‘Never have so many, owed so much, to so few.’Footnote 1 Borrowing Winston Churchill’s words, this is how Professor M. Cherif BassiouniFootnote 2 expressed his gratitude at the 1998 Diplomatic Conference in Rome to those involved in the Herculean task of drafting the Statute of the International Criminal Court.Footnote 3 Creating a legal framework for a permanent international court to try mass atrocity crimes was no easy task, yet the drafters had several models from which to draw inspiration: the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg; the International Military Tribunal for the Far East in Tokyo; the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY); and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR). What caused negotiating the Rome Statute to be such a painstaking process was that, unlike the post-Second World War tribunals (which were imposed by victorious states) and the ad hoc tribunals (which were imposed by the United Nations Security Council), states were now being asked to relinquish part of their domestic jurisdiction (and sovereignty) to the International Criminal Court (ICC).Footnote 4
While the statutory provisions of the ICTY and ICTR were handed down by the UN Security Council (UNSC) with the admonition that only accepted customary international law would be applied,Footnote 5 it was left to the judges to draft the rules of procedure and evidence. This allowed for a flexible approach to mixing and matching procedural modalities to be tinkered with for efficacy and efficiency as deemed necessary,Footnote 6 but it seemingly gave the judges legislative authority.Footnote 7 With the unlikelihood of the UNSC amending the statutory provisions, the judges could cleverly get around this inconvenience by amending and interpreting their own rules.Footnote 8 At the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC), judges were more limited in the creation of procedural issues as Article 33 (new)Footnote 9 of the Establishment Law had limitations precluding them from effectively exercising such legislative power.Footnote 10 While some legislation from the bench may have been necessary and tolerated for the ad hoc tribunals, if states were going to sign on to the Rome Statute, and thus collectively as states parties take on the role of a legislative body,Footnote 11 the Rules of Procedure and Evidence would need to be drafted as part of the package, with states parties having the sole authority to amend them,Footnote 12 subject to exceptions.Footnote 13
Drafting a statute and accompanying Rules of Procedure and Evidence by committeeFootnote 14 – especially when the drafters come from different legal traditions and may also be either unfamiliar with or suffer prejudice against other legal traditions – can be challenging, despite the best intentions.Footnote 15 The same terms can often be understood as covering different meanings in various legal traditions.Footnote 16 In describing what emerged after the ECCC Internal Rules were drafted by the judges, Judge Marcel Lemonde bemoaned, ‘[t]he dish was not exactly what we ordered’.Footnote 17 Of course, Judge Lemonde was one of the cooks in the kitchen, but too many chefs in the kitchen spoil the broth, especially when the cooks are trained in different cuisines, having neither the appetite nor desire to understand and appreciate the cuisines of their fellow cooks.Footnote 18
Ultimately, what emerged from the Rome Conference was a highly comprehensive but complex, and in some instances, confusing text with a fair amount of constructive ambiguity. With no reports being produced to recount the work of the Conference, as was done for the Preparatory Committee,Footnote 19 and no official legislative history from which to divine the negotiators’ intended purpose behind the statutory provisions, a commentary that would inform as much as it would guide was necessary. For this we are grateful to the late Otto Triffterer, Professor of International Criminal Law and Procedure at the University of Salzburg. In 1999, just 13 months after the adoption of the Rome Statute, Professor Triffterer published his seminal ‘Commentary on the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court: Observers’ Notes, Article-by-Article Commentary’ (the Commentary). From the outset, Professor Triffterer’s Commentary (and updated editions) has been the busy practitioner’s first go-to treatise when quickly searching for sound, practical, yet authoritative and scholarly analysis on discrete issues of law related to the interpretation and application of the statutory provisions of the Rome Statute.
Professor Triffterer’s purpose behind his 1,295-page Commentary was to inform interested persons – primarily, those responsible for interpreting and applying the Rome Statute at the international or national level and states uncertain about signing it – about the drafting process and to provide an interpretive guide which takes into account its history and evolution.Footnote 20 In other words, while it was to be a work-in-progress and perhaps assist in the drafting of the elements of crimes, it was also meant to persuade wavering states to sign the Rome Statute in the hopes of reaching the ‘60th instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession’ required for entry into force.Footnote 21
With no jurisprudence from the yet-to-be-operational Court, the first edition draws heavily from the travaux préparatoires and the experience of the negotiators at the Diplomatic Conference in Rome. Fifty-one contributors, representing 25 countries, many of whom participated in the negotiations in Rome, invite the reader into the conversations at the negotiating table, providing a comprehensive understanding of the multi-faceted ambitions of the Statute and multiple agendas behind it. When considering that there is no summary of the work of the Rome Conference, these accounts are invaluable to understanding how the drafters of the Rome Statute intended each provision to be interpreted and applied.
The first edition provides a comprehensive article-by-article analysis that tracks the structure of the Rome Statute. Each article follows the same user-friendly structure: the relevant statutory text, a table of contents, general remarks, and an analysis and interpretation of each element of the Statute, paragraph by paragraph. Heavily footnoted to the travaux préparatoires and academic works, each article provides rich source material from which to glean the intent of the negotiators. Published three years before the ICC came into operation (and even before any state signed the Statute), the Commentary provides succinct discussion of each article in a unified systematic structure, thus creating ease for the reader in finding the most crucial point when in need of interpretive guidance.Footnote 22
Twenty-three years later, the fourth edition of the Commentary, edited by Kai Ambos, Professor at Göttingen University and Reserve Judge at the Kosovo Specialist Chambers, has expanded by nearly 2,000 pages, spanning a voluminous 3,064 pages. By contrast to the first edition, it is not aimed at persuading states to sign the Rome Statute or to be a ‘mouthpiece of the ICC’ but rather to ‘critically engage … in a constructive spirit, with its case law and its performance in general’.Footnote 23 As explained by Professor Ambos in his editor’s note, the fourth edition of the Commentary serves different purposes than the first edition: to update the case law of the ICC; to account for the most important academic contributions and legislative developments; and to provide clarity and structure and presentation and greater consistency.Footnote 24
Featured in the fourth edition are 79 contributors, 23 of whom contributed to the first edition.Footnote 25 While the first edition had an introduction by the Chair of the Drafting Committee, the fourth benefits from introductions by five of the Court’s pillars: the ICC President, the President of the Assembly of State Parties, one of the Judges, the Prosecutor, and the President of the ICC Bar Association representing defence and victims’ counsels. The involvement of these high-level actors conveys the high esteem in which this commentary is held.
Following the five introductions, of which only Judge Bertram Schmitt’s is noteworthy in succinctly describing the key judicial developments at the ICC since the third edition of the Commentary,Footnote 26 is a list of general literature concerning core topics of international criminal law and procedure, after which is a list of official ICC documents as well as documents from other international(ized) criminal tribunals and courts. Illustrating the 17 years of jurisprudential developments since the first edition, the table of cases spans 85 pages, with a comprehensive index of terms to assist the reader in locating discrete topics discussed in the article-by-article analysis.
While the first edition provided preliminary remarks with topical or thematic overviews of Parts 1 (Establishment of the Court), 9 (International Cooperation and Judicial Assistance), and 13 (Final Clauses) of the Statute – the fourth removes preliminary remarks for Parts 1 and 13. Most likely, the Preliminary Remarks for Part 9 were retained in the fourth edition because international co-operation and judicial assistance was one area where consensus was most difficult to achieve and because it is a key issue in ICC proceedings going to their fairness and expediency.Footnote 27 New articles are also covered in the fourth edition to reflect legislative developments, namely, the activation of the Court’s jurisdiction over the crime of aggressionFootnote 28 and the addition of four new war crimes in Article 8.Footnote 29 However, the commentaries to these new articles are somewhat less informative since there is no ICC jurisprudence and reference is primarily made to jurisprudence of the International Court of Justice and academic works. While the fourth edition does not cover the Rules of Procedure and Evidence, amendments to the rules, for instance, Rules 135 bis to 134 quater (concerning presence of the accused at trial through video technology or excusal from presence at trial) are discussed in the corresponding Article in the Rome Statute.Footnote 30
Remarkably, the fourth edition comes just six years after the third edition, reflecting the increase in the ICC case load and rapid jurisprudential development. Bemba was convicted of war crimes and crimes against humanity and was subsequently acquitted on appeal,Footnote 31 while in the ICC’s first Article 70 case, he was convicted alongside Kilolo, Mangenda, Babala, and Arido.Footnote 32 Al-Mahdi was convicted following the ICC’s first proceedings on the admission of guilt by the accused under Article 65.Footnote 33 NtagandaFootnote 34 and OngwenFootnote 35 were convicted of war crimes and crimes against humanity, while Gbagbo and Blé Goudé were acquitted following a successful No Case to Answer motion.Footnote 36 Important procedural issues were addressed in these cases such as the introduction of prior recorded statements under Rule 68, witness preparation, as well as the submission/admission regimes concerning the introduction of evidence.Footnote 37 Reparations procedures were also underway in four cases,Footnote 38 charges were confirmed against three suspects,Footnote 39 three new investigations were authorized,Footnote 40 two suspects surrendered to the ICC,Footnote 41 and key decisions were made on the applicability of amnesties and pardonsFootnote 42 and immunities of heads of state.Footnote 43 As Judge Schmitt explains in his introduction, these significant judicial developments ‘make … it more than clear that the Court is fully operational’.Footnote 44
When comparing the third to the fourth edition, some articles contain only modest updates while reflecting more substantial jurisprudential developments. For example, in the fourth edition, Article 2 concerning the relationship of the Court with the UN effectively tracks the third edition but for a few additional sentences reflecting developments such as the adoption of the 2016 UN-ICC Best Practices Manual.Footnote 45 Article 41 concerning excusal and disqualification of a judge features two additional paragraphs in the fourth edition discussing developments in Lubanga (a request to disqualify Judge Silvia Fernández de Gurmendi from the sentence review proceedings) and Bemba et al. (a request to disqualify two of three judges on the Trial Chamber).Footnote 46 By contrast, Article 69 concerning evidence grew from 74 pages in the third edition to 96 pages in the fourth, reflecting the Court’s growing jurisprudence especially in light of challenges made to the admissibility of evidence at trial.
The fourth edition, much like the third, is heavily footnoted to the law and jurisprudence of the ICC as well as other international(ized) criminal courts and tribunals, reflecting a move away from the travaux préparatoires and academic opinions relied on in the first edition. Critics such as Simon M. Meisenberg view the shift away from the travaux préparatoires as justified given the Court’s jurisprudential output since the first edition, but finds that the Commentary loses sight of the big picture by taking an article-by-article approach.Footnote 47 While I welcome the shift away from the travaux préparatoires and the focus on ICC case law, I disagree with his assessment of the Commentary’s structure: from a practitioner’s perspective, the article-by-article format is a much more useful tool allowing the reader to quickly home in on the relevant provision and sub-provisions to obtain an accurate and precise interpretation, rather than having to unscramble various principles elaborated upon in thematic overviews.
Others, such as Christoph Barthe, criticized the third edition for its lack of reference to domestic jurisprudence, considering that some states had been interpreting and applying principles expressed in the Rome Statute in domestic courts and that such jurisprudence can form part of customary international law.Footnote 48 He also laments that many of the articles are purely descriptive, lacking cross-analysis and application to real-life scenarios (such as contemporary crimes committed in Syria and Iraq).Footnote 49 While Barthe’s criticisms and proposals seem appealing – especially with the plethora of cases being tried under universal jurisdiction in national courts of member states of the ICCFootnote 50 – in my view they are unsound, at least in so far as the Commentary remains in printed form, as opposed to an electronic format with more periodic updates as suggested below. Incorporating surveys of legal systems the world over to divine customary international law – or providing examples for cross-analysis and real-life application – would considerably expand the size of the Commentary and detract from its purpose: to explain the content of the Articles in the Rome Statute, including their drafting history, and their interpretation and application at the ICC (as opposed to national or other courts) through emerging case law in a user-friendly format.Footnote 51
One downside of the Commentary is that it is not a commentary on the entirety of the Court’s legal framework, including the Rules of Procedure and Evidence and Elements of Crimes. Several topics that are dealt with in Rules or Elements, such as issues concerning the disclosure process and detention matters, are left out.Footnote 52 Nonetheless, the third and fourth editions give considerably more attention to the Rules of Procedure and Evidence and the Elements of Crimes – a notable change from the second edition, which reproduced 200 pages of the core legal texts in an annex.
Just as the Triffterer Commentary became an authority widely recognized by international criminal law practitioners, academics, and external observers, the Ambos Commentary, having taken Professor Triffterer’s vision to a higher and deeper level, can equally claim authoritativeness and erudition. The contributors deserve high praises. The fourth edition of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court: Article-by-Article Commentary is an essential tool both for international and domestic practitioners involved in international criminal law. It is highly reliable and exceptionally useful. With the growing number of situations and cases under the scrutiny of the ICC Office of the Prosecutor, and the relatively short time period in between the publication of the third and fourth editions, one wonders whether a new edition would be necessary in the next couple of years. As ICC President Piotr Hofmański aptly put it in his introduction to the fourth edition, ‘commentaries generally end exactly where real problems begin’.Footnote 53
Unfortunately, the Commentary comes at a costly £475 or roughly €560, as with all major commentaries – hence why an electronic version should be considered for the next edition, rather than publishing another hefty manuscript (or multi-volume publication), with a subscription option to receive periodic updates to reflect evolving jurisprudence. Professor Mark Klamberg’s short and digestible commentary, for example, is available online for anyone to download with hyperlinks to the source material for easy cross referencing.Footnote 54 Consideration should also be given to having an electronic annex of domestic cases. Recent developments in domestic tribunals, such as the January 2022 conviction of the former colonel Anwar Raslan in Germany for war crimes committed in Syria,Footnote 55 could indeed enrich the analysis for the growing number of states exercising universal jurisdiction. Considering the impact of this Commentary on the development of international criminal law, the large volume of jurisprudence that predictably will reach the desks of the commentators, and the potential to reach a wider global audience, due consideration should be given to publishing an electronic version of the next edition of Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court: Article-by-Article Commentary.