Source: Human Rights Watch
Colombia’s passage of
a law to reform the military justice system is a major setback for
human rights, Human Rights Watch said today. The law creates a serious
risk that unlawful killings by the military, known as “false positives,”
will be transferred from civilian prosecutors to the military justice
system. The law also authorizes public security forces to use lethal
force against civilians in a dangerously broad range of situations.
The law, approved by Congress on June 17, 2013, implements
constitutional changes to the military justice system enacted in
December 2012. The law is expected to be signed by the president.
“The law approved today is filled with loopholes that will help shield
military officers responsible for human rights violations from
prosecution,” said José Miguel Vivanco,
Americas director at Human Rights Watch. “The law could result in the
transfer of cold-blooded killings by the military known as ‘false
positives’ from civilian authorities to the military justice system,
where there is virtually no chance for accountability.”
The constitutional amendment enacted in December establishes that the
military justice system will “exclusively handle” international
humanitarian law violations and other abuses by the military, except for
a closed list of seven crimes, including “extrajudicial executions.”
The definition of “extrajudicial executions” established in the
implementing law does not ensure that the roughly 3,000 alleged “false
positive” cases currently being investigated by the Attorney General’s
Office as “aggravated homicide” or “homicide of protected person” will
remain with civilian prosecutors.
The law's definition of what constitutes an “extrajudicial execution,”
and therefore remains in the civilian justice system, is very narrow,
Human Rights Watch said. The victim must have been “under the control of
the state agent” and “did not try to escape,” or was previously placed
“in a state of defenselessness” with the purpose of killing him, or was
killed “by deception.” Furthermore, the law defines an “extrajudicial
execution” as a new offense in the Penal Code. This will allow defense
lawyers and Colombian authorities to argue that the principle of
non-retrospectivity, under international and Colombian law, prohibits
anyone currently under investigation for an alleged false positive from
being prosecuted for this new offense.
They could contend that false positives should continue to be
investigated and prosecuted as aggravated homicides or homicides of
protected persons – and not extrajudicial executions – and thus be moved
to military jurisdiction. Colombia could have avoided this problem if
it had defined extrajudicial executions by referring to the existing
provisions from Colombian law under which “false positives” and other
illegal killings are currently investigated and prosecuted. The law
takes this approach in relation to crimes of sexual violence.
The law’s expansion of the military justice system over human rights
violations directly contradicts the repeated rulings of the
Constitutional Court of Colombia and the Inter-American Court of Human
Rights. In September 2012, for example, the Inter-American Court ruled
in the case of Vélez Restrepo and Family v. Colombia that the
military justice system “is not the competent system of justice to
investigate and, as appropriate, prosecute and punish the authors of
human rights violations.”
The law also establishes a definition of “legitimate target” that
allows the public security forces to attack civilians in an overly broad
range of situations, such as when civilians carry out activities that
are unrelated to the country’s armed conflict. Article 10 of the law
provides that “civilians who participate directly in the hostilities”
are legitimate targets. Article 11 defines direct participation in
hostilities as anyone who carries out acts that will “probably” cause
any kind of “harm” to civilians or civilian objects, the public security
forces, or other state institutions “in support of an armed group.”
By contrast, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has
said that to qualify as direct participation in hostilities, a specific
act must reach a threshold of harm, and be designed to cause harm in
support of one party to an armed conflict and in detriment to another
party. The Colombian Military Forces’ Operational Law Manual of 2009,
citing the ICRC, recognized these requirements, but the new law fails to
incorporate them.
“By establishing an incredibly broad and vague definition of whom the
security forces can attack and kill, the law dilutes the fundamental
distinction between civilians and combatants enshrined by international
humanitarian law,” Vivanco said. “Hopefully the Constitutional Court
will strike down the provisions in the legislation that contradict
international humanitarian law and human rights standards.”