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PROTOCOL 1
Additional to the Geneva Conventions
of 12 August 1949,
and
Relating to the Protection of Victims of
International Armed Conflicts, 8 June 1977
Article 85 -- Repression of Breaches of This Protocol
1. The provisions of the Conventions relating
to the repression of breaches and grave breaches, supplemented by this
Section, shall apply to the repression of breaches and grave breaches of
this Protocol.
2. Acts described as grave breaches in the
Conventions are grave breaches of this Protocol if committed against persons
in the power of an adverse Party protected by Articles 44, 45 and 73 of
this Protocol, or against the wounded, sick and shipwrecked of the adverse
Party who are protected by this Protocol, or against those medical or religious
personnel, medical units or medical transports which are under the control
of the adverse Party and are protected by this Protocol.
3. In addition to the grave breaches defined
in Article 11, the following acts shall be regarded as grave breaches of
this Protocol, when committed wilfully, in violation of the relevant provisions
of this Protocol, and causing death or serious injury to body or health:
(a) making the civilian population
or individual civilians the object of attack;
(b) launching an indiscriminate
attack affecting the civilian population or civilian objects in the knowledge
that such attack will cause excessive loss of life, injury to civilians
or damage to civilian objects, as defined in Article 57, paragraph 2 (a)(iii);
(c) launching an attack
against works or installations containing dangerous forces in the knowledge
that such attack will cause excessive loss of life, injury to civilians
or damage to civilian objects, as defined in Article 57, paragraph 2 (a)(iii);
(d) making non-defended
localities and demilitarized zones the object of attack;
(e) making a person the
object of attack in the knowledge that he is hors de combat;
(f) the perfidious
use, in violation of Article 37, of the distinctive emblem of the red cross,
red crescent or red lion and sun or of other protective signs recognized
by the Conventions or this Protocol.
4. In addition to the grave breaches defined
in the preceding paragraphs and in the Conventions, the following shall
be regarded as grave breaches of this Protocol, when committed wilfully
and in violation of the Conventions or the Protocol:
(a) the transfer by the occupying
Power of parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies,
or the deportation or transfer of all or parts of the population of the
occupied territory within or outside this territory, in violation of Article
49 of the Fourth Convention;
(b) unjustifiable delay
in the repatriation of prisoners of war or civilians;
(c) practices of apartheid
and other inhuman and degrading practices involving outrages upon personal
dignity, based on racial discrimination;
(d) making the clearly-recognized
historic monuments, works of art or places of worship which constitute
the cultural or spiritual heritage of peoples and to which special protection
has been given by special arrangement, for example, within the framework
of a competent international organization, the object of attack, causing
as a result extensive destruction thereof, where there is no evidence of
the violation by the adverse Party of Article 53, subparagraph (b), and
when such historic monuments, works of art and places of worship are not
located in the immediate proximity of military objectives;
(e) depriving a person protected
by the Conventions or referred to in paragraph 2 or this Article of the
rights of fair and regular trial.
5. Without prejudice to the application of
the Conventions and of this Protocol, grave breaches of these instruments
shall be regarded as war crimes.
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