Tensions between Colombia’s war crimes tribunal and the country’s chief prosecutor have reached a climax after prosecution officials on Friday “unduly” seized copies of case files and allegedly intimidated a judge.
The president of the Special Jurisdiction for Peace (JEP), Patricia Linares, responded furiously and accused Prosecutor General Nestor Humberto Martinez of “outright and categorically undue meddling” with criminal proceedings and even the “intimidation” of judges and employees.
Martinez’ latest attempt to ‘intimidate’ the court
Martinez, whose reputation has been tarnished by corruption allegations, reportedly sent one of his most trusted assistants, Majer Nayi Abushihab, to the war crimes tribunal’s main office in Bogota with an order to seize case files and subpoena a judge to appear in his office for a hearing.
According to the president of the JEP, Abushihab and other officials “disrespectfully” told the judge she was expected at a prosecution hearing.
Taking advantage of the confusion, the prosecution officials were able to make copies of the case files related to kidnapping allegedly carried out by demobilized FARC members, also known as “Case 001,” said Linares on Friday.
JEP president Patricia Linares
Martinez back down
Martinez announced on Twitter that he revoked the order to obtain copies of the case files after they were already in the hands of his office.
The increasingly controversial prosecutor — Martinez has been tied to some of Colombia’s largest corruption scandals in recent history — also said he would no longer seek to subject the judge to a hearing.
According to Linares, a few hours after the incident, “the same official who had accessed and taken a digital copy of the file returned and destroyed it before the Judicial Secretary General, the Executive Secretary and a magistrate of the Court.”
Linares called on Inspector General Fernando Carrillo to investigate the latest incident and take action if necessary.
Colombia’s prosecution to investigate war crimes tribunal officials
Duque backs Martinez anyway
While Martinez backed down, President Ivan Duque supported the chief prosecutor, claiming he had “acted in accordance with the law” and meant to “correct flaws” in the war crimes tribunal.
Duque — whose political and economical backers have been implicated in countless war crimes and crimes related to the conflict — has fiercely opposed the transitional justice system for years.
Linares rebuked the president, saying that “when an irregularity like yesterday’s is committed,” authorities are “not acting within the framework of the rule of law.”
Patricia Linares
Is Colombia’s state losing its legitimacy?
Friday’s clash came on the same day that United Nations mission chief Jean Arnault, who leads the international monitoring of the peace process, informed the UN Security Council that Colombia’s state institutions had become a threat to peace in the country, together with organized crime and other illegal armed groups.
Colombia’s state and illegal armed groups both threaten peace: UN
On the same day and at the request of Colombia’s Constitutional Court, the UN’s human rights chief in Colombia, Alberto Brunori, advised the court to dump a bill approved by congress and the president that seeks to limit the war crimes tribunal’s ability to investigate crimes committed by the military.
According to Brunori, the law proposed by Duque’s Democratic Center (CD) party is “contrary to the international obligations of the Colombian State to investigate, judge and punish serious conduct and violations of human rights and breaches of international humanitarian law.”
The military fought the FARC and other guerrilla groups together with paramilitary groups that were formed by Colombia’s business and political elites.
Furthermore, the military executed thousands of civilians in order to falsely present them as guerrillas killed in combat when Duque’s political patron and CD chief Alvaro Uribe was president between 2002 and 2010, .
Colombia’s congress trying to obstruct military war crimes probe: UN
Of all people, chief prosecutor told to respect the court
Despite the inconvenience of the war crime investigations for Duque’s backers and the clients of Martinez’ law firm, the president of the JEP on Saturday said the chief prosecutor “must respect the autonomy and independence of the JEP.”
The court began investigating war crimes earlier this year as part of a peace process that has been opposed by Duque for years. His party even ordered the illegal wiretapping of peace talks with the FARC in 2014 in apparent attempts to derail them.
The peace process seeks to end more than 50 years of armed conflict between the state and the FARC that has left at least 210,000 civilians dead, 80,000 missing and 7.5 million displaced.