INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW AND THE SEPTEMBER 11 EVENTS
Abstract
The events of September 11 and the subsequent war against Afghanistan, which started less than a month later, raised important legal issues of international law. On the one hand, they raised the issue of criminal legal responsibility, the issues associated with legally apprehending and extraditing the offenders, and the issue of their public trial for crime against humanity. They also raised the issue of whether or not these events gave rise to a state of war. The war against Afghanistan raised the issue of whether or not a state, in this case the United States, could be at war with an entity less than that of a belligerent, the issue of self-defence, either by reference to customary international law or by reference to the United Nations Charter. It also
raised the issue of individual and state criminal responsibility and the issue of extension of individual responsibility to cover state responsibility when the latter is not clearly and directly established.
Keywords
References
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Details
Primary Language
English
Subjects
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Journal Section
Research Article
Authors
Adel Safty
This is me
Publication Date
December 27, 2001
Submission Date
September 19, 2001
Acceptance Date
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Published in Issue
Year 2001 Volume: 9 Number: 2