March
24, 2003
The
Geneva Conventions and Prisoners of War
By Anthony Dworkin
Looking
dazed and fearful, five U.S. soldiers captured by Iraqi forces were
shown on videotape broadcast by al-Jazeera on March 23. President
Bush warned that if POWs were not treated humanely, the
people who mistreat the prisoners will be treated as war criminals.
For its part, Iraq said it would respect the Geneva Conventions
in its treatment of the prisoners.
Iraqi
POWs are not the only ones who have been filmed or photographed
in captivity. U.S. networks have also shown footage of Iraqi soldiers
surrendering or being detained during military operations, and several
still photographs of POWs have appeared in U.S. and other
news media.
The
rules governing the treatment of prisoners of war are spelled out
in the third Geneva Convention of 1949. The Convention requires
that POWs must at all times be treated humanely,
and goes on to list a number of specific requirements: they must
not be killed, seriously endangered, mutilated or subject to medical
or scientific experiments. Furthermore, they must be protected against
acts of violence or intimidation, and against insults and
public curiosity (Article 13).
According
to A.P.V. Rogers, a former Major General in the British army and
an expert in the laws of war, the key to deciding whether treatment
of POWs infringes the Convention is to look at the intention
of the action. Action that was intended to be humiliating
and degrading, he said, would qualify as a breach of the Convention.
But television footage that was merely factual would
not necessarily be a violation.
That
distinction was seized on by the British Defense Minister, Geoff
Hoon, who told reporters on March 24 that there was an enormous
difference between the factual photographs very often
of the backs of prisoners surrendering as against the appalling,
barbaric behaviour of Iraqi forces dealing with... American prisoners.
But
Francoise Bouchet-Saulnier, legal advisor to Medecins Sans Frontieres,
said that it was important to take the likely consequences of filming
POWs into account. She pointed out that a key concern of the
Convention was to prevent prisoners from being put in danger, and
said that footage of Iraqi soldiers voluntarily surrendering might
lead to future reprisals against them or their families on the grounds
that they were traitors. She added that if the footage was shot
by film crews embedded within the U.S. military, and
cleared by military officials before being broadcast, then the army
had a responsibility to prevent it from being shown, if individual
Iraqi soldiers could be identified.
A spokesman
for the International Committee of the Red Cross, Florian Westphal,
told the Crimes of War Project that the ICRC would consider the
use of any image that makes a prisoner of war individually
recognisable to be a violation of Article 13 of the Convention.
He pointed out that the condition of being taken prisoner might
be considered degrading or humiliating in itself, and that representations
of captives could also have an impact on families. He said that
the ICRC was appealing to both sides to abide by the provisions
of the third Geneva Convention, including Article 13.
He
also said that the ICRC is talking to both sides about obtaining
access to prisoners of war, and hopes to be given access within
days.
An
earlier controversy about the photographing of military detainees
came when the United States released images of shackled captives
in Guantanamo Bay last year. Those photographs were felt by many
to be degrading, although it was not easy to identify individual
captives. Although the United States says that the Geneva Conventions
are not technically applicable to detainees from the war in Afghanistan
or the wider campaign against terrorism, the U.S. government has
pledged to abide by the main humanitarian provisions of the Convention.
General
Rogers pointed out that during the last Gulf War in 1991, the British
Army had pursued a deliberately cautious policy toward the representation
of prisoners of war, requiring that footage of enemy soldiers being
taken prisoner should not be broadcast if they could be individually
identified. But the view taken was that there would be no
problem in showing them as a group, he said.
Francoise
Bouchet-Saulnier also pointed out that under the law, prisoners
of war cannot be coerced to reveal information of military use.
You can interrogate prisoners if you think they may have been
involved in a crime, if the questioning is related to prevention
of a future crime that may be planned, or to the investigation of
a crime that has already been committed, she said. But to
force soldiers to release military information is to encourage them
to become traitors, she said, and that is to put them in possible
danger.
It
is important to be aware that you may have different types of prisoner,
she added. Those who surrender freely may be willing to cooperate,
but those who are taken prisoner during hostilities should not be
put under pressure to reveal information about their sides
military resources or deployment.
Technically,
not all violations of the Geneva Conventions are war crimes
that determination is reserved for serious breaches of the
treaty. General Rogers said that in his opinion, subjecting prisoners
of war to humiliating or degrading treatment was a serious violation,
and hence a war crime.
It
has been reported that footage of dead U.S. soldiers, also aired
by al-Jazeera, appears to indicate that some may have been shot
in the forehead at close range. If the soldiers were executed in
captivity, that would be a grave breach of the Geneva Convention,
and a war crime.
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