Yustisia
Vol 10, No 3: December 2021

The International Criminal Court Jurisdiction Towards The Deportation Issues In Myanmar

Bugivia Maharani Setiadji Putri (Faculty of Law, Universitas Islam Indonesia, Yogyakarta)
Sefriani Sefriani ((Scopus ID: 57204317614) Faculty of Law, Universitas Islam Indonesia, Yogyakarta)



Article Info

Publish Date
23 Dec 2021

Abstract

This research aims to comprehensively analyze the International Criminal Court’s jurisdiction in adjudicating gross violations of human rights involving a non-party state of the 1998 Rome Statute and its application to the perpetrators of deportation against the Rohingya with Myanmar as the non-party state. The results showed that this jurisdiction can be implemented under three conditions, first, the crime is committed by nationals of a non-party state on the territory of a state party to the Statute. Second, the UN Security Council refers a situation to the International Criminal Court in its resolution. Third, through an ad hoc declaration that a non-party state of the Rome Statute accepts the International Criminal Court’s jurisdiction. Since the territorial jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court covers crimes that occur wholly or partly on the territory of a state party, it can be applied to the deportation against the Rohingya in Myanmar. This involved the fleeing of this ethnic group from attacks by the Government of Myanmar to Bangladesh, a state party to the 1998 Rome Statute

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Journal Info

Abbrev

Yustisia

Publisher

Subject

Law, Crime, Criminology & Criminal Justice Social Sciences

Description

The scope of the articles published in Yustisia Jurnal Hukum deal with a broad range of topics in the fields of Civil Law, Criminal Law, International Law, Administrative Law, Islamic Law, Constitutional Law, Environmental Law, Procedural Law, Antropological Law, Health Law, Law and Economic, ...