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Chapter VII - The United Nations and the Obligation to Prevent Genocide Under International Law

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 November 2022

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Summary

There can be no more important issue and no more binding obligation than the prevention of genocide,

Indeed, this may be considered one of the original purposes of the United Nations. The “Untold Sorrowwhich the scourge of war had brought to mankind, at the time when the organization was established, included genocide on a horrific scale. The words “Never againwere on everyone's lips,

KofiAnnan

INTRODUCTION

The three previous chapters mainly discussed the obligation to prevent genocide in international law with a specific focus on what states are obligated to do in preventing genocide. Because of the nature of this obligation and the actions needed at different levels of prevention as well as the challenges involved, the need to see the role of the United Nations in the prevention of genocide became pressing at several occasions. This is also because the UN has been mentioned in the Genocide Convention. Indeed, while article I of the Genocide Convention provides for the obligation vis-à-vis contracting parties to prevent and punish genocide, article VIII provides for recourse to the UN for preventive actions. This article states that “Any Contracting Party may call upon the competent organs of the United Nations to take such action under the Charter of the United Nations as they consider appropriate for the prevention and suppression of acts of genocide or any of the other acts enumerated in article III”.

An analysis of the language used in these two articles read in the context of the Genocide Convention as a whole as well as other related sources of international law is very essential in order to know whether the United Nations has an obligation to prevent genocide and in the affirmative to know the actions it should take in complying with that obligation. Other questions linked to this need to be answered as well. The first is whether the obligation to prevent genocide by the UN (if any) is subjected to prior information by contracting states about the risk, imminence or occurrence of genocide. The second is related to the territorial scope of that obligation (if any). The third is related to the organs of the UN which are competent to take action to prevent genocide at each level and the actions they may and should take.

Type
Chapter
Information
Prevention of Genocide Under International Law
An Analysis of the Obligations of States and the United Nations to Prevent Genocide at the Primary, Secondary and Tertiary Levels
, pp. 229 - 288
Publisher: Intersentia
Print publication year: 2014

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