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â I. INTRODUCTION Forty-eight years ago, the London Conference on âThe Future of Law in Africaâ agreed that there should be a general set of criminal laws to be universally applied to all African nations.1 Unfortunately, no progress whatsoever has been made towards achieving this long-term objective. Lately, a fresh impetus for doing so has come from another quarter, namely, the enactment of the Statute of the International Criminal Court in 2002 (hereinafter called the âICC Statuteâ2 ) which was the culmination of the Rome Conference convened to establish such a court. As a result of the ICC Statute, a permanent international criminal court composed of judges who are independent of their home states, was created for the ï¬rst time in history, to try perpetrators of crimes against humanity, genocide, war crimes and aggression. The ICC Statute contains provisions spelling out some of the general principles of criminal responsibility. This development is of special signiï¬cance to African nations because many of them have ratiï¬ed the Statute. Moreover, at the time of writing, all the cases before the International Criminal Court (ICC) involve African nationals. Consequently, the ICC Statute is an important source of law which African lawmakers (both
African Journal of International and Comparative Law – Edinburgh University Press
Published: Mar 1, 2009
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