RESPONSIBILITY FOR PROPERTY AND ASSETS FROZEN OR SEIZED UPON REQUEST BY THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL

117

author Owiso Owiso
journal RIDP (ISSN: 0223-5404)
volume 2022
issue Contemporary challenges and alternatives to international criminal justice
section Articles
date of publication Dec. 6, 2022
language English
pagina 117
abstract

Article 57(3)(e) of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court empowers the
International Criminal Court to ‘seek the cooperation of States pursuant to article 93,
paragraph 1 (k), to take protective measures for the purpose of forfeiture, in particular for the
ultimate benefit of victims’, while Article 93(1)(k) imposes an obligation on state parties to the
statute to provide assistance to the Court in the ‘identification, tracing and freezing or seizure
of proceeds, property and assets and instrumentalities of crimes for the purpose of eventual
forfeiture’. However, the Court does not yet have sufficient jurisprudence to flesh out the
conceptual and practical boundaries of these provisions, including the question of
responsibility for the management of the frozen or seized property and assets. If the Court’s
very limited relevant jurisprudence is anything to go by, it is urgently necessary to interrogate
these provisions and their practical application, as these questions lie at the very core of the
Court’s integrity and credibility. This is especially so as the Court seeks to expand its practical
reach beyond (mainly indigent) non-state actors to state actors, a situation that is likely to call
more attention to the Court’s powers and responsibilities specifically relating to Articles
57(3)(e) and 93(1)(k). This article interrogates the Court’s powers under Article 57(3)(e) and
the extent of obligations of the Court and of state parties arising from Article 93(1)(k), as well
as the possible implications for the rights of accused persons, the rights and expectations of
victims and for state cooperation.