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2012-05-16
G8 Summit: President Obama To Press Chancellor Merkel On Euro-Zone Growth Package

Water Policy Needs 'Radical' Change To Protect People And Environment

U.S. Nuclear Weapons Upgrades - Experts Report Massive Costs Increase

Discussion: Greek Politicians Debate Election Disaster - 'If We Leave The Euro, Everything Will Be Worse'

Practiced Civility - Politesse Trumps Policy As Hollande Meets Merkel

Aftermath Of An Election Debacle - Merkel Fires Environment Minister Rottgen

In U.S.: Georgia Police Escort School Buses After Rifle Threat

Disses And Death Threats - Rapper In Germany Fears For Life After Fatwa

Ratko Mladic Goes On Trial For Bosnia War Crimes

2012-05-15
U.S. Justice Dept. Opens Investigation Into JP Morgan's $2 Billion Trading Losses

Conflict With Far-Right Party - Young German Muslims Defend Right To Protest

Rebekah Brooks Defiant Over Charges Relating To Phone-Hacking 'Cover-Up'

Delayed Indefinitely - Unraveling Berlin's New Airport Debacle

New Elections In June - Markets Fall As Greek Talks Collapse

News Analysis: Standing Firm - Germany's Merkel Won't Budge On Austerity Despite Setback

Better Than Expected - German GDP Surges As Euro-Zone Split Widens

Former Mexican Official Pleads Guilty To Aiding Cartel

Panel Calls For Steep Cuts In U.S. Nuclear Weapons

Checking The Vaults - Germans Fret About Their Foreign Gold Reserves

French President Inaugurated - Hollande Under Pressure To Score Quick Victories

Report: Resources Being Stripped Faster Than Planet Can Renew Them

2012-05-14
North Dakota Oil Boom: Thousands Pin Their Dreams On Striking It Rich

Time To Admit Defeat - Greece Can No Longer Delay Euro Zone Exit

E.U.: Israel Putting Any Two-State Peace Deal At Risk

JP Morgan Investment Boss Ina Drew Quits Over Bank's $2 Billion Investment Losses

Commentary: 'It's Going To Get Harder For Merkel'

Couples Therapy - Germany's Merkel And France's Hollande Are Damned To Get Along

Gulf Unity On Hold Amid Iranian Warning

News Analysis: Merkel's Defeat - Germany's Social Democrats Return To Relevancy

Champagne Before Crash - Pilot Bravado May Be To Blame For Russian Superjet Disaster


War Crimes Ruling - Human Rights Take A Backseat To Sovereignty
2012-02-04 18:25:36 (15 weeks ago)
Posted By: Intellpuke

An international court ruled on Friday that Germany cannot be held liable for paying reparations to the descendents of victims of a massacre perpetrated during World War II in Italy. The verdict has implications far beyond Nazi-era war crimes, and was welcomed by countries far and wide.

It sounds like a paradox: Germany takes Italy to court and wins -- and Rome is secretly pleased with the ruling. In addition, several other governments around the world are breathing a sigh of relief on Friday. After all, had the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruled differently, people in Afghanistan or Ethiopia, in the Balkans or in Libya, would have been able to take countries to court whose soldiers committed war crimes on their soil. It is a situation that governments everywhere wanted to avoid.

And now they have. The ICJ ruling threw out a 2008 decision by the highest Italian appellate court which sought to force Germany to pay reparations to the families of victims of World War II-era war crimes. "The action of Italian courts in denying German immunity ... constitutes a breach of the obligation owed by the Italian state to Germany," said Hisashi Owada, president of the United Nations court.


An archive image shows German Nazi soldiers making arrests in Rome,
Italy in 1944. Bundesarchiv

Human rights organization Amnesty International said in a statement that the ruling was a "great step backwards in the protection of international human rights." The group said that the ICJ placed countries' interests above the protection of human rights.

The case focused specifically on the June 29, 1944 murder of 250 Italian civilians in and near the Tuscan town of Civitella at the hands of German troops belonging to the Herman Goring Division. It was an act of revenge taken in response to a partisan assault on German soldiers a few days earlier resulting in three deaths. More than forty years later, family members of the victims of the civilian massacre sued Germany in an Italian court in the hopes of receiving reparations.

(story continues below)




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