根据国际刑事法院规约,在网络空间活动的非国家行为者对战争罪的个人刑事责任

Giulia Gabrielli
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摘要

在当代武装冲突中,敌对行动中越来越多地使用数字技术。虽然对于国际人道法的规则和原则完全适用于战争的“第五领域”已达成广泛共识,但许多问题仍存在争议。更具体地说,数字技术使国家以外的各种行为者——如个人、“黑客活动分子”、犯罪集团、非国家武装团体——能够在敌对行动中发挥作用,并参与可能伤害平民或破坏民用基础设施的网络行动,这可能构成严重违反国际人道法的行为。在此背景下,本文试图研究非国家行为体(nsa)实施的敌对网络行动可能构成战争罪的法律依据,从而使其在国际法下承担个人刑事责任。因此,分析将集中于《国际刑事法院罗马规约》关于战争罪的规定对这种行动的适用性,以期确定触发国际刑事法院管辖权的必要先决条件。为此,第一部分将重点关注国家安全局越来越多地通过网络手段参与敌对行动,并以最近俄罗斯和乌克兰之间的冲突为相关案例研究。随后,本文将探讨适用《国际刑事法院规约》第8条的必要条件,并特别注意由于国家安全机构参与武装冲突而被认为特别成问题的那些方面。最后,本文试图强调未来可能对可能构成战争罪的网络行为进行调查的局限性。这些问题不仅包括可受理性问题,而且还包括《罗马规约》在涉及适用于非国际性武装冲突的战争罪规定时的法定限制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
INDIVIDUAL CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY OF NON-STATE ACTORS OPERATING IN CYBERSPACE FOR WAR CRIMES UNDER THE ICC STATUTE
Contemporary armed conflict has witnessed an increased employment of digital technologies in the conduct of hostilities. While there is broad consensus on the full applicability of the rules and principles of international humanitarian law (IHL) to the “fifth domain” of warfare, many issues remain debated. More specifically, digital technologies allow a wide range of actors other than States – such as individuals, “hacktivists”, criminal groups, non-State armed groups – to play a role in the hostilities and engage in cyber operations that have the potential of harming civilians or damaging civilian infrastructure and that may amount to serious violations of IHL. Against this backdrop, this paper seeks to examine the legal grounds upon which hostile cyber operations carried out by non-State actors (NSAs) could constitute war crimes, thus entailing their individual criminal responsibility under international law. Hence, the analysis will focus on the applicability of the war crimes provisions of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) to such operations, with a view to identifying the prerequisites necessary to trigger the ICC’s jurisdiction. To this end, the first part will focus on the increased involvement of NSAs in the conduct of hostilities by cyber means, taking the recent conflict between Russia and Ukraine as a pertinent case study. Subsequently, the paper will explore the conditions necessary for the application of Article 8 of the ICC Statute, with special attention devoted to those aspects that are deemed particularly problematic in light of the participation of NSAs in armed conflict. Finally, the paper seeks to highlight the limits of possible future investigations of cyber conducts possibly amounting to war crimes. These encompass not only issues of admissibility, but also the statutory limits of the Rome Statute when it comes to war crimes provisions applicable to noninternational armed conflicts.
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