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Liydmyla Panova, Ernest Gramatskyy, Dmytro Baranenko, Dmytro Sichko y Oleksiy Ulianov
Expropriation and other forms of reparation in terms of compensation for damage caused as a  
 
result of war crimes: International legal experience 
As for  bringing  responsibility  for war  crimes,  the  experience of using 
international tribunals is no less interesting (Table 1).
Use of tribunal mechanisms to prosecute war criminals
The 
Nuremberg 
Tribunal
operated in  Nuremberg  from November  1945 to  October 1946  against  the 
leaders  of  Hitler’s  Germany  and  showed  the  possibility  of  international 
justice against a criminal political regime, not against a country and a people.
Tokyo 
Tribunal
The International Military Tribunal for the Far East (3/05/1946-12/11/1948) 
over Japanese war criminals, following the Nuremberg trials in the Eastern 
region (International organization for migration, 2008).
International 
tribunals 
under the 
auspices of 
the UN
International Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (1993)
investigated  crimes  committed  during  the  wars  in  the  former  Yugoslav 
republics in 1991-2001. Permanent judges of the tribunal were elected by the 
UN General Assembly, deputy judges were appointed by the UN Secretary 
General on the recommendation of the UN General Assembly. In addition, 
the tribunal for the former Yugoslavia introduced the principle of command 
(hierarchical) responsibility - military commanders or ocials could be tried 
for the fact that they did not prevent crimes committed by their subordinates 
or did not punish them. The jurisdiction of the tribunal included: violations 
of  the  Geneva  Conventions,  which  dene  the  standards  of  treatment  of 
civilians,  prisoners,  and  wounded;  violation  of  the  rights  and  customs  of 
warfare;  crimes  against  humanity  (murder,  extermination,  deportation, 
imprisonment,  torture,  rape,  persecution  for  political,  racial  or  religious 
reasons); genocide. The territorial jurisdiction of the tribunal extended to all 
former Yugoslav republics except Slovenia. (USAID, 2022)
International Tribunal for Rwanda (1994) In April-July 1994, the 
leadership of Rwanda, represented by politicians and soldiers from the Hutu 
people,  carried  out  the  mass  extermination  of  several  hundred  thousand 
people from the Tutsi tribe by the  Tutsi  and  the  opposition  Hutus. Rebels 
from  the  Rwandan  Patriotic  Front,  representing  ethnic  Tutsi,  recaptured 
most of the country and the capital by July 1994, prompting a mass exodus of 
Hutu to the neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo. Among the fugitives 
were Hutus, who gave orders to exterminate Tutsis and many perpetrators of 
murder and rape. Rwanda’s new government has asked the United Nations 
to  create  a  judicial  body  to  try  people  who  committed  crimes  during  the 
Rwandan genocide. 
In the  resolution of  the UN  Security Council  of November  8, 1994,  it was 
decided  to  create  a  tribunal  to  punish  those  involved  in  genocide  and 
violations of international humanitarian law. The tribunal was located in the 
city of Arusha, in Tanzania, neighboring Rwanda, and the appeals chamber 
was located in The Hague. In terms of organizational structure, this tribunal 
diered  little  from  the  International  Tribunal  for  the  former  Yugoslavia. 
He was  empowered to  prosecute people  accused of  violating international 
humanitarian  law  on  the  territory  of  Rwanda  and  to  prosecute  Rwandan 
citizens  who  committed  such  violations  on  the  territory  of  neighboring 
states. (Crimes committed from January 1 to December 31, 1994). 
The jurisdiction of the tribunal included: genocide, crimes against humanity, 
and violations of the provisions  of  the Geneva Conventions, which related 
to  internal  military  conicts.  Crimes  against  humanity  included  assaults 
on  physical  and  psychological  well-being,  hostage-taking,  terrorism,  rape, 
forced  prostitution,  looting,  robbery,  slavery,  the  slave  trade,  etc.  as  well 
as threats  of such  actions. During  its 20  years  of  operation,  the  Rwandan 
tribunal has indicted 96 people. 61 of them were sentenced to various terms 
of imprisonment, 14 were acquitted, and 10 cases were transferred to courts 
of national  jurisdiction. Proceedings against 8 defendants were suspended 
due  to  various  circumstances.  In  2016,  the  tribunal  stopped  working. 
(USAID, 2022)