Crimes against humanity refer to specific crimes committed in the
context of a large-scale attack targeting civilians, regardless of their
nationality. These crimes include murder, torture, sexual violence,
enslavement, persecution, enforced disappearance, etc.
Crimes
against humanity have often been committed as part of State policies,
but they can also be perpetrated by non-State armed groups or
paramilitary forces. Unlike war crimes, crime against humanity can also
be committed in peacetime, and contrary to genocide, they are not
necessarily committed against a specific national, ethnical, racial or
religious group.
Crimes against humanity appeared for the first
time in a treaty in the 1945 Nuremberg Charter at the end of the Second
World War, albeit with a different definition than today.
Since
the 1990s, crimes against humanity have been codified in different
international treaties such as the Statute of the International Criminal
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (1993), the Statute of the
International Tribunal for Rwanda (1994) and the Rome Statute of the
International Criminal Court (1998). The Rome Statute provides the most
recent and most expansive list of specific criminal acts that may
constitute crimes against humanity.
Unlike other human rights
violations, war crimes do not engage State responsibility but individual
criminal responsibility. This means that individuals can be tried and
found personally responsible for these crimes....<<<Read More>>>...
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