Abstract

The prosecution of perpetrators of mass violations of human rights remains one of the unfinished tasks of Africa's ʺdemocraciesʺ which, in itself, is eloquent evidence of the need for systemic arrangements to protect human rights, build a culture of the rule of law and ultimately defeat impunity. Emboldened by the absence of the foregoing, accountability for human rights violations of individuals and the fulfilment of the corresponding duty to prosecute violators have been contentious issues in Africa's politically volatile communities. As states are caught betwixt and between protecting human rights and holding individuals accountable, the questions about the State's fulfilment of its international obligations arises. Sourced primarily from international treaties, customary international law, and general principles of law, the duty to prosecute violations of human rights is revisited with a focus on the theoretical and legal framework. Situated in the context of the ongoing Anglophone Cameroon crisis in which political factions of the English-speaking regions are pitted against the French-speaking dominated Government of Cameroon, and bringing to the fore the violations, which have become an odious scourge, this paper argues that there is a sacrosanct duty on the Government of Cameroon to investigate, prosecute and punish such violations. The paper interrogates the relevant international law instruments and engages in a dialogue with relevant and respectable literature penned by prominent scholars and jurists on the issue of accountability. It provides an analytical disquisition on the duty to prosecute which, as argued herein, must be fulfilled by Cameroon given the violations that have been committed during the ongoing Anglophone Cameroon crisis.

Highlights

  • In the last several decades, the protection of human rights has grown to be sacrosanct as evidenced by numerous international human rights instruments including mechanisms put in place to hold perpetrators of gross human rights violations accountable

  • Situated in the context of the ongoing Anglophone Cameroon crisis in which political factions of the Englishspeaking regions are pitted against the French-speaking dominated Government of Cameroon, and bringing to the fore the violations, which have become an odious scourge, this paper argues that there is a sacrosanct duty on the Government of Cameroon to investigate, prosecute and punish such violations

  • In order to engage in a constructive dialogue that builds upon existing gaps on the issue of accountability for gross violations of human rights, the paper considered the qualitative desktop research approach as the most suitable: it warranted the identification, collection and interrogation of both primary and secondary sources on the issue of accountability for human rights violations by looking at the legal framework, the international soft-law arrangements, case-law and respectable and relevant publications penned by some leading scholars on the topic

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Summary

Introduction

In the last several decades, the protection of human rights has grown to be sacrosanct as evidenced by numerous international human rights instruments including mechanisms put in place to hold perpetrators of gross human rights violations accountable. In order to engage in a constructive dialogue that builds upon existing gaps on the issue of accountability for gross violations of human rights, the paper considered the qualitative desktop research approach as the most suitable: it warranted the identification, collection and interrogation of both primary and secondary sources on the issue of accountability for human rights violations by looking at the legal framework (at global, regional and national levels), the international soft-law arrangements, case-law and respectable and relevant publications penned by some leading scholars on the topic. The results achieved include persuasive analytical and descriptive research in which both primary and secondary sources are interwoven in building a theoretical and legal framework on the duty to prosecute gross violations of human rights committed in the Anglophone Cameroon crisis

A brief overview of the Anglophone Cameroon crisis
International human rights instruments
The duty to prosecute under customary international law
The duty to prosecute
United Nations Security Council Resolutions
Regional framework for human rights accountability
Domestic legal framework for accountability
Conclusion
Literature
Full Text
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