THE United Nations is to set up a dedicated investigations unit in Geneva to examine the legality of drone attacks in cases where civilians are killed in so-called ‘targeted’ counter-terrorism operations.

The announcement was made by Ben Emmerson QC, a UN special rapporteur, in a speech to Harvard law school in which he condemned secret rendition and waterboarding as crimes under international law.

His forthright comments, directed at both US presidential candidates, will be seen as an explicit challenge to the prevailing US ideology of the global war on terror.

Earlier this summer, Emmerson, who monitors counter-terrorism for the UN, called for effective investigations into drone attacks. Some US drone strikes in Pakistan — where those helping victims of earlier attacks or attending funerals were killed — may amount to war crimes, Emmerson warned.

In his Harvard speech, he revealed: “If the relevant states are not willing to establish effective independent monitoring mechanisms — then it may in the last resort be necessary for the UN to act.

“Together with my colleague Christof Heyns, (the UN special rapporteur on extra-judicial killings), I will be launching an investigation unit within the special procedures of the (UN) Human Rights Council to inquire into individual drone attacks.”

The unit will also look at “other forms of targeted killing conducted in counter-terrorism operations, in which it is alleged that civilian casualties have been inflicted, and to seek explanations from the states using this technology and the states on whose territory it is used. (It) will begin its work early next year and will be based in Geneva.”

Security officials who took part in waterboarding interrogations or secret rendition removals should be made accountable for their actions and justice, Emmerson added.

“The time has come,” he said, “for the international community to agree minimum standard principles for investigating such allegations and holding those responsible to account.

“Let us be clear on this: secret detention is unlawful as a matter of international law. Waterboarding is always torture. Torture is an international crime of universal jurisdiction. The torturer, like the pirate before him, is regarded in international law as the enemy of all mankind. There is therefore a duty on states to investigate and to prosecute acts of torture.”

The US stance of conducting counter-terrorism operations against Al Qaeda or other groups anywhere in the world because it is deemed to be an international conflict was indefensible, he maintained.

“The global war paradigm has done immense damage to a previously shared international consensus on the legal framework underlying both international human rights law and international humanitarian law,” Emmerson said. “It has also given a spurious justification to a range of serious human rights and humanitarian law violations.

“The (global) war paradigm was always based on the flimsiest of reasoning, and was not supported even by close allies of the US.

The first-term Obama administration initially retreated from this approach, but over the past 18 months it has begun to rear its head once again, in briefings by administration officials seeking to provide a legal justification for the drone programme of targeted killing in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia ...

By arrangement with the Guardian

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