From War Crimes to Crimes against Humanity and Genocide: Turkish Responsibility after World War I

Q3 Social Sciences
E. Gzoyan
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Abstract

Abstract:On 24 May 1915, the Triple Entente powers of Britain, France, and Russia issued a joint declaration that qualified the massacres, imprisonments and violence inflicted on the peaceful Armenian population as "crimes against humanity and civilization." The concept of crimes against humanity was further developed and explained by the Commission on the Responsibility of the Authors of the War and on Enforcement of Penalties (hereinafter: Commission), which was formed during the Paris Peace Conference to investigate violations of the laws and customs of war and prosecute war criminals. This article traces the evolution of discussions held within the Commission regarding the atrocities committed by the Ottoman Turkish government against its Armenian population, which technically fell outside the jurisdiction of the crimes specified in these talks, as the atrocities were committed not against the population of a belligerent state but, rather, against their own nationals. These discussions played a major part in the development of international criminal law; particularly of the concept of crimes against humanity. The Armenian Memorandum and the list of perpetrators of the Armenian atrocities were also presented to the Commission, which (together with other data and information collected) identified the crimes committed against the Armenian population by the Ottoman authorities, thus defining the concept of crimes against humanity and the acts that fell within its scope. Although post-World War I efforts for justice are generally assessed as a failed effort, crimes against humanity first materialized as a term in international law during this period and its development was based on the Armenian atrocities, which provided a critical basis for the International Military Tribunal's later convictions and contributed to the concept's evolution into its present-day significance.
从战争罪到危害人类罪和种族灭绝罪:第一次世界大战后土耳其的责任
摘要:1915 年 5 月 24 日,英、法、俄三国协约国发表联合声明,将屠杀、囚禁和平的亚美尼 亚人并对其施以暴力的行为定性为 "反人类罪和反文明罪"。巴黎和会期间成立的战争发动者责任与刑罚执行委员会(以下简称:委员会)进一步发展和解释了反人类罪的概念,该委员会的任务是调查违反战争法规和惯例的行为并起诉战争罪犯。这篇文章追溯了委员会内部就奥斯曼土耳其政府对其亚美尼亚人口所犯暴行进行讨论的演变过程,从技术上讲,这些暴行不属于这些会谈中规定的罪行的管辖范围,因为这些暴行不是针对交战国的人口,而是针对其本国国民。这些讨论对国际刑法的发展,特别是危害人类罪概念的发展起到了重要作用。亚美尼亚备忘录》和亚美尼亚暴行犯罪人名单也提交给了委员会,委员会(连同收集到的其他数据和信息)确定了奥斯曼当局对亚美尼亚人民犯下的罪行,从而界定了危害人类罪的概念及其范围内的行为。虽然人们普遍认为第一次世界大战后的司法努力是失败的,但危害人类罪在这一时期首次成为国际法中的一个术语,其发展是以亚美尼亚暴行为基础的,这为国际军事法庭后来的定罪提供了重要依据,并促进了这一概念的演变,使其具有今天的意义。
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来源期刊
Genocide Studies International
Genocide Studies International POLITICAL SCIENCE-
CiteScore
0.10
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7
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