Showing posts with label International Criminal Court. Show all posts
Showing posts with label International Criminal Court. Show all posts

Monday 13 June 2022

MORE ABOUT INTERPOL: RED NOTICE

 

PHOTOGRAPH OF PEOPLE SUBJECT TO RED NOTICES 

How effective are these notices? What colour notices can be issued? Tell me more about the subjects of these notices? What matters are not subject to Red Notices or any other colour? This information is current as of 8 June 2022 and should be checked regularly for updates. Click on this link for updates: https://www.interpol.int/How-we-work/Notices/Red-Notices

 

How many Red Notices are there?

There are currently approximately 69,270 valid Red Notices, of which some 7,500 are public.

 

The majority of Red Notices are restricted to law enforcement use only.

 

In some cases, for example where the public’s help is needed to locate an individual or they pose a threat to public safety, a public extract of the Red Notice is published on this website.

 

In 2021, INTERPOL issued 10,776 Red Notices.

Who are the subjects of Red Notices?

Red Notices are issued for fugitives wanted either for prosecution or to serve a sentence. This follows judicial proceedings in the country issuing the request. This is not always the home country of the individual, but the country where the crime was committed.

 

When a person is sought for prosecution, they have not been convicted and should be considered innocent until proven guilty. A person sought to serve a sentence means they have been found guilty by a court in the issuing country.

 

What checks are done before a Red Notice is issued?

Every Red Notice request is checked by a specialised task force to ensure it is compliant with our rules. This review takes into account information available at the time of publication.

 

Whenever new and relevant information is brought to the attention of the General Secretariat after a Red Notice has been issued, the task force re-examines the case.

Offences for which a Red Notice may not be issued

Article 83 of INTERPOL’s Rules on the Processing of Data (RPD) sets out the specific conditions for the publication of Red Notices.

 

Red Notices may be published only if the offence concerned is a serious ordinary-law crime. They may not be published for the following categories of offences:

 

offences that in various countries raise controversial issues relating to behavioural or cultural norms;

offences relating to family/private matters;

offences originating from a violation of laws or regulations of an administrative nature or deriving from private disputes, unless the criminal activity is aimed at facilitating a serious crime or is suspected of being connected to organized crime.

The General Secretariat maintains a non-exhaustive list of specific offences that fall within the above categories.

 

The current list of offences for which a Red Notice may not be published can be downloaded in the Related Documents section below.

 

Are the individuals wanted by INTERPOL?

No, they are wanted by a country or an international tribunal.

 

INTERPOL cannot compel the law enforcement authorities in any country to arrest someone who is the subject of a Red Notice.

 

Each member country decides what legal value it gives to a Red Notice and the authority of their law enforcement officers to make arrests.

 

Why are Red Notices important?

They are used to simultaneously alert police in all our member countries about internationally wanted fugitives. Police in other countries can then be on the watch for them and use the Red Notice to support extradition proceedings.

 

Red Notices help bring fugitives to justice, sometimes many years after the original crime was committed.

 

What should I do if I have information on an individual?

Please inform your local police authorities and/or the INTERPOL General Secretariat. If you have information on any person who is subject to any notice that was issued by Interpol, please click on this link and fill out the form requesting information:

https://www.interpol.int/Contacts/Fugitives-wanted-persons

 

Thank you for reading this story and I would appreciate it to hear from you:

 

Please write me a letter by clicking on these e-mail links: neelcoertse@wirelessza.co.za & cjcoertse.law@gmai.com

 

Thursday 6 October 2016

INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT AND AFRICA: ONE DECADE ON

Ms Evelyn A Ankumah, Ms Angela Mudukuti, Judge Richard Goldstone & Ms Fatou Bensouda

I attended a book launch at Webber Wentzel Attorneys on 5 October 2016. The editor of the book THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT AND AFRICA is Ms Ankumah. The keynote was by H.E. Ms Fatou Bensouda, the chief prosecutor of the ICC [about the ICC: https://www.icc-cpi.int/about].

It was hosted by Webber Wentzel Attorney and the Dutch Embassy.

African countries are now complaining and falsely accuse the ICC of "colonialism" and that the ICC is unfairly targeting African Countries. It is abundantly clear, and it was so stated in the speeches yesterday, that the bulk of the human rights violations are committed on the African continent. It is also factually correct that almost all of the matters that are presently investigated by the ICC were referred to it by the African States themselves.

You will recall how the SA Government actively assisted President Al Bashir from Sudan to escape being arrested when he visited our country. You can read a lot of literature on this matter on the internet. It was announced at the meeting yesterday that the matter will be argued in the Constitutional Court on 22 November 2016. When you click on this link, it gives you access to the papers filed in the court.