Philippe Sands
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 64 |
Date of birth | October 17,1960 |
Zodiac sign | Libra |
Born | London |
United Kingdom | |
Spouse | Natalia Schiffrin |
Job | Lawyer |
Professor | |
Author | |
Film Producer | |
Essayist | |
Law professor | |
Books | A Death in the Vatican |
East West Street | |
Principles of International Environmental Law | |
Torture team | |
Lawless World | |
Bowett's law of international institutions | |
Manual on International Courts and Tribunals | |
The Availability of Article 11 Agreements in the Context of the Basel Convention's Export Ban on Recyclables: A Discussion Paper | |
International Environmental Law: Emerging Trends and Implications for Transnational Corporations | |
The Ratline | |
Education | Corpus Christi College |
Movies/Shows | A Nazi Legacy: What Our Fathers Did |
Nationality | British |
French | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 572527 |
Philippe Sands Life story
Philippe Joseph Sands, KC is a British and French writer and lawyer at 11 King's Bench Walk and Professor of Laws and Director of the Centre on International Courts and Tribunals at University College London.
Ukraine's prosecutors wrestle with a new role: war crimes investigators
... " It is absolutely fine to be talking about potential war crimes, but the moment you set things in stone you make it easier for the other side to discredit your work, " said Philippe Sands, a UCL law professor who has served at the UN International Court of Justice and the European Court of Human Rights...
Russia's war: Do Bucha civilian killings amount to genocide?
... For Philippe Sands, there appears to be evidence of war crimes given the targeting of civilians and the siege of the port city of Mariupol appears to be a crime against humanity...
War in Ukraine: Gordon Brown backs Nuremberg-style trial for Putin
... Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba and the former president of the UK Supreme Court Lady Hale have added their signatures to the petition - as have professor of international law Philippe Sands QC; former prosecutor for the Nuremberg Military Tribunal Benjamin Ferencz; Labour peer Helena Kennedy QC; and former president of the European Court of Human Rights Sir Nicolas Bratza...
What is a war crime, and could Putin be prosecuted over Ukraine?
... Here s the problem: Professor Philippe Sands QC, an expert on international law at University College London, says the ICC couldn t prosecute Russia s leaders for this offence because the country isn t a signatory to the court...
Ukraine: Is Russia using cluster bombs?
... Philippe Sands, professor of law at University College London, said that the scale of civilian casualties witnessed during the latest conflict in Ukraine suggests some intentionality...
Chagos islanders in emotional, historic trip home
... It s a big deal for the Mauritian government, which has fought to get these islands back since independence, " said Philippe Sands, the British barrister representing the government in its legal battle with the UK...
FW de Klerk and the South African line about apartheid and crimes against humanity
... shock, in de Klerk, the ignorance that is apartheid, It is not vulnerable and hopeless, today they claim, and has never been, a crime against humanity , said Philippe Sands, QC, professor and expert on international law...
Chagos Islands dispute: Britain accused of crimes against humanity of Mauritius
... Philippe Sands, a lawyer of the Mauritian government, said: the UK is found on the edge of itself as a pariah state...
Russia's war: Do Bucha civilian killings amount to genocide?
The Killing of civilians in Bucha near the capital Kyiv has sparked widespread accusations of War Crimes - with Some Voices arguing that Moscow has gone even further.
" That is real genocide, what you have seen here, " Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said from Bucha .
Poland's Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki agrees the killings in Bucha and other towns near the capital " must be called acts of genocide and be dealt with as such".
And attacks on civilians in Bucha do not " look far short of genocide".
But the US and The West 's Nato military alliance have stopped short of using The Word to describe what's Happening in Ukraine.
So is there a case for accusing Russian forces of committing what has been called the " crime of all crimes"?
What is genocide?Genocide is widely seen as The Most serious crime against humanity.
as a mass extermination of a particular group of People - for example, the murder of six million Jews in The Holocaust of World War Two.
The UN Genocide Convention defines genocide as committing any of The Following " with the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group":
Has Russia committed genocide in Ukraine?There is no consensus on this.
Eugene Finkel, an associate professor of international affairs at Johns Hopkins University, believes genocide is underway in Ukraine. He says there is evidence of killings, carried out in Bucha and other places, of People based on their Ukrainian identity.
" It's not just killing People , it's targeting a national identity group, " he says.
However, it's the rhetoric coming from Moscow that tips over into genocidal intent, Mr Finkel says.
He points to an article titled " What should Russia do with Ukraine? " published This Week by Russia's State -owned media Ria news agency.
The article argues that Ukraine " is impossible as a nation State " and even its name " apparently cannot be retained" the Ukrainian nationalist elite " need to be liquidated, its re-education is impossible" argues the writer, Timofei Sergeytsev.
He bases his theory on the baseless claim that Ukraine is a Nazi State , arguing that a significant section of the population is guilty too because They are " passive Nazis" and therefore accomplices. After a Russian victory these People would require re-education lasting at least A Generation and it would " inevitably mean de-Ukrainisation".
" For me, The Shift in tone in recent weeks in Russia, and especially among The Elites , was the Tipping Point that we call the threshold of intent, not just to destroy The State . . But to destroy an identity, " says Prof Finkel.
" The Goal of The War is de-Ukrainisation. . They are not focusing on The State , They 're focusing on Ukrainians. "
Gregory Stanton , founding president and chair of Genocide Watch , says there is proof " that the Russian Army is in fact intending to destroy, in part, the Ukrainian national group".
" That's why They 're targeting civilians. They 're not just targeting combatants and military. "
He says President Putin's claims in the lead-up to The Invasion , were what some scholars call " mirroring".
" Often the perpetrator of genocide will accuse The Other Side - the targeted Victims - of intending to commit genocide before, in fact, the perpetrator does so. That's What Happened in this case. "
'Evidence not strong enough yet'But other experts in The Field of genocide say it's too early to define Russian atrocities in that category.
According to Jonathan Leader Maynard, lecturer in international politics at King's College London, The Evidence is still too unclear under the strict wording of the Genocide Convention.
That doesn't necessarily mean genocide is not taking place - he says it's " very clear" that atrocities are Happening - just that The Bar has yet to be cleared.
" It's possible that those atrocities could be genocidal or could escalate in future to genocide, But The Evidence is not strong enough yet, " he says.
However, he points to the " deeply troubling" rhetoric of Russia's president denying Ukraine's historical existence as an independent nation. It illustrates a " genocidal way of thinking" he says, where Vladimir Putin believes Ukraine " isn't real, so They don't have The Right to exist".
The Risk of genocide is increasing due to that kind of talk, he says, " But we cannot automatically assume that such rhetoric is going to lead to actions carried out on the ground".
For Philippe Sands , there appears to be evidence of War Crimes given the targeting of civilians and The Siege of The Port city of Mariupol appears to be A Crime against humanity.
However, Prof Sands who is director of the Centre for International Courts and Tribunals at University College London, says in order to prove genocide under International Law , a prosecutor must establish an intent to destroy a group, in whole or in part. And international courts have set a very high threshold for proving that.
Intent can be established by direct evidence where The Perpetrators say They are killing People in order to destroy The Group . But Prof Sands believes that is unlikely to exist in Ukraine's case.
Intent can also be inferred from a pattern of behaviour, " But that's a tough call" he adds. Not enough is known yet of the intentions of those Russians alleged to have carried out atrocities.
" Going into a village and executing a significant proportion of adult males from one national or religious group on an apparently systematic Basis - if that is What Happened in Bucha - could be an indicator of a genocidal intent, " he says.
" But at this stage we have insufficient evidence to know what precisely happened and why. I think it's right to be extremely alert to signs of genocidal intent, as The War moves to The East of Ukraine and becomes increasingly brutal. "
Alex Hinton, director of the Centre for the Study of Genocide and Human Rights at Rutgers University , says that War Crimes and crimes against humanity certainly seem to be taking place in Ukraine through obliteration bombing and targeting of civilians.
President Putin is displaying genocidal rhetoric, Mr Hinton says, But this will need to be clearly linked to atrocities on the ground to prove genocidal intent.
" I wouldn't say this is genocide like [President] Zelensky has stated, But I'd say The Warning signals are there. The Risk threat is very high, " he says.
Whether or not Russia is committing genocide should not cloud what Alex Hinton sees as clear atrocities being committed by Russian forces in Ukraine.
" We know atrocity crimes are taking place and that compels action. It shouldn't be a case where we think it has to be genocide to do more. "
War in Ukraine: More coverageSource of news: bbc.com