Home
Current Issue
Developments
Archive
Table of Contents
Surveys
Book Reviews
Discussion Forum
Information
Reading Room
Links of Interest
Search
Join our email list
Translate this page
  

Previous PageTable of Contents

Silencing Hearings? Victim-Witnesses at War Crimes Trials

Marie-Bénédicte Dembour* and Emily Haslam *

Full text available: PDF format **

Abstract

It is commonly accepted that war crimes trials should provide a space for victims to tell their stories. A close reading of the transcripts of victim-witnesses' testimonies in the Krstic trial at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia suggests, however, that war crimes trials effectively silence, rather than hear, victims. In this particular trial, victim-witnesses predictably governed neither the agenda nor the pace of the hearings. More problematically, we argue that incongruously optimistic judicial remarks unnecessarily denied their suffering. On a different plane, victims' testimonies were only vaguely connected to the person of the accused; they related to facts the relevance and proof of which are debatable. This article aims to generate a debate about victim-witnesses' testimonies at war crimes trials. It seeks to identify both the demands that the legal process imposes on victim-witnesses and the tensions that arise out of their participation in it. In the light of the fact that legal proceedings cannot produce the definitive collective memory of the events with which they deal, the article finally stresses the need to foster a variety of collective memories outside the judicial platform.

Silence: v. . . . 1. Trans. To cause or compel (a person) to cease speaking . . .

Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Hearing: . . . 2. The action of listening . . . 3. The listening to evidence and pleadings in a court of law . . .

Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

I hope your father will come back.

(Judge Riad to Mr Husic, who testified in the Krstic trial)

* Sussex Law School, University of Sussex

Previous PageTable of Contents





Top of Page

© 1990-2004 European Journal of International Law
All comments and suggestions should be sent to webmaster
This site is part of the Academy of European Law online, a joint partnership of the Jean Monnet Center at NYU School of Law and the Academy of European Law at the European University Institute.
This file was last modified: Friday, August 12, 2005 11:09AM