de la République de Gambie auprès
de l’Organisation de la coopération islamique,
S. Exc. M. Youssef Aldobeay, sous-secrétaire général aux affaires politiques, Organisation de la
coopération islamique,
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H.E. Mr. Hassan Ali Hassan, Director of Legal Affairs, Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, Mr.
Hassan Abedin, Adviser to the Secretary General, Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, Ms Yasmin
Ullah, President of the Rohingya Human Rights Network,
Ms Razia Sultana, Director of the Arakan Rohingya National Organization and Coordinator of the Free
Rohingya Coalition,
Mr. Wakar Uddin, Director General of the Arakan Rohingya Union, Ms Hasina Begum,
Ms Hamida Khatun, Mr. Yousuf Ali,
as Advisers;
Mr. Scott Edmonds, Cartographer, International Mapping, Ms Vickie Taylor, Cartographer,
International Mapping,
as Technical Advisers;
Ms Elise Barber, Washington, DC, Ms Nancy Lopez, Washington, DC,
as Assistants;
Mr. Mark van Melle,
Mr. Erik Alexander van Houwelingen, Mr. Robby Veltmeijer,
as Security Officers.
The Government of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar is represented by:
H.E. Ms Aung San Suu Kyi, Union Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Republic of the Union of
Myanmar,
as Agent;
H.E. Mr. Kyaw Tint Swe, Union Minister for the Office of the State Counsellor of the Republic of
the Union of Myanmar,
as Alternate Agent;
H.E. Mr. Kyaw Tin, Union Minister for International Cooperation of the Republic of the Union of
Myanmar,
as Senior member of the delegation;
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S. Exc. M. Hassan Ali Hassan, directeur des affaires juridiques, Organisation de la coopération
islamique,
M. Hassan Abedin, conseiller du secrétaire général, Organisation de la coopération islamique, Mme
Yasmin Ullah, présidente du réseau de droits de la personne Rohingya,
Mme Razia Sultana, directrice de l’Arakan Rohingya National Organization et coordinatrice du réseau
Free Rohingya Coalition,
M. Wakar Uddin, directeur général de l’Arakan Rohingya Union, Mme Hasina Begum,
Mme Hamida Khatun,
M. Yousuf Ali,
comme conseillers ;
M. Scott Edmonds, cartographe, International Mapping, Mme Vickie Taylor, cartographe, International
Mapping,
comme conseillers techniques ; Mme Elise Barber (Washington DC), Mme Nancy Lopez (Washington DC),
comme assistantes ;
M. Mark van Melle,
M. Erik Alexander van Houwelingen,
M. Robby Veltmeijer,
comme agents de sécurité.
Le Gouvernement de la République de l’Union du Myanmar est représenté par :
S. Exc. Mme Aung San Suu Kyi, ministre des affaires étrangères de la République de l’Union du
Myanmar,
comme agent ;
S. Exc. M. Kyaw Tint Swe, ministre de l’Union pour le bureau du conseiller d’Etat de la République
de l’Union du Myanmar,
comme agent suppléant ;
S. Exc. M. Kyaw Tin, ministre de l’Union pour la coopération internationale de la République de
l’Union du Myanmar,
comme membre principal de la délégation ;
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Mr. Christopher Staker, member of the Bar of England and Wales, 39 Essex Chambers,
Mr. William Schabas, OC, MRIA, Professor of International Law, Middlesex University and Professor
of International Criminal Law and Human Rights, Leiden University,
Ms Phoebe Okowa, Professor of Public International Law, Queen Mary University of London, Advocate
of the High Court of Kenya, member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration,
as Counsel and Advocates;
Mr. Andreas Zimmermann, LLM (Harvard), Professor of International Law, University of Potsdam,
Director of the Potsdam Centre of Human Rights, member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration,
Ms Catherine Dobson, member of the Bar of England and Wales, 39 Essex Chambers,
as Counsel;
H.E. Mr. Soe Lynn Han, Ambassador of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar to the Kingdoms of
Belgium and the Netherlands,
Mr. Chan Aye, Director-General, International Organizations and Economic Department, Ministry of
Foreign Affairs,
Mr. Min Thein, Director-General, Protocol Department, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Aung Ko,
Director-General, Political Department, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ms Thi Da Oo,
Director-General, Attorney General’s Office,
Ms Leena Ghosh, Advisor to the Alternate Agent, Senior Peace Adviser, National Reconciliation and
Peace Center,
Ms Aye Thida Myo, Minister Counsellor, Permanent Mission of Myanmar to the United Nations, New
York,
Ms Myo Pa Pa Htun, Minister Counsellor, Permanent Mission of Myanmar to the United Nations, Geneva,
Mr. Zaw Naing Win, Deputy Director/Personal Staff Officer to the Agent,
Ms Phoo Pwint Ko Ko, Counsellor, Myanmar Embassy, Kingdom of Belgium,
Mr. Thu Rein Saw Htut Naing, Assistant Director, International Organizations and Economic
Department, Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
Mr. Swe Sett, Assistant Director/Personal Staff Officer to the Alternate Agent, Mr. Chan Aye, First
Secretary, Myanmar Embassy, Kingdom of Belgium,
Ms May Myat Noe Naing, First Secretary, Myanmar Embassy, Kingdom of Belgium,
Mr. Kyaw Kyaw Lwin, Third Secretary, Permanent Mission of Myanmar to the United Nations, Geneva,
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M. Christopher Staker, membre du barreau d’Angleterre et du pays de Galles, 39 Essex Chambers,
M. William Schabas, OC, MRIA, professeur de droit international à l’Université du Middlesex et
professeur de droit pénal international et des droits de l’homme à l’Université de Leyde,
Mme Phoebe Okowa, professeure de droit international public à la Queen Mary University of London,
avocate près la Haute Cour du Kenya, membre de la Cour permanente d’arbitrage,
comme conseils et avocats ;
M. Andreas Zimmermann, LLM (Université de Harvard), professeur de droit international à
l’Université de Potsdam, directeur du centre des droits de l’homme de l’Université de Potsdam,
membre de la Cour permanente d’arbitrage,
Mme Catherine Dobson, membre du barreau d’Angleterre et du pays de Galles, 39 Essex Chambers,
comme conseils ;
S. Exc. M. Soe Lynn Han, ambassadeur de la République de l’Union du Myanmar auprès des Royaumes de
Belgique et des Pays-Bas,
M. Chan Aye, directeur général du service des organisations internationales et de l’économie,
ministère des affaires étrangères,
M. Min Thein, directeur général du service du protocole, ministère des affaires étrangères,
M. Aung Ko, directeur général du service politique, ministère des affaires étrangères, Mme Thi Da
Oo, directrice générale, bureau de l’Attorney General,
Mme Leena Ghosh, conseillère auprès de l’agent suppléant, conseillère principale pour la paix,
Centre pour la réconciliation nationale et la paix,
Mme Aye Thidar Myo, ministre conseillère, mission permanente du Myanmar auprès de l’Organisation
des Nations Unies à New York,
Mme Myo Pa Pa Htun, ministre conseillère, mission permanente du Myanmar auprès de l’Organisation
des Nations Unies à Genève,
M. Zaw Naing Win, directeur adjoint du cabinet de l’agent,
Mme Phoo Pwint Ko Ko, conseillère, ambassade du Myanmar au Royaume de Belgique,
M. Thu Rein Saw Htut Naing, sous-directeur du service des organisations internationales et de
l’économie, ministère des affaires étrangères,
M. Swe Sett, sous-directeur du cabinet de l’agent suppléant,
M. Chan Aye, premier secrétaire, ambassade du Myanmar au Royaume de Belgique,
Mme May Myat Noe Naing, première secrétaire, ambassade du Myanmar au Royaume de Belgique,
M. Kyaw Kyaw Lwin, troisième secrétaire, mission permanente du Myanmar auprès de l’Organisation des
Nations Unies à Genève,
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Mr. Zaw·Thet, Head of Branch II, Protocol Department, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Kyaw Tin,
Legal Consultant,
Mr. Thihan Myo Nyun, Legal Consultant, Ms Tint Tint Tun, aide to the Agent,
Dr. Thet Lel Swe Aye, physician to the Agent,
as Members of the delegation;
Mr. Icarus Chan, Assistant to the Secretariat,
Mr. Matthew Christopher Terry, Assistant to the Secretariat,
M. Alison Onyango, Assistant to Counsel and Advocates,
as Assistants;
Pol. Lt. Pyae Phyo Naing, Security Officer to the Agent, Pol. Lt. Nay Min Tun, Security Officer to
the Agent, Pol. Lt Kyaw Zin Oo, Security Officer to the Agent, Pol. WO. Cherry Htet, Security
Officer to the Agent, Pol. Sgt. Ohn Mar Myint, Security Officer to the Agent,
as Security Officers.
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M. Zaw Thet, chef du service II, service du protocole, ministère des affaires étrangères,
M. Kyaw Tin, consultant juridique,
M. Thihan Myo Nyun, consultant juridique, Mme Tint Tint Tun, assistante de l’agent, Dr Thet Lel
Swe Aye, médecin de l’agent,
comme membres de la délégation ;
M. Icarus Chan, assistant au secrétariat,
M. Matthew Christopher Terry, assistant au secrétariat, Mme Alison Onyango, assistante des conseils
et avocats,
comme assistants ;
Pol. Lt. Pyae Phyo Naing, policier affecté à la sécurité de l’agent, Pol. Lt. Nay Min Tun, policier
affecté à la sécurité de l’agent, Pol. Lt. Kyaw Zin Oo, policier affecté à la sécurité de l’agent,
Pol. WO. Cherry Htet, policier affecté à la sécurité de l’agent, Pol. Sgt. Ohn Mar Myint, policier
affecté à la sécurité de l’agent,
comme agents de sécurité.
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The PRESIDENT: Please be seated. The sitting is open. The Court meets this morning to hear the
second round of oral observations of The Gambia on its request for the indication of provisional
measures. I see that Mr. Reichler is already at the lectern. I will give him the floor. You have
the floor.
MR. REICHLER:
Court.
I. URGENCY AND IRREPARABLE HARM
1. Thank you, Mr. President. Good morning, Mr. President, good morning, Members of the
2. Myanmar made two arguments about genocidal intent. First, they denied that they acted
with genocidal intent in their treatment of the Rohingya. Second, they argued that, even if
genocidal intent can be inferred from their conduct, it is not the only plausible inference that
can be drawn. I will respond to the first argument. Professor Sands will answer the second.
3. What is most striking, Mr. President, is what Myanmar has not denied. So I will begin there.
Myanmar has not denied that the United Nations Fact-Finding Mission reached this conclusion: “there
is no reasonable conclusion to draw, other than the inference of genocidal intent, from the State’s
pattern of conduct”1.
4. Nor has Myanmar denied that the Fact-Finding Mission reached this conclusion based on seven
specific indicators, which it found to be “indicators of genocidal intent in international case
law”2. Nor has Myanmar challenged the propriety of the Fact-Finding Mission’s use of these seven
indicators, or any one of them, for inferring genocidal intent. Professor Akhavan identified them
on Tuesday. I call them to your attention today, only for the purpose of considering what Myanmar
said, or failed to say, about them yesterday. This is the first indicator of genocidal intent.
“[F]irst, the Tatmadaw’s extreme brutality during its attacks on the Rohingya.”3
1 UN Human Rights Council (UN HRC), Detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding
Mission on Myanmar, UN doc. A/HRC/42/CRP.5 (16 Sept. 2019), para. 225.
2 Ibid., para. 224.
3 Ibid.
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5. Professor Akhavan and Mr. Loewenstein gave you many heart-rending examples of this, from the
reports of the UN Fact-Finding Mission. Myanmar did not deny any of it. In fact, its Agent
admitted that “it cannot be ruled out that disproportionate force was used by members of the
Defence Services”4.
“[S]econd, the organized nature of the Tatmadaw’s destruction.”5
6. Mr. Loewenstein showed you how the Tatmadaw employed the same brutal tactics in each Rohingya
village, in “clearance operations” that were planned and ordered by senior military staff. Myanmar
did not deny this. Nor did they deny that 392 Rohingya villages were systematically destroyed,
either totally or partially, during these operations.
“[T]hird, the enormity and nature of the sexual violence perpetrated against women and girls during
the ‘clearance operations’.”6
7. We heard nothing about sexual violence from Myanmar yesterday. Not a single word about it. Not
from the Agent. Not from any of their counsel. Because it is undeniable and unspeakable they
chose to ignore it completely. I cannot really blame them; I would hate to be the one having to
defend it.
“[F]ourth, the insulting, derogatory, racist and exclusionary utterances of Myanmar officials and
others prior, during and after the ‘clearance operations’.”7
8. Myanmar did not deny any of this, either. Nor could it. The Agent even underscored its
significance: “Hate narratives are not simply confined to hate speech language that contributes
to extreme polarization also amounts to hate narratives.8”
9. And here is such a narrative, from the Facebook page of Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, the
Commander-in-Chief of the Tatmadaw, before Facebook took his page down. Posted at the height of the
2017 “clearance operations”, it described “[t]he Bengali problem” as an, as yet,
4 CR 2019/19, p. 15, para. 15 (Aung San Suu Kyi).
5 UN HRC, Detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on Myanmar, UN
doc. A/HRC/42/CRP.5 (16 Sept. 2019), para. 224.
6 Ibid.
7 Ibid.
8 CR 2019/19, p. 19, para. 29 (Aung San Suu Kyi).
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“unfinished job” that the “government in office is taking great care in solving”9; he added: “[W]e
openly declare that ‘absolutely, our country has no Rohingya race’.”10
10. Returning to the seven indicators of genocidal intent:
“[F]ifth, the existence of discriminatory plans and policies, such as the Citizenship Law and the
[national verification card] process, as well as the Government’s efforts to clear, raze,
confiscate and build on land in a manner that sought to change the demographic and ethnic
composition of Rakhine State”11.
11. Again, no denial by Myanmar. How could it? Myanmar’s laws and policies overtly and expressly
discriminate against the Rohingya. All the Agent could say was that “birth certificates” would now
be issued “regardless of religious background”12. But not citizenship and nothing about the
confiscation of Rohingya lands.
“[S]ixth, the Government’s tolerance for public rhetoric of hatred and contempt for the
Rohingya”13.
12. Myanmar did not deny this either.
13. And,
“[S]eventh, the State’s failure to investigate and prosecute gross violations of international
human rights law and serious violations of international humanitarian law”14.
14. This is the only indicator of genocidal intent, the only one of the seven, that Myanmar has
disputed. The Agent herself asked: “Can there be genocidal intent on the part of a State that
actively investigates, prosecutes and punishes soldiers and officers who are accused of
wrongdoing?”15
15. Mr. President, we could not help but ask ourselves, what State is she talking about? It is
certainly not Myanmar. The Agent herself made this perfectly clear: “Under its 2008 Constitution,
9 UN HRC, Report of the detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on
Myanmar, UN doc. A/HRC/39/CRP.2 (17 Sept. 2018), para. 753.
10 Ibid., para. 1330.
11 UN HRC, Detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission
on Myanmar, UN doc. A/HRC/42/CRP.5 (16 Sept. 2019), para. 224.
12 CR 2019/19, pp. 19-20, para. 32 (Aung San Suu Kyi).
13 UN HRC, Detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission
on Myanmar, UN doc. A/HRC/42/CRP.5 (16 Sept. 2019), para. 224.
14 Ibid.
15 CR 2019/19, p. 17, para. 23 (Aung San Suu Kyi).
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Myanmar has a military justice system. Criminal cases against soldiers or officers for possible war
crimes committed in Rakhine must be investigated and prosecuted by that system.”16
16. To her credit, the Agent acknowledged the difficulties with such a system: “It is never easy
for armed forces to recognize self-interest in accountability for their members, and to implement a
will to accountability through actual investigations and prosecutions.”17
17. It certainly is not easy in Myanmar. How can anyone possibly expect the Tatmadaw to hold itself
accountable for genocidal acts against the Rohingya when six of its top generals including the
Commander-in-Chief, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing have all been accused of genocide by the UN
Fact-Finding Mission and recommended for criminal prosecution?18
18. In addition to Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, these include the Deputy Commander in Chief,
Vice Senior General Soe Win, and the Commanders of the two Light Infantry Divisions, the 33rd and
the 99th, which were primarily responsible for carrying out the “clearance operations” against the
Rohingya: Brigadier-General Aung Aung, and Brigadier-General Than Oo19.
19. Two days ago, on 10 December, International Human Rights Day, the United States Government
imposed sanctions on all of them20. The official announcement by the United States Department of
the Treasury, at tab 25 of your folders, described the crimes of which they are accused. When you
read this document, you will see under the name of each of these generals that these are the same
genocidal acts that the UN Fact-Finding Mission reported, and that Professor Akhavan and
Mr. Loewenstein described on Tuesday. Of particular interest, in light of the Agent’s comment on
accountability, the United States Government warned that: “Such abuses and the continuing impunity
must stop . . . Burma’s military must address the climate of impunity and cease abuses and
violations of universally accepted human rights.”21
16 CR 2019/19, p. 16, para. 17 (Aung San Suu Kyi).
17 CR 2019/19, p. 16, para. 19 (Aung San Suu Kyi).
18 UN HRC, Report of the detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on
Myanmar, UN doc. A/HRC/39/CRP.2 (17 Sept. 2018), para. 1555.
19 Ibid.
20 US Department of the Treasury, Treasury Sanctions Individuals for Roles in Atrocities and Other
Abuses
(10 Dec. 2019), available at https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/sm852.
21 Ibid.
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20. It should come as no surprise, then, that the Tatmadaw has not been willing to investigate,
prosecute or punish its own members for crimes against the Rohingya. There has been just one
prosecution, which was initiated only in response to an international outcry, and ended with full
pardons issued to the perpetrators22. I beg the Court’s forgiveness for displaying these
photographs, at tab 26, which are difficult to look at, and some in the courtroom might wish to
look away, but the extreme brutality of the Tatmadaw toward the Rohingya is part of the evidence of
genocidal intent. Even Myanmar has not denied this.
21. This is a photo, obtained by Reuters reporters, of ten Rohingya men in Tatmadaw custody, with
their wrists tied behind their backs, at Inn Din in Rakhine State.
22. This is a photo, obtained by the same reporters, immediately after they were executed at
point-blank range.
23. After the photos were published worldwide, the Tatmadaw made an arrest. Not of the soldiers who
committed these brutal murders. But of the Reuters reporters23. They were tried by a military
court, convicted of violating the Official Secrets Act, and sentenced to seven years of
imprisonment24. The international community came down hard on Myanmar for this, and the Tatmadaw
eventually put the killers on trial and sentenced them, but gave them full military pardon after
serving only seven months. The message was not that soldiers would be held accountable for crimes
against the Rohingya, but exactly the opposite. Even the Agent admitted: “Many of us in Myanmar
were unhappy with the pardons.”25 Unhappy? Perhaps. But absolutely unable, or unwilling, to do
anything about it.
24. The Agent and Professor Okowa mentioned one other prosecution by the Tatmadaw26. What they
neglected to tell you was that the victims were not Rohingya, and the crime was not committed in
Rakhine State. It had nothing to do with the Rohingya. We were also told about the initiation of a
new court martial proceeding, on 25 November 2019, two weeks after The Gambia’s
22 UN HRC, Report of the detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on
Myanmar, UN doc. A/HRC/39/CRP.2 (17 Sept. 2018), para. 232.
23 Ibid., para. 1296.
24 Ibid., para. 1296.
25 CR 2019/19, p. 17, para. 20 (Aung San Suu Kyi).
26 CR 2019/19, p. 17, para. 21 (Aung San Suu Kyi); CR 2019/19, p. 70, para. 14 (Okowa).
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Application was filed, and two weeks before these hearings began27. Could there be any connection?
25. Reference was made yesterday to an International Commission of Enquiry, created by Myanmar to
investigate events in Rakhine State. We were told by the Agent that it might lead to new
prosecutions28. But that is not how the Chair of the Commission sees it. She stated very clearly
that “there will be no blaming of anybody, no finger-pointing of anybody because we don’t achieve
anything by that procedure”29.
26. On Tuesday, we called your attention to the observations of the UN Special Rapporteur for human
rights in Myanmar. She wrote, as you will recall: “[t]hose responsible for these violations enjoy
impunity which perpetuates the devastating cycle of abuse”, and that Myanmar is “incapable of
delivering accountability”30. Now perhaps you can better appreciate how well founded these
observations are.
27. Mr. President, Myanmar’s Agent told you that Myanmar is “committed to the voluntary, safe and
dignified repatriation of displaced persons from Rakhine under the framework agreement reached
between Bangladesh and Myanmar”31. She then asked another rhetorical question: “how can there be an
ongoing genocide or genocidal intent when these concrete steps are being taken in Rakhine”32?
Professor Okowa spent much of her time extolling the virtues of this supposedly wonderful
repatriation programme33.
28. In fact, it is a complete fraud. Even Professor Okowa admitted: “It is true that few displaced
persons have returned.”34 The UN Fact-Finding Mission explained why, in its September 2018
report: “While the Myanmar Government has, in principle, committed to
27 Office of the Commander in Chief of Defence Services, “Court-Martial Trial on Incident of
Gutapyin Commences”, available at http://cincds.gov.mm/node/5471.
28 CR 2019/18, p. 20, para. 17 (Tambadou).
29 UN HRC, Report of the detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on
Myanmar, UN doc. A/HRC/39/CRP.2 (17 Sept. 2018), para. 1619.
30 Yanghee Lee & Isabel Todd, “Myanmar's military companies should be sanctioned”, Al Jazeera (26
Nov. 2019), available at
https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/myanmar-military-sanctioned-1….
31 CR 2019/19, p. 20, para. 32 (Aung San Suu Kyi). 32 CR 2019/19, p. 20, para. 33 (Aung San Suu
Kyi). 33 See CR 2019/19, pp. 65-69, paras. 9-11 (Okowa).
34 CR 2019/19, p. 68, para. 10 (Okowa).
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Rohingya repatriation, nothing thus far indicates this will be in a manner ensuring respect for
human rights, essential for a safe, dignified and sustainable return.”35
29. The Fact-Finding report continues:
“on the contrary, Myanmar is making active efforts to prevent this return, through the
consolidation of the destruction of Rohingya villages, through appropriation of vacated land and
terrain clearance, erasing every trace of the Rohingya communities, and the construction on this
land of houses for other ethnic groups”36.
30. This deplorable situation did not change as of the Fact-Finding Mission’s September
2019 report: “Conditions in Myanmar are unsafe, unsustainable and impossible for approximately one
million displaced Rohingya to return to their homes and lands.”37
31. The Fact-Finding report continues: “the Government is able but unwilling to change conditions
in Rakhine State to ensure the Rohingya are able to enjoy all of their human rights. This is
perhaps the strongest indication of why Rohingya justifiably insist that they are not prepared to
return at this time.38”
32. Professor Okowa claimed that Myanmar’s lack of genocidal intent is proven by UNHCR’s
collaboration with the Government on repatriation of displaced Rohingya. But she failed to quote
from any of UNHCR’s actual reports, including this one, to the Security Council:
“Conditions are not yet conducive to the voluntary repatriation of Rohingya refugees. The causes of
their flight have not been addressed, and we have yet to see substantive progress on addressing the
exclusion and denial of rights that has deepened over the last decades, rooted in their lack of
citizenship.”39
33. Nor did she quote from this UNHCR report:
“UNHCR and UNDP, as was mentioned, have committed to helping Myanmar create conditions inside
Rakhine State that would be conducive to the voluntary and sustainable return of refugees, meaning
freedom of movement and a pathway to citizenship for those who remain . . . These conditions were
stipulated in the MOU, but are not yet in place. We are still waiting for access to carry out our
work.”40
35 UN HRC, Report of the detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on
Myanmar, UN doc. A/HRC/39/CRP.2 (17 Sept. 2018), para. 1181.
36 Ibid., para. 1182.
37 UN HRC, Detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission
on Myanmar, UN doc. A/HRC/42/CRP.5 (16 Sept. 2019), para. 213.
38 Ibid., para. 248.
39 UN Security Council, 8179th Meeting, UN doc. S/PV.8179, 13 Feb. 2018, p. 4.
40 UNHCR, Statement to the Seventh Ministerial Conference of the Bali Process (7 Aug. 2018)
available at
https://www.unhcr.org/en-us/admin/hcspeeches/5b69a6e47/statement-sevent…
- process.html?query=Rohingya.
- 19 -
34. These conditions are still not in place, Mr. President. Senior Myanmar government and military
officials refuse even to use the word “Rohingya” in order to preserve their racist myth that no
such group exists. The Court will have noted that the Agent, as is her custom, refused to refer to
the Muslims of Rakhine State as “Rohingya”; she uttered the word only in reciting the full formal
name of the ARSA insurgent group41.
35. Myanmar’s rejection of the Rohingya, and its failure to carry out its commitments to UNHCR and
UNDP, demonstrate that it has no intention of allowing the displaced Rohingya to return. This is
the view of Bangladesh, which Professor Okowa mistakenly depicted as having a favourable view of
Myanmar’s commitment to repatriation. On 9 June 2019, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued the
following statement:
“The Government of Myanmar failed to restore normalcy in northern Rakhine and make any visible
progress in creating an environment conducive for return, which is an essential precondition for
the commencement of repatriation . . . Other than making hollow promises, Myanmar has so far made
hardly any progress in fulfilling its obligations.”42
36. Professor Okowa misconstrues the willingness of Bangladesh and other States to promote
repatriation of the Rohingya as endorsement of Myanmar’s actions. China and Japan are to be
commended for contributing to infrastructure and transportation to facilitate repatriation. And
India, too, is to be applauded for its encouragement of repatriation. But it is up to Myanmar to
create the conditions conducive for voluntary return as UNHCR has repeatedly reminded it and it
has stubbornly refused to do so, as both UNHCR and the UN Fact-Finding Mission have reported. And,
as a result, as even Myanmar’s counsel now admits, no significant repatriation has occurred.
37. Reference was made to a commission headed by former Secretary-General Kofi Annan, which
presented a report in August 2017. It is of no assistance to Myanmar in these proceedings, because,
as the UN Fact-Finding Mission observed, the Annan Commission’s mandate “was focused on proposing
concrete measures for improving the welfare of all people in Rakhine State.
41 See CR 2019/19, p. 13, para. 6 (Aung San Suu Kyi); CR 2019/19, p. 18, para. 27 (Aung San Suu
Kyi).
42 People’s Republic of Bangladesh, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, untitled press release (9 June
2019) (Observations of The Gambia (OG), Ann. 7).
- 20 -
It was not mandated to investigate specific cases of alleged human rights violations.”43 And it did
not make any such investigation or finding.
38. Mr. President, Myanmar has told us that its “clearance operations” were not aimed at destroying
the Rohingya, but were actually intended, to quote the Agent, “to clear an area of insurgents or
terrorists”44.
39. By deliberately killing Rohingya children? Slaughtered mercilessly by the Tatmadaw in these
“clearance operations”. Many were infants, beaten to death or torn from their mothers’ arms and
thrown into a river to drown. How many of them were terrorists?
40. By raping and gang raping and savagely mutilating women and girls? Is that indicative of
fighting terrorism, or of committing genocide against a hated group?
41. By burning to the ground hundreds of villages, and thousands of homes, with entire families
forced to remain inside?
42. Where is the evidence that the Tatmadaw’s “clearance operations” were primarily directed at
insurgents or terrorists, and not at the Rohingya population? There is very little. We have been
told that the trigger for the 2017 “clearance operation” was an attack by ARSA on 25 August
of that year. But contemporaneous reporting from Myanmar shows that the Tatmadaw deployed its
notorious light infantry divisions to northern Rakhine State two weeks earlier, as of 11 August,
as reflected in this article in The Irawaddy, at tab 27, complete with photograph of arriving
troops, and quotes from senior military officers45. The evidence is more consistent with Senior
General Min Aung Hlaing’s Facebook post that the troops were deployed because it was time to solve
“the Bengali problem” once and for all46.
43. Mr. President, we do not contend that there were no insurgents, or that Myanmar did not have
the right to take military action against them. But we do contend that armed conflict can never be
an excuse for genocide.
43 UN HRC, Report of the detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on
Myanmar, UN doc. A/HRC/39/CRP.2 (17 Sep. 2018), para. 1605 and fn. 3364.
44 CR 2019/19, p. 15, para. 12 (Aung San Suu Kyi).
45 “ANALYSIS: Myanmar Army Deployed in Maungdaw”, The Irrawaddy (11 Aug. 2017), available at
https://www.irrawaddy.com/news/burma/analysis-myanmar-army-deployed-mau….
46 UN HRC, Report of the detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on
Myanmar, UN doc. A/HRC/39/CRP.2 (17 Sep. 2018), para. 753.
- 21 -
44. As the UN Fact-Finding Mission observed, regarding the Tatmadaw’s conduct of these “clearance
operations”,
“There was not the least effort on their part to make any distinction between ARSA fighters and
civilians, or to specifically target a military objective or identify and repel an immediate
threat. Everyone was a target and no one was spared: mothers, infants, pregnant women, the old and
infirmed all fell victim to this ruthless campaign.”47
45. Professor Schabas helpfully confirmed that reports of fact-finding missions like this one “may
contain valuable information”48. However, he criticized the UN Mission’s conclusions, in its
September 2019 report, that evidence of Myanmar’s genocidal intentions had “strengthened” over the
past year, on the ground that the Mission did not mention how, or on what basis, it reached that
conclusion49. He must have skipped over all the relevant paragraphs. Paragraph 9, for example,
summarizes the evidence the Mission considered in reaching its conclusion. It includes:
“the Government’s hostile policies toward the Rohingya, including its continued denial of
citizenship and ethnic identity, the living conditions to which it subjects them, its failure to
reform laws that subjugate the Rohingya people, the continuation of hate speech directed at the
Rohingya, its prior commission of genocide and its disregard for accountability in relation to
the ‘clearance operations’ of 2016 and 2017”50.
Much of the report consists of extensive details supporting all of these findings.
46. Professor Schabas was also mistaken in asserting that there are no mass graves51. To be sure,
Myanmar has not made it easy to find them. It has systematically denied independent fact finders
and human rights organizations, as well as journalists, access to areas of Rakhine State where its
“clearance operations” were carried out. Nevertheless, the Associated Press located at least five
mass graves of Rohingya. The report is located at tab 28 of your judges’ folders52.
47. Professor Okowa told you that the requirement of urgency is not met, and that provisional
measures should be denied, because, allegedly, the decision to sue Myanmar was made
47 UN HRC, Report of the detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on
Myanmar, UN doc. A/HRC/39/CRP.2 (17 Sep. 2018), para. 1433.
48 CR 2019/19, p. 36, para. 45 (Schabas).
49 CR 2019/19, p. 36, para. 45 (Schabas).
50 UN HRC, Detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on
Myanmar, UN doc. A/HRC/42/CRP.5 (16 Sep. 2019), para. 9.
51 CR 2019/19, p. 37, para. 48 (Schabas).
52 Foster Klug, “AP finds evidence for graves, Rohingya massacre in Myanmar”, Associated Press (1
Feb. 2018), available at:
https://apnews.com/ef46719c5d1d4bf98cfefcc4031a5434/AP-finds-evidence-f…
-in-Myanmar.
- 22 -
in March 2019 and the Application was not filed until November53. She asked, somewhat sarcastically
it appeared, “was there something that happened” in the interim that gave urgency to the request
for provisional measures?54 The answer is “yes”, the submission of the UN
Fact-Finding Mission’s report, in September 2019, which concluded that evidence of Myanmar’s
genocidal intent had “strengthened” in the past year, and that “there is a serious risk that
genocidal actions may occur or recur”55. That prompted The Gambia to proceed as quickly as possible
to retain counsel and file the Application.
48. I would also refer Professor Okowa to her colleague, Professor Zimmermann, who is listed as
counsel to Myanmar in these proceedings. In his commentary on Article 41 of the Court’s Statute, he
states: “Under the aspect of urgency, it is not relevant whether the situation complained of had
already existed for a considerable time when the request was filed, for what is important is only
the imminence of action prejudicial to the rights at stake.”56
49. Mr. President, we demonstrated on Tuesday that there is an urgent need for provisional measures
to prevent irreparable harm to the rights of The Gambia that are at issue in this case, and that
the case for provisional measures here is among the most compelling that have ever been presented
to the Court. Nothing Myanmar said yesterday contradicts this. The Fact-Finding Mission’s
conclusion that the only reasonable inference to be drawn from Myanmar’s pattern of conduct is
genocidal intent still stands. Indeed, as we have seen this morning, Myanmar either admits, or
fails to deny, what the extensive evidence we submitted makes perfectly clear: there is an urgent
need for provisional measures to prevent irreparable harm to The Gambia’s rights as a State party
to the Genocide Convention.
50. Mr. President, Members of the Court, this concludes my presentation. I thank you again for
your kind courtesy and patient attention, and I ask that you call my colleague,
Professor d’Argent, to the podium.
53 CR 2019/19, p. 65, para. 8 (Okowa).
54 CR 2019/19, p. 65, para. 8 (Okowa).
55 UN HRC, Detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on
Myanmar, UN doc. A/HRC/42/CRP.5 (16 Sep. 2019), para. 9.
56 Karin Oellers-Frahm & Andreas Zimmermann, “Article 41”, in Andreas Zimmermann et al., The
Statute of the International Court of Justice: A Commentary (3rd ed. 2019), para. 57.
- 23 -
The PRESIDENT: I thank Mr. Reichler for his statement. I now give the floor to Professor
Pierre d’Argent. You have the floor.
M. d’ARGENT : Merci, Monsieur le président.
II. COMPÉTENCE PRIMA FACIE
1. Monsieur le président, Madame la vice-présidente, Mesdames et Messieurs les juges, il me revient
de répondre aux arguments qui vous ont été présentés hier par Me Staker autour du thème de votre
compétence prima facie.
1. Le différend bilatéral porté devant la Cour oppose la Gambie au Myanmar
2. Me Staker a d’abord soutenu que la Gambie a agi «as the proxy for an international organization»
et que la Gambie a saisi la Cour, non pas en tant qu’Etat partie à la convention, mais en sa
qualité de président du comité ministériel ad hoc de l’OCI, c’est-à-dire en tant qu’organe de cette
organisation internationale57. Me Staker en a déduit que votre compétence ratione personae ferait
défaut et que concevoir les choses autrement reviendrait à contourner l’article 34 du Statut58.
3. La proposition fait fi de la réalité. En effet, c’est la Gambie qui a proposé à l’OCI d’adopter
la résolution 59/45 de mai 2018. Ce n’est pas l’OCI qui a mandaté la Gambie, c’est la Gambie qui a
été chercher au sein de l’OCI le soutien de ses Etats membres. Tel est assurément son droit, de
même que rien n’interdit à la Gambie de recevoir le soutien financier d’autres Etats.
4. Par ailleurs, Me Staker oscille en pleine contradiction juridique lorsqu’il vous dit dans le
même moment que la Gambie aurait agi en tant qu’organe de l’OCI et en tant que mandataire. Bien
entendu, en droit, cela ne peut être que l’un ou l’autre. En réalité, ce n’est ni l’un, ni l’autre.
5. La présidence du comité ministériel ad hoc qui est revenue à la Gambie du fait de son initiative
ne transforme pas la Gambie en organe ou agent de l’OCI. Ce n’est d’ailleurs pas en cette qualité
que la Gambie a saisi la Cour.
6. En effet, lorsque la Gambie soumet à la Cour sa requête introductive d’instance, cet acte
juridique est incontestablement attribuable à la Gambie en tant qu’Etat Membre des Nations Unies
57 CR 2019/19, p. 46, par. 23 (Staker).
58 Ibid., par. 25.
- 24 -
lié par le Statut de la Cour et y ayant accès. L’agent de la Gambie qui signe la requête est le
ministre de la justice de ce pays. Il en est l’organe ; il n’a pas été mis à la disposition de
l’OCI et n’a pas agi sous le contrôle effectif de cette organisation59, pas plus qu’il n’en est le
mandataire. Aucun document vous ayant été soumis ne permet de soutenir que l’OCI est en droit de
confier des mandats («proxy») à l’un de ses membres, ni qu’elle l’aurait fait en l’espèce.
7. Les Etats membres de l’OCI n’ont fait qu’encourager la Gambie à agir devant la Cour. Monsieur le
président, il n’y a aucun contournement de l’article 34 du Statut lorsqu’un Etat ayant accès à la
Cour agit avec le soutien et les encouragements politiques de 56 autres Etats, fussent-ils réunis
au sein d’une organisation internationale.
8. Il est à cet égard totalement indifférent que 13 des 57 Etats membres de l’OCI ne sont pas liés
par la convention ou son article IX. Le lien d’instance formé par la requête du 11 novembre dernier
a été établi entre la Gambie et le Myanmar. Ce n’est qu’au regard de ces deux Etats que la
compétence prima facie de la Cour doit être établie.
9. Monsieur le président, Mesdames et Messieurs les juges, le différend judiciaire dont vous êtes
saisis oppose bien la Gambie au Myanmar et non l’OCI et le Myanmar.
10. Me Staker a recyclé son argument ratione personae lors de l’examen de la compétence
ratione materiae de la Cour60, mais, pour les mêmes raisons, cet argument doit être rejeté.
2. Le différend bilatéral entre la Gambie et le Myanmar existait avant le dépôt de la requête
introductive d’instance
11. Me Staker a ensuite soutenu qu’aucun différend au sujet de la convention sur le génocide
n’aurait existé entre les Parties avant le 11 novembre 2019, jour du dépôt de la requête
introductive d’instance. Mon collègue Me Suleman vous a exposé très clairement mardi que le
différend entre les Parties existait bien avant la saisine de la Cour.
12. En réponse, Me Staker soutient d’abord que les résolutions de l’OCI sont sans pertinence pour
établir l’existence préalable d’un différend car le Myanmar n’en serait pas membre et que ces
résolutions ne contiendraient aucune affirmation positive selon laquelle le Myanmar aurait violé
la
59 CDI, Projet d’articles sur la responsabilité des organisations internationales (2011), art. 7.
60 CR 2019/19, p. 48, par. 31 (Staker).
- 25 -
convention, tandis que, s’appuyant sur l’affaire des Iles Marshall61, il a mis en doute la
signification du vote positif de la Gambie.
13. Le fait que le Myanmar ne soit pas membre de l’OCI est indifférent car ces résolutions ont été
portées à sa connaissance, ce que le Myanmar n’a pas contesté puisqu’il y a réagi62.
14. Par ailleurs, ces résolutions visent explicitement le Myanmar et la situation des Rohingya,
tandis qu’elles font référence à la nécessité de prévenir le génocide. Tel est notamment le cas de
la résolution de mai 2018 qui crée le comité ministériel ad hoc. La résolution 4/46 de mars 2019
qui n’était pas jointe au dossier que le Myanmar vous a transmis hier mais qui fut bien visée
dans la requête introductive d’instance et jointe aux observations de la Gambie appelle le
Myanmar à honorer ses obligations «under international law and human rights covenants, and to
take all necessary measures to immediately halt all vestiges and manifestations
of … genocide … against Rohingya Muslims»63. Peut-on, en langage diplomatique, être plus clair ?
Pourquoi appeler au respect d’obligations si ce n’est parce qu’on les considère violées ?
15. Quant aux votes de la Gambie au soutien de ces résolutions, je rappellerai qu’elles ne
contenaient pas «nombre de propositions différentes»64 et qu’elles étaient monothématiques, de
telle manière que la signification de ces habitudes de vote est limpide.
16. Me Staker a également contesté que les rapports de la mission d’établissement des faits du
Conseil des droits de l’homme pouvaient servir de base pour identifier un différend préalable entre
la Gambie et le Myanmar. Certes, la Gambie n’est pas l’auteure de ces rapports, mais il est
incontestable qu’en saluant l’intention de la Gambie de déférer à votre compétence le présent
différend, le rapport onusien en a nécessairement averti le Myanmar, d’autant que l’Etat défendeur
61 Obligations relatives à des négociations concernant la cessation de la course aux armes
nucléaires et le désarmement nucléaire (Iles Marshall c. Royaume-Uni), exceptions préliminaires,
arrêt, C.I.J. Recueil 2016 (II), p. 855, par. 56.
62 CR 2019/18, p. 47-48, par. 18, 20 (Suleman).
63 OIC, résolution no 4/46-MM sur la situation de la communauté musulmane du Myanmar, doc. OIC/CFM-
46/2019/MM/RES/FINAL (1er-2 mars 2019), disponible à l’adresse :
https://www.oic-oci.org/docdown/?docID
=4447&refID=1250.
64 Obligations relatives à des négociations concernant la cessation de la course aux armes
nucléaires et le désarmement nucléaire (Iles Marshall c. Royaume-Uni), exceptions préliminaires,
arrêt, C.I.J. Recueil 2016 (II), p. 855, par. 56.
- 26 -
a catégoriquement rejeté ce rapport65. Le Myanmar ne pouvait pas ne pas être conscient de
l’existence du différend.
17. Me Staker a considéré que la déclaration de la Gambie à l’Assemblée générale des
Nations Unies serait sans importance car le vice-président gambien qui a alors parlé avait omis de
viser spécifiquement la convention sur le génocide. La déclaration gambienne à l’Assemblée générale
date du 26 septembre66, soit dix jours après le rapport d’enquête visant explicitement la
convention sur le génocide et saluant l’intention de la Gambie de porter son différend devant la
Cour et trois jours avant son rejet catégorique par le Myanmar67. Me Staker soutient-il
sérieusement que le Myanmar pouvait légitimement penser que l’objet du différend que la Gambie
s’est déclarée prête à soumettre à la Cour avait changé du tout au tout en l’espace de quelques
jours ?
18. Au sujet de la note verbale gambienne du 11 octobre 2019, Me Staker a formulé plusieurs
objections, mais il n’a pas contesté que le Myanmar l’avait reçue.
19. Selon Me Staker, la note verbale n’aurait appelé aucune réponse car elle ne spécifiait
aucun fait particulier au soutien des accusations qui y sont contenues68.
20. Me Staker confond manifestement les exigences de l’article 38 du Règlement au sujet du contenu
de la requête introductive d’instance avec la simple nécessité de manifester avant celle-ci que les
Parties sont en désaccord au sujet du respect de certaines obligations internationales. Par
ailleurs, dans la mesure où, à la différence d’autres clauses compromissoires, l’article IX de la
convention ne subordonne pas la compétence de la Cour à l’existence de négociations préalables, les
exigences formulées par Me Staker sont déplacées.
21. La Cour ne manquera pas de contraster les affirmations de Me Staker selon lesquelles le
Myanmar aurait sans doute répondu à la note verbale de la Gambie si elle avait été plus élaborée,
avec l’attitude du Myanmar qui, lorsque le rapport détaillé de la commission d’établissement des
faits lui est transmis, le rejette en bloc et très rapidement.
65 CR 2019/18, p. 48, par. 21 (Suleman).
66 Assemblée générale des Nations Unies, soixante-quatorzième session, 8e réunion plénière,
Discours de Mme Isatou Touray, Vice-présidente de la République de la Gambie, doc. A/74/PV.8 (26
septembre 2019), p. 31.
67 République de l’Union du Myanmar, Bureau du Conseiller d’État, U Kyaw Tint Swe, Ministre de
l’Union pour le Bureau du Conseiller d’État et Chef de la délégation du Myanmar à la
soixante-quatorzième session de l’Assemblée générale des Nations Unies prononce une déclaration au
débat général de haut niveau, New York, 29 septembre 2019, (30 septembre 2019), disponible à
l’adresse : https://www.statecounsellor.gov.mm/en/node/2551, p. 11.
68 CR 2019/19, p. 50, par. 42 (Staker).
- 27 -
22. Ce simple fait permet également de rejeter l’affirmation selon laquelle le mois s’étant écoulé
entre la note verbale et la requête du 11 novembre fut trop bref pour permettre au Myanmar de
prendre position69. L’Etat défendeur n’a pourtant eu besoin que de treize jours pour rejeter d’une
phrase le rapport de 190 pages du 16 septembre. Me Staker peut-il éclairer la Cour sur la durée
convenable qu’un Etat accusé de génocide serait, selon lui, en droit d’attendre avant que l’Etat
auteur de cette accusation déjà maintes fois repoussée par ailleurs puisse saisir la Cour ?
23. Me Staker s’est aussi interrogé sur la raison pour laquelle la note verbale a été envoyée une
semaine après que la Gambie s’eut adjoint les services de ses conseils, et non avant. Il en a
déduit que l’envoi de la note verbale aurait été «a legal formality»70.
24. Si par «legal formality», Me Staker vise un acte confirmant l’existence d’un différend
préexistant, il aura correctement identifié la nature de la note verbale du 11 octobre. Sauf à
considérer que le silence du Myanmar vaut acceptation de responsabilité, la note verbale a
simplement confirmé l’existence d’un différend entre les Parties au sujet de la convention sur le
génocide avant la saisine de la Cour. D’ailleurs, le porte-parole du Gouvernement birman déclara le
16 novembre 2019, cinq jours après la requête introductive d’instance, que le Myanmar s’y attendait
depuis plus d’un mois.
3. La Gambie peut invoquer la responsabilité du Myanmar pour violation de la convention et saisir
la Cour de son différend
25. Monsieur le président, tandis que le professeur Schabas a contesté la plausibilité des demandes
(«plausibility of claims») qui est une question distincte sur laquelle le professeur Sands
reviendra, Me Staker n’a pas contesté la plausibilité des droits en litige dont la Gambie sollicite
la protection. Il a toutefois estimé qu’à défaut d’avoir été lésée par les actes qu’elle dénonce,
la Gambie n’aurait pas de «standing» dans la présente procédure.
26. Me Staker n’a pas contesté que la Gambie était en droit d’invoquer la responsabilité du Myanmar
en tant qu’Etat «autre qu’un Etat lésé» au sens de l’article 48 des articles sur la responsabilité
internationale des Etats, mais il a considéré que cette invocation de responsabilité ne
69 CR 2019/19, p. 50-51, par. 44 (Staker).
70 CR 2019/19, p. 52, par. 47 (Staker).
- 28 -
pouvait être faite que dans les relations internationales et non devant un juge71. Il a également
soutenu que l’affaire Belgique c. Sénégal devait être distinguée de la présente instance car, dans
ce cas, la Belgique aurait été un Etat lésé. Il a enfin brandi le spectre de l’actio popularis. Sur
ce dernier point, le professeur Sands répondra à Me Staker ; je me limiterai à quelques brèves
observations sur les autres points relatifs au prétendu défaut de «standing».
27. S’agissant de l’arrêt Belgique c. Sénégal, Me Staker n’a pas expliqué la raison pour laquelle
1) la Cour n’a pas jugé nécessaire d’identifier si la Belgique avait été spécialement atteinte et
2) la Cour a au contraire affirmé de manière plus générale que, face à des obligations erga omnes
partes, l’exigence d’un intérêt particulier aurait pour conséquence qu’aucun Etat ne serait, dans
bien des cas, en mesure de présenter une demande contre l’Etat auteur du fait illicite.
28. S’agissant de la distinction entre l’invocation de la responsabilité dans les relations
internationales ou devant la Cour, elle paraît particulièrement obscure et injustifiée. Invoquer la
responsabilité devant un juge ou dans des rapports diplomatiques a toujours pour but de dénoncer un
manquement au droit. La distinction suggérée par Me Staker n’apparaît pas dans les travaux de la
Commission du droit international. Elle est également contredite par l’Institut de droit
international72 lorsqu’il existe comme en l’espèce un lien juridictionnel entre les parties.
29. Me Staker a encore soutenu que la demande de mesures conservatoires se heurtait à
l’article 41 du Statut qui dispose qu’elles visent à préserver le «droit de chacun». Il ne s’est
toutefois pas expliqué à cet égard et n’a en rien contesté que cette formule vise tous les «droits
en litige devant le juge»73.
4. La réserve birmane relative à l’article VIII de la convention ne prive pas la Cour de sa
compétence, pas plus qu’elle n’empêche son exercice
30. Enfin, Me Staker a soutenu que, par la réserve birmane relative à l’article VIII de la
convention, la Cour ne pourrait être valablement saisie et devrait décliner l’exercice de sa
compétence.
71 CR 2019/19, p. 56, par. 65 (Staker).
72 G. Gaja, «Les obligations erga omnes en droit international», Justitia et pace, Institut de
droit international, résolution de Cracovie (2005), Cinquième Commission : Les obligations et les
droits erga omnes en droit international, art. 3, disponible à l’adresse :
http://www.idi-iil.org/app/uploads/2017/06/2005_kra_01_fr.pdf.
73 CR 2019/18, p. 55, par. 17 (d’Argent).
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31. Parce que le Myanmar n’a pas accepté l’article VIII de la convention, aucun Etat partie ne
pourrait valablement saisir la Cour, alors même que, de l’aveu de l’Etat défendeur, celui-ci a
donné compétence à son égard en consentant à l’article IX. Le Myanmar vide l’article IX de son
contenu et Me Staker n’a pas expliqué ce que le consentement de l’Etat défendeur à l’article IX et
à votre compétence pouvait en ce cas signifier.
32. Au stade conservatoire où sa compétence doit s’apprécier prima facie, la Cour ne devra guère
s’attarder sur cet argument qui, disons-le franchement, est fort éloigné de la bonne foi qui
devrait présider à l’interprétation des traités.
33. Monsieur le président, Madame la vice-présidente, Mesdames et Messieurs les juges, je vous
remercie de votre attention. Puis-je vous demander, Monsieur le président, de bien vouloir inviter
le professeur Philippe Sands à prendre la parole ?
Le PRESIDENT : Je remercie le professeur d’Argent pour sa présentation. Je donne à présent la
parole au professeur Sands. Vous avez la parole, Monsieur.
M. SANDS : Merci, Monsieur le président, Madame la vice-présidente, Mesdames et Messieurs de la
Cour.
III. THE LAW
1. I will address the legal arguments made by Myanmar in the first round, in six points.
2. I have to say, at the outset it was hard not to be struck by Myanmar’s first round arguments, a
sort of “Back to the Future” of legal submissions.
3. My first point. Mr. Staker addressed the Court at length on the issue of legal interest and
standing. His position, in short, was that The Gambia has no legal interest in the question of
whether Myanmar is treating its citizens in accordance with the requirements of
the 1948 Convention. He cited numerous cases in support of that contention, but there was one that
he did not mention. As he addressed the Court, in dulcet Australian tones, I shut my eyes and
suddenly wondered if I was not hearing the voice of Sir Percy Spender, back in 1966, as he
explained why he cast the decisive President’s vote in favour of the Court’s conclusion: you will
recall that decision, that Ethiopia and Liberia “cannot be considered to have established any legal
right or interest
- 30 -
appertaining to them in the subject-matter of the present claims”, namely the question of whether
South Africa was treating the inhabitants of the territory of South West Africa in accordance with
obligations incumbent upon it under international law74. That Judgment caused a scandal, it cast
the Court into a wilderness for nearly two decades. This Court could, I suppose, if it wishes, rule
that The Gambia has no legal interest in the case, but you will surely be aware that to take that
approach will cast the Court into an incomparably more bleak wilderness, given that the
overwhelming majority of the Members of the United Nations, having endorsed the
reports of the UN Fact-Finding Mission, and other UN supported activities, will be truly
shocked if this Court, 53 years after South West Africa, declines to indicate provisional
measures in this case. But of course we trust that that will not be the case.
4. Indeed, I can direct Mr. Staker’s attention to a paragraph of that dismal Judgment: paragraph
66. Even Sir Percy Spender even Sir Percy Spender was willing to accept that if Ethiopia and
Liberia had been parties to a treaty to which South Africa was also a party, which provided basic
rights for the inhabitants of South West Africa, they would have had standing. Substantive rights,
the Court ruled,
“may be derived from participation in an international instrument by a State which has signed and
ratified, or has acceded, or has in some other manner become a party to it; and which in
consequence, and subject to any exceptions expressly indicated, is entitled to enjoy rights under
all the provisions of the instrument concerned”75.
In the South West Africa case, back in 1966, the three countries were not all parties to an
international instrument like the Genocide Convention and hence, Sir Percy ruled, they did not
have legal standing. By contrast, The Gambia is a party to such a treaty, and so is Myanmar. The
Gambia has a legal interest, and it has legal standing.
5. My second point, the conditions governing an order for provisional measures. Mr. Staker asserted
that, on the facts before you, the claim that a genocide has occurred is not “plausible”. Indeed,
he went on, it is so manifestly lacking that the case should not even be inscribed on the Court’s
List. Reject the application in limine, he basically said76.
74 South West Africa (Ethiopia v. South Africa; Liberia v. South Africa), Second Phase, Judgment,
I.C.J. Reports 1966, p. 51, para. 99.
75 South West Africa (Ethiopia v. South Africa; Liberia v. South Africa), Second Phase, Judgment,
I.C.J. Reports 1966, pp. 39-40, para. 66.
76 CR 2019/19, p. 52, para. 48 (Staker).
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6. He followed the submissions of Professor Schabas, who made much of the Court’s jurisprudence on
proving genocidal intent. Understandably, he took you to paragraph 510 of the Court’s merits
Judgment in the Croatia case. This states that “for a pattern of conduct . . . to be accepted as
evidence of genocidal intent, it would have to be such that it could only point to the existence of
such intent, that is to say, that it can only reasonably be understood as reflecting that
intent”77. Let me be clear, The Gambia’s Application is based squarely on that standard. So are the
conclusions of the UN Fact-Finding Mission and of the Special Rapporteur and
the US Holocaust Memorial Museum78.
7. Professor Schabas said the question you must ask yourselves, at this preliminary phase, is:
“whether it is plausible that genocidal intent is the only inference that can be drawn”79. It is a
reasonable question, provided of course that the question is posed in relation to some of the acts
alleged, but not necessarily all of them. After all, it is possible for some acts to be
characterized as genocidal (such as rape and killing), while others are characterized as “crimes
against humanity” (such as the forcible displacement of human beings or their deportation). If the
answer to the question posed by Professor Schabas is yes, in relation to some of the acts that are
before you, then you order provisional measures. Moreover, the fact that it is also plausible that
another inference could be drawn in relation to those acts does not mean that you cannot order
provisional measures. Plausibility is not a zero-sum game. The plausibility of one explanation does
not exclude the plausibility of another80. Two explanations can be simultaneously plausible. That
is a difference between the provisional measures phase and the merits phase. Professor Schabas’s
attempt to create a new and onerous legal standard at the provisional measures stage, one that
imports the test that applies at the merits stage, has no legal basis.
77 Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia
v. Serbia), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2015 (I), p. 151, para. 510.
78 UN HRC, Detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission
on Myanmar, UN doc. A/HRC/42/CRP.5 (16 Sept. 2019), para. 225; “Museum Finds Compelling Evidence
Genocide was Committed Against Rohingya, Warns of Continued Threat”, United States Holocaust
Memorial Museum (3 Dec. 2018), available at
https://www.ushmm.org/information/press/press-releases/museum-finds-com…
-committed- against-rohingya-wa; “Prosecute Myanmar army chief for Rohingya ‘genocide’: UN Envoy”,
Al Jazeera (25 Jan. 2019), available at
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/01/prosecute-myanmar-army-chief-roh…-
190125112535665.html; judges’ folder, tab 4.
79 CR 2019/19, p. 27, para. 19 (Schabas).
80 Certain Activities Carried Out by Nicaragua in the Border Area (Costa Rica v. Nicaragua),
Provisional Measures, Order of 8 March 2011, I.C.J. Reports 2011 (I), p. 19, para. 58.
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8. Indeed, neither Professor Schabas nor any of Myanmar’s other counsel addressed the obligation on
Myanmar to prevent genocide under Article I, and how that interacts with the findings of genocidal
intent. As this Court is well aware, Myanmar is not only under an obligation not to commit
genocide, but also to prevent it, a duty which arises “at the instant that the State learns of, or
should normally have learned of, the existence of a serious risk that genocide will be
committed”81. The UN Fact-Finding Mission reports amply demonstrate the existence of a serious
risk. Can this Court really conclude otherwise? That seems, frankly, a bit of a stretch, one that
would be manifestly inconsistent with the obligation to prevent, an obligation that arises from the
first moment of awareness. Yet Professor Schabas tells you that now, today, next week and
thereafter, you are required to apply a standard that requires a conclusive finding of solely
genocidal intent simply to be able to order provisional measures.
9. In short, the test at this stage is not whether genocidal intent is the only plausible inference
to be drawn, as Professor Schabas argues. If that was the test, it would be hard to see how this
Court could ever order provisional measures under the Genocide Convention in relation to
Article I, since such a conclusion can hardly be reached without descending deeply into the merits,
and that is something the parties agree this Court cannot do at this stage. The Court did not apply
that test back in 1993 in the Bosnia case, although it seems that Myanmar wants you to abandon the
approach it then adopted.
10. The thrust of the Convention and this Court’s Statute is to require you to act protectively, to
err on the side of caution. If it is plausible that a finding of genocide might be made, on the
basis of the evidence and material that is before you, then you have to order provisional measures.
If it is not plausible, then you don’t. Given the reports that are on the record, we do not see how
the Court can possibly conclude that genocidal intent is to be excluded. The Agent for Myanmar told
you that “invoking the 1948 Genocide Convention is a matter of utmost gravity”82. Indeed it is.
States do not lightly invoke or allege genocide. The fact that 56 members of the OIC have decided
to lend
81 Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Bosnia
and Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2007 (I), p. 222, para. 431.
82 CR 2019/19, p. 12, para. 2 (Aung San Suu Kyi).
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their support to this case along with Canada and the Netherlands83 and more will no doubt surely
follow speaks clearly as to the gravity of the current situation. It strengthens the case for
provisional measures, rather than weakens it, exactly contrary to Myanmar’s argument84. It is
equally telling that a United States federal institution the US Holocaust Memorial Museum, with a
Board of Trustees that includes four members of the US Senate and five members of the US House of
Representatives85 has found “compelling evidence that the Burmese military committed ethnic
cleansing, crimes against humanity, and genocide against the Rohingya”86. An institution like this,
a venerable institution, does not tend to make public statements that are easily characterized as
implausible.
11. Nor, might I add, does Professor Schabas, at least when he is speaking in an academic capacity,
rather than as Counsel for Myanmar. Let us look at what he told Al Jazeera back in 2013, about the
term “genocide”:
“We’re moving into a zone where the word can be used (in the case of the Rohingya). When you see
measures preventing births, trying to deny the identity of the people, hoping to see that they
really are eventually, that they no longer exist, denying their history, denying the legitimacy of
the right to live where they live, these are all warning signs that mean that it is not frivolous
to envisage the use of the term genocide.”
12. You can watch him on video for yourselves, it is publicly available on the web and the citation
is in the footnotes to this speech87. Of course, everyone is allowed to change their mind, but the
obvious question is: how could that which was “not frivolous” in 2013, before the “clearance
operations”, before the killings, before the rapes, somehow become implausible in 2019? The path to
implausibility is eased, of course, if you simply take certain categories of acts out of the
equation: Myanmar has been conspicuously silent, for example, about all the sexual violence that
83 Joint Statement of Canada and the Kingdom of the Netherlands regarding the Gambia’s action to
address accountability in Myanmar (9 Dec. 2019), available at
https://www.canada.ca/en/global-affairs/news/2019/12/joint-
statement-of-canada-and-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands-regarding-the-gambias-action-to-address-accou
ntability-in- myanmar.html.
84 CR 2019/19, p. 46, paras. 23-26 (Staker).
85 Available at https://www.ushmm.org/information/about-the-museum/council.
86 “Museum Finds Compelling Evidence Genocide was Committed Against Rohingya, Warns of Continued
Threat”, 3 Dec. 2018, available at
https://www.ushmm.org/information/press/press-releases/museum-finds-com…-
evidence-genocide-was-committed-against-rohingya-wa.
87 “Myanmar: The Hidden Genocide”, Al Jazeera (30 Oct. 2013), available at https://www.youtube.com/
watch?v=dSkZlgk76-E, from 44:06; judges’ folder, tab 29.
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has occurred on a wide and systematic basis, a clear reflection, we say, as do the UN bodies that
have considered the matter, of genocidal intent. Yet the word “rape” rape did not once pass the
lips of the Agent, or any of Myanmar’s counsel. There was no commitment to co-operate with UN
bodies, no commitment to investigate this crime on its own account, no commitment to prosecute. We
heard much from Myanmar’s Agent about the vital importance of domestic accountability88, but not a
word not a word about the women and the girls of her country, Myanmar, who have been subjected
to these awful serial violations. Madam Agent, your silence said far more than your words.
13. I turn briefly to another point made by Myanmar the third of my points. You were taken to the
recent decision of the ICC Pre-Trial Chamber to authorize an investigation of the deportation of
Rohingya from Myanmar to Bangladesh, as a crime against humanity, not genocide89. You see, counsel
suggested, how can it possibly be a genocide if the ICC has not said it is a genocide? The
explanation is rather prosaic: Myanmar is not a party to the Statute of the ICC, but Bangladesh is,
and the ICC’s jurisdiction only extends to acts occurring on the territory of a State party. No
element of the crime of genocide has been committed on the territory of Bangladesh. The crime of
deportation, however, which is a crime against humanity, might have been committed on the territory
of Bangladesh, as it is a transboundary crime. It is in no way inconsistent with the existence of a
genocidal intent in respect of other acts. Indeed, the ICTY genocide cases relating to Srebrenica
all also included the crime against humanity of deportation, and Professor Schabas is well aware of
their co-existence90. Such co-existence of distinct crimes is readily recognized in the
jurisprudence of the ICTY, the ICTR, and the ICC. Myanmar suggested that the observations of
various bodies including the High Commissioner for Human Rights and
the UN Human Rights Council91 that there is “ethnic cleansing” in Rakhine somehow precludes
the plausibility of a simultaneous finding of genocide. That suggestion is wrong in fact and in
law.
88 CR 2019/19, p. 18, para. 26 (Aung San Suu Kyi).
89 “ICC judges authorise opening of an investigation into the situation in Bangladesh/Myanmar”,
press release, 14 Nov. 2019, available at https://www.icc-cpi.int/Pages/item.aspx?name=pr1495.
90 Prosecutor v. Vujadin Popovic (Judgement), IT-05-88-T, International Criminal Tribunal for the
former Yugoslavia (ICTY), 10 June 2010; Prosecutor v. Momir Nikolic (Sentencing
Judgement), IT-02-60/1-S, ICTY, 2 Dec. 2003.
91 CR 2019/19, p. 33, para. 37 (Schabas).
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As this Court made clear in its Bosnia v. Serbia Judgment, “it is clear that acts of ‘ethnic
cleansing’ may occur in parallel to acts prohibited by Article II of the Convention, and may be
significant as indicative of the presence of a specific intent (dolus specialis) inspiring those
acts”92. In 2015, the Court reaffirmed in its Croatia v. Serbia Judgment that, “[a]cts of ‘ethnic
cleansing’ can indeed be elements in the implementation of a genocidal plan”93.
14. My fourth point: Myanmar made a number of claims about the 1993 Orders in the Bosnia case,
presumably in response to our argument that those Orders are instructive and offer an appropriate
starting-point for what the Court should do in this case. It seems that Myanmar does not like the
1993 Orders very much. Mr. Staker told you they were merely “a 26-year-old precedent”94, and that
they predate the Court’s “important ruling on binding provisional measures” in LaGrand95. But he
seems to have missed paragraph 452 of your 2007 Bosnia Judgment, where the Court stated explicitly
that the fact that the 1993 Orders predated LaGrand “does not affect the binding nature of those
Orders”, which “created legal obligations which both Parties were required to satisfy”96.
15. Mr. Staker also submitted that the 1993 Orders were, in effect, useless, which is my fifth
point. “Provisional measures in such terms serve no useful purpose”, he told you97. We are grateful
to him for reinforcing the point we made on Tuesday, when I reminded you that the 1993 Orders
failed to prevent the genocide at Srebrenica, two years later. “[P]rovisional measures worded in
such broad terms”, Mr. Staker explained, make it “impossible to know what the precise conduct might
be within provisional measures”98. We agree. The Court must go further on the first and second
provisional measures and specify, with as much precision as possible and on the basis of what has
already occurred, the kind of acts that Myanmar must refrain from and prevent.
92 Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Bosnia
and Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2007 (I), p. 123, para. 190.
93 Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia
v. Serbia), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2015 (I), pp. 150-151, para. 510.
94 CR 2019/19, p. 58, para. 76 (Staker).
95 Ibid., p. 21, para. 2 (Staker).
96 Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Bosnia
and Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2007 (I), p. 230, para. 452.
97 CR 2019/19, p. 60, para. 83 (Staker).
98 CR 2019/19, p. 61, para. 64 (Staker).
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16. Indeed, to the list we have already provided to you, we would have no objection if you added
the acts identified by Professor Schabas in his 2013 interview, like the prevention of births, the
right to live where you live, and the denial of the identity of the Rohingya people. On the last
point, we noted that the Agent said that “[a]ll children born in Rakhine, regardless of religious
background, are issued with birth certificates”. Notwithstanding the UN Fact-Finding Mission’s
conclusion that this has not been the case99, the Agent’s comment seems to imply, at the very
least, a recognition that the Rohingya are human beings, which seems like a concession. But she did
not recognize their right to citizenship and, as you will have noted, and Mr. Reichler reminded
you, did not feel able to mention the word “Rohingya”.
17. We noted, incidentally, that the Agent, like her counsel, passed in total silence over the
genocide at Srebrenica, one recognized by this Court. Perhaps this was because the numbers
killed 8,000 are, in the view of Myanmar, simply too small to merit recognition. After all, as
Professor Schabas put it in the case of the Rohingya, “10,000 deaths out of a population of well
over one million might suggest something other than an intent to physically destroy the group”100.
Genocide is not just a numbers game, Mr. President, and the Convention makes clear that the
intention to destroy a group “in part” is sufficient. You have evidence before you that entire
Rohingya villages have been destroyed, and most, if not all, of the inhabitants have been
killed101. There is ample authority in the jurisprudence on genocide to support the view that such
destruction of an entire community, in a limited geographic area, on grounds of ethnicity or
religion or race, and even where it is not the whole protected group, can properly be characterized
as an act of genocide102.
18. My sixth submission concerns the other provisional measures we have requested, on which Myanmar
had very little to say. On the third measure, they wondered what “evidence related to the events
described in the Application” might mean. With respect, Myanmar is assisted by a
99 UN HRC, Report of the detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on
Myanmar, UN doc. A/HRC/39/CRP.2 (17 Sep. 2018), para. 463.
100 CR 2019/19, p. 38, para. 48 (Schabas).
101 UN HRC, Report of the independent international fact-finding mission on Myanmar, UN doc.
A/HRC/39/64 (12 Sep. 2018), para. 36.
102 Prosecutor v. Radovan Karadžić (Judgment), IT-95-5/18-AR98bis.1, Appeals Chamber of the ICTY,
11 July 2013, paras. 61-70; Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the
Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2007
(I), p. 166, para. 297.
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team of experienced international counsel, who can advise them on exactly what this means. It
starts with the preservation of mass graves, the preservation of bodies of victims, the
preservation of destroyed villages, and it continues to all the other evidence which, presumably,
is of the kind Myanmar now says it will be gathering for the investigations which they have told
the Court they are committed to undertaking.
19. The fourth provisional measure not aggravating or extending the dispute is standard in the
practice of this Court. Again, if Myanmar is in doubt, it can obtain advice from its experienced
counsel.
20. The fifth provisional measure would impose a reporting requirement. As Mr. Staker well knows,
it is not intended to create some sort of “human rights monitoring machinery”, but simply require
the Parties to inform the Court as to the steps they are taking to give effect to the provisional
measures Order indicated by the Court. This is routine, for example, in matters relating to the law
of the sea which, while of very great importance, cannot be said to be as grave as the issues that
arise in this case103. If reporting is good enough for the law of the sea, it is certainly good
enough for this case.
21. As to the sixth provisional measure, we say it is proper and appropriate for a number of
compelling reasons. First, it is intrinsically linked to the obligation under Article I of the
Genocide Convention to “prevent and to punish” genocide. Effective investigation, and the
preservation of evidence, are fundamental to preventing impunity for genocide and thus complying
with the Article I obligation. Yet the consistent picture before the Court is that Myanmar is
refusing to co-operate with or provide access to investigative bodies to collect evidence, thereby
creating a material impediment to the eventual punishment of genocide, and that it is itself
destroying evidence, including by bulldozing destroyed Rohingya villages104. Since Myanmar has
proved itself to be unwilling to investigate what has occurred, in any real sense, it is only by
ordering it to co-operate with independent UN investigators (currently in the form of the
Independent Investigative Mechanism) that this Court might be able to assure itself that The
Gambia’s right to
103 Delimitation of the Maritime Boundary in the Atlantic Ocean (Ghana/Côte d’Ivoire), Provisional
Measures Order of 25 April 2015, ITLOS Reports 2015, p. 146.
104 UN HRC, Detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on
Myanmar, UN doc. A/HRC/42/CRP.5 (16 Sep. 2019), para. 117.
- 38 -
have other parties to the Convention comply with their Article I obligation will be protected
pending the resolution of this case.
22. Second, the sixth provisional measure is consistent with the jurisprudence of the Court. It
builds on the Order that was made, for example, in the Frontier Dispute case that the parties
“should refrain from any act likely to impede the gathering of evidence material to the present
case”105. Myanmar’s persistent refusal to co-operate with the UN Fact-Finding Mission has already
impeded the gathering of evidence material to the present case, and it is only by indicating the
requested provisional measures that further impediment can be avoided. The requested measure is
not, as I have said, novel: it is the same in substance as the Order made in the Frontier Dispute
case, adapted to the specific circumstances pertaining to this case. Further, it is directly linked
to the Article 41 requirement of preserving the respective rights of the parties: it is necessary
to preserve the integrity of these proceedings, and The Gambia’s right to have its claim fairly
adjudicated, because this claim will in due course depend on the evidence that can be collected.
Myanmar’s non-co-operation with international investigative bodies threatens that right, and a
provisional measure in the form requested is necessary in order to protect it.
23. Mr. President, Members of the Court, I will conclude. As I mentioned in my first-round
statement, genocide is not a single act. From its very genesis, it has been recognized to be a
continuum that was the only point I made in invoking the spirit of Dr. Lemkin and it is
comprised of different actions which individually and together, and over stages and time, amount to
this most heinous crime. With genocide, one thing always leads to another. That was the point of
invoking the spirit of Primo Levi.
24. The situation the Court is confronted with today is a delicate one: unlike in the Bosnia case,
there is no international criminal tribunal with special responsibility for the crimes committed in
this case. Today, the hopes of The Gambia and of the Rohingya people some of whom are in the
Great Hall today rest entirely with you to exercise the power vested in you by Article 41 of
the Statute, and to grant specific, protective provisional measures to interrupt and prevent the
105 Frontier Dispute (Burkina Faso/Republic of Mali), Provisional Measures, Order of 10 January
1986, I.C.J. Reports 1986, p. 12, para. 32 (1) (B).
- 39 -
continuum of genocide break the chain that has already occurred, and is continuing to occur
today in Rakhine.
25. Myanmar urges you to take a different path. Peace and harmony is best assured by doing nothing,
the Agent told you yesterday. Forget about the 1993 Orders, counsel said yesterday, they are
useless. Go back to the glory days of 1966 and the South West Africa Judgment counsel, in effect,
pleaded, but not its paragraph 66. Forget about the Genocide Convention of 1948. Just give Myanmar
the space and the freedom to act unfettered by the unfortunate distraction that is international
law. Perhaps perhaps some of you might be tempted to do that, but we trust that the Court will
exercise its judicial function, that it will apply the law, that it will give effect to the
requirements that the drafters of the 1948 Convention entrusted upon you, that you will not
abdicate your judicial functions and responsibilities.
26. Mr. President, Madam Vice-President, Members of the Court, the eyes of the world, of
individuals and of groups, of countries and of the United Nations bodies, are upon this Court. That
concludes my submissions. I would like to express my thanks to all my colleagues for their
assistance, in particular Ms Jessica Jones. I thank you again for your kind and patient attention,
and invite you to ask the Agent of The Gambia to the Bar.
The PRESIDENT: I thank Professor Sands. I shall now give the floor to the Agent of The
Gambia, His Excellency Mr. Abubacarr Marie Tambadou. You have the floor, sir.
Mr. TAMBADOU:
IV. AGENT’S CLOSING REMARKS
1. Mr. President, honourable Judges, it is an honour to address you once again as the Agent of the
Republic of The Gambia.
2. As you heard on Tuesday and this morning, the situation of the Rohingya in Myanmar is dire. The
evidence from various United Nations bodies and independent human rights organizations clearly
establishes the urgent and imminent risk of the recurrence of genocide that they face.
- 40 -
3. The lives of these human beings are at risk. The Gambia may not be a neighbouring State, but The
Gambia has a keen and special interest in seeing that no group of people, including the Rohingya,
suffer genocide.
4. As a State party to the Genocide Convention, The Gambia has come to this Court to protect its
rights under the Convention to ensure that the erga omnes partes obligations undertaken by Myanmar
under the Convention are fulfilled. Those obligations not to commit genocide and to prevent and
punish genocide are owed to The Gambia and indeed to all other States parties to the Convention.
5. Mr. President, honourable Judges, The Gambia has been open about its dispute with Myanmar. We
openly raised this dispute at successive sessions of the United Nations General Assembly. We have
openly welcomed support for this effort from other States, including member States of the
Organisation of Islamic Cooperation. Indeed, it was, from beginning to end, The Gambia’s initiative
to table resolutions and form a committee and seek the broader support of the other 56 member
States of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation. The Gambia is proud to have the diplomatic and
political support of the other 56 member States of the OIC and of other supportive States, like
Canada and the Netherlands as The Gambia, in its sovereign capacity, pursues this case against
Myanmar.
6. It was The Gambia alone that sent the Note Verbale to Myanmar to clearly spell out the nature of
this dispute and put Myanmar on notice. And it was The Gambia alone that has filed the Application
and Request for provisional measures that is now before the Court.
7. Mr. President, honourable Judges, The Gambia’s request for provisional measures falls squarely
within the Genocide Convention. We have shown that the rights of The Gambia that we are seeking to
protect are plausibly connected to the measures requested. And we have amply demonstrated urgency
and risk of irreparable harm.
8. The Gambia urges this Court, as the guardians of our moral and legal compass under the
Convention, to indicate the requested provisional measures.
9. Mr. President, in accordance with Article 60 of the Rules of Court, I shall now read out The
Gambia’s final submissions:
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“Pursuant to Article 41 of the Statute of the Court, The Gambia, as a State party to the Genocide
Convention, respectfully requests the Court, as a matter of extreme urgency, to indicate the
following provisional measures, which are directly linked to the rights that form the subject
matter of the dispute, pending its determination of this case on the merits:
(a) Myanmar shall immediately, in pursuance of its undertaking in the Convention on the Prevention
and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide of 9 December 1948, take all measures within its power to
prevent all acts that amount to or contribute to the crime of genocide, including taking all
measures within its power to prevent the following acts from being committed against any member of
the Rohingya group: extrajudicial killings or physical abuse; rape or other forms of sexual
violence; burning of homes or villages; destruction of lands and livestock, deprivation of food and
other necessities of life, or any other deliberate infliction of conditions of life calculated to
bring about the physical destruction of the Rohingya group in whole or in part;
(b) Myanmar shall, in particular, ensure that any military, paramilitary or irregular armed units
which may be directed or supported by it, as well as any organizations and persons which may be
subject to its control, direction or influence, do not commit any act of genocide, of conspiracy to
commit genocide, or direct and public incitement to commit genocide, or of complicity in genocide,
against the Rohingya group, including: extrajudicial killing or physical abuse; rape or other forms
of sexual violence; burning of homes or villages; destruction of lands and livestock, deprivation
of food and other necessities of life, or any other deliberate infliction of conditions of life
calculated to bring about the physical destruction of the Rohingya group in whole or in part;
(c) Myanmar shall not destroy or render inaccessible any evidence related to the events described
in the Application, including without limitation by destroying or rendering inaccessible the
remains of any member of the Rohingya group who is a victim of alleged genocidal acts, or altering
the physical locations where such acts are alleged to have occurred in such a manner as to render
the evidence of such acts, if any, inaccessible;
(d) Myanmar and The Gambia shall not take any action and shall assure that no action is taken which
may aggravate or extend the existing dispute that is the subject of this Application, or render it
more difficult of resolution;
(e) Myanmar and The Gambia shall each provide a report to the Court on all measures taken to give
effect to this Order for provisional measures, no later than four months from its issuance; and
(f) Myanmar shall grant access to, and cooperate with, all United Nations fact-finding bodies that
are engaged in investigating alleged genocidal acts against the Rohingya, including the conditions
to which the Rohingya are subjected.”
10. Mr. President, honourable Judges, this concludes The Gambia’s second round of observations. I
wish to take this opportunity to thank you, once again, for your kind attention. I would also like
to take the opportunity to thank all members of the Registry, the Court staff and security, and the
interpreters for their dedicated work throughout the hearings. I thank you. With your permission,
Mr. President, I would like to take my seat.
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The PRESIDENT: You have my permission. I thank the Agent of The Gambia. The Court takes note of the
provisional measures requested by The Gambia, that you have just read out on behalf of your
Government. The Court will meet again this afternoon, at 4.30 p.m., to hear the second round of
oral observations of Myanmar. The sitting is adjourned.
The Court rose at 11.30 a.m.
Public sitting held on Thursday 12 December 2019, at 10 a.m., at the Peace Palace, President Yusuf presiding, in the case concerning Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (The Gambia v. Myanmar)