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The “Media Trial” and the Crime of Direct and Public Incitement to Commit Genocide

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Date

2010

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Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington

Abstract

The thesis of this paper is that the trial against Nahimana et al before the ICTR, better known as the “Media Trial”, can be considered as a helpful precedence in international criminal law ever since the Appeals Chamber judgment from 2007. To answer the question, the author challenges the open legal questions, the ICTR had to judge about in Nahimana regarding the crime of direct and public incitement to commit genocide. Both in the paper and in the judgment this crime is central. The point is not only how to define the elements. The name “Media Trial” but was especially awarded because directors of the media were held responsible. Thereby the paper makes clear that radio and newspaper directors can be held liable under the doctrine of superior responsibility. Furthermore important is the question how the nature of the crime should be defined and which ideas of law are decisive for the interpretation of incitement. It shows that there is an own international law of incitement. In the application of this international incitement law, the Trial Chamber made several mistakes. It defined incitement as a continuing crime and held that ambiguous speeches can constitute a direct incitement. Only the decision that incitement needs no causal link between the crime and the effect (genocide) was completely positive and necessary. However, these wrong decisions were appealed by the Appeals Chamber, which was important for the development of incitement.

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Keywords

Media trial, Incitement, Genocide, International criminal law

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