On 8 August, the Prime Minister of Georgia, Irakli Gharibashvili, spoke at the Mukhadgverdi mass grave about the August 2008 war’s investigation: “There exists a direct request from The Hague to Georgia to investigate the August war; otherwise, The Hague itself will investigate all of the war’s details and nuances. It is the duty of our country for this topic to be investigated.”
With this statement, Irakli Gharibashvili responded to Tea Tsulukiani’s statement made on 7 August. Tsulukiani said: “Our government, just like the previous one, meets objective difficulties because this is a really complex, multi-volume, multi-episode and multi-valued case. We should assert more importance to this investigation, it should advance faster and the country’s problem should be resolved within it. No one would like the 2008 August war case to be investigated by The Hague’s Prosecutor. This threat is real but we are doing everything in order to fulfill our international obligations within the country so that nobody from abroad holds us accountable later.”
A member of the United National Movement, Givi Targamadze, also commented upon this issue: “Tsulukiani’s statements and especially acts, if she has meetings with prosecutors in The Hague, are most likely, a betrayal of this country…”
It is important to take into account the contexts of the statements made by the Prime Minister and the Minister of Justice. Whilst speaking about the investigation of the August war, Irakli Gharibashvili also speaks about the responsibility of the previous government for not being able to avoid the hostilities. On 24 March 2014, during an interview with Kviris Palitra, the Prime Minister stated: “I think that the investigations of the circumstances of the August 2008 war should begin. How the war advanced, who was responsible and who commanded what. We ‘opened’ this topic last year. Many crimes and violations have been revealed and all of the questions must be answered. We have to know who made the mistake and where.”
FactCheck took interest in whether or not it is Georgia’s duty to investigate the August war and what is implied by this duty.
Both the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the International Criminal Court (ICC) are located in The Hague. Intra-state disputes are heard by the ICJ whilst the ICC is an international criminal tribunal which was launched as a permanent body by the Rome Statute in 1998. The ICC is authorised to prosecute for those crimes listed in Article 5 of the Rome Statute; namely: genocide, crime against humanity, war crimes and aggression. Georgia joined the Rome Statute in 2003 and is considered as one of its member states. Russia, on the other side, has not signed the treaty.
The jurisdiction of the ICC covers crimes committed on the territory of either a Statute’s member country or the states that recognise the ICC’s jurisdiction regardless of who committed the crime. The Court’s jurisdiction also covers crimes committed by the citizens of member countries regardless of the scene of the crime. In this way, according to the Rome Statute, the ICC has the jurisdiction to hear crimes committed in Georgia against a citizen of any country. Article 13 of the Rome Statute defines when the ICC is able to implement its jurisdiction. First of all, a member state itself or the UN Security Council can notify the court prosecutor about the circumstance of an alleged crime. Second, the prosecutor with his/her own initiative can start an investigation based upon the existing information about possible crimes within the ICC’s jurisdiction.
In the case of the August 2008 war with Russia, the ICC took interest in the ongoing events in Georgia on its own initiative. After the visit of the Minister of Justice of Georgia to The Hague on 14 August 2008, the Office of The Prosecutor (OTP) in The Hague stated that it would carry out a preliminary examination of war crimes. As the former Deputy Minister of Justice, Tina Burjaliani, has stated, the Georgian side provided the Prosecutor’s Office of The Hague with information about the ethnic cleansing of Georgians. On 27 August 2008, OTP requested further information connected to the progress of the investigation from both the Prosecutor’s Offices of Georgia and Russia.
After investigating the information, OTP decides to initiate a preliminary examination regarding the case. OTP, based upon the assessment of the available information during the inquiry stage decides whether or not to initiate an investigation concerning a certain fact or facts. Whilst making the decision, the Office reviews the following topics:
- Is there a reasonable doubt for a crime to be accounted as committed or being in the process of committing?
- Is there a basis to deny the admissibility of a case according to Article 17 of the Rome Statute? A case is inadmissible to the International Criminal Court, if:
- The case is being investigated or prosecuted by a state which has jurisdiction over it unless the state is unwilling or genuinely unable to carry out the investigation or prosecution.
- The case has been investigated by a state which has jurisdiction over it and the state has decided not to prosecute the person concerned unless the decision resulted from the unwillingness or inability of the state genuinely to prosecute.
- The person concerned has already been tried for conduct which is the subject of the complaint.
- The case is not of sufficient gravity to justify further action by the International Criminal Court.
- The prosecutor also considers whether or not an investigation serves justice.
- Forcible displacement of the Georgian population: South Ossetian armed forces allegedly forced up to 30,000 ethnic Georgians to flee from villages within and outside South Ossetia by systematically destroying and pillaging their houses and other property. In some cases, ethnic Georgians were killed and/or subjected to abuses.
- Attack against peacekeepers: The Georgian armed forces allegedly carried out attacks on the Joint Peacekeeping Force Headquarters (JPKF HQ) and the base of the Russian Peacekeeping Forces Battalion (RUPKFB) during the nights of 7 and 8 August 2008. According to the Russian authorities, ten peacekeepers belonging to the Russian peacekeeping battalion were killed and 30 of them were wounded as a result of the alleged attack.
- Unlawful attacks directed against the civilian population and civilian objects: Both Georgian and Russian armed forces allegedly launched indiscriminate and disproportionate attacks against civilian targets and/or failed to take the required precautions to minimise civilian losses.
- Destruction of property: Extensive destruction of civilian property allegedly resulted from heavy shelling and bombing of towns and villages during the active hostilities phase and later as a result of acts of violence carried out by South Ossetian forces in ethnic Georgian villages in South Ossetia and to a lesser extent in the “buffer zone.”
- Pillaging: In the aftermath of the active hostilities, the ethnic Georgian villages in South Ossetia and in the “buffer zone” were allegedly systematically pillaged by South Ossetian armed forces.
- Torture and other forms of ill-treatment: Georgian prisoners of war, as well as ethnic Georgian and South Ossetian civilians, were reportedly victims of torture and other forms of ill-treatment.