ICMP (International Commission on Missing Persons) was founded on then US President Bill Clinton’s initiative in 1996 at the G-7 Conference in Lyon, France. Its ostensible task was to aid governments in disaster relief and other humanitarian missions requiring victim identification. But in fact the bulk of its work was focused on assisting the Prosecution of the Hague Tribunal to build its Srebrenica case. ICMP’s president is always an American citizen nominated by the State Department. Until recently, ICMP maintained its headquarters in Sarajevo, Bosnia, and operated two laboratories there, one in Tuzla and the other in Banja Luka. In 2015, its head office was moved to the Hague, Netherlands.
It is noteworthy that although ICMP has allegedly furnished to the Hague Tribunal key forensic evidence for use in Srebrenica cases, chambers have consistently rejected all defense requests for independent verification of ICMP data. Although ICTY theoretically has the power to compel disclosure of probative evidence, and has used it on governments, no chamber has ever ventured to enforce production of evidence from ICMP. Instead, disregarding defense objections as well as long-standing legal principles, chambers based their factual conclusions and judgments not on direct access to hard data but on ICMP summaries and its claims of what the forensic facts were.
We now know that deliberate steps had been taken as early as 1998, when the Hague Tribunal was in its inception and shortly after ICMP was founded, to ensure that the ICMP was above and beyond the law and could never be held to account. In fact there was never the remotest possibility that its crucial scientific evidence would be made available for independent scrutiny.
Research in 2017 by the international Association of Genocide Scholars revealed the ICMP had been granted extraordinary and unprecedented immunity in a deal with the governments of Croatia and the central government of Bosnia. The Headquarters Agreement between the Commission and the Council of Ministers of Bosnia Herzegovina gave the ICMP the status of an intergovernmental organization.
Article 3 granted the ICMP “immunity from every form of legal and administrative process.”
Article 4 stated: “The premises of the ICMP shall be inviolable. The property and assets of the ICMP shall be immune from search, requisition, confiscation, expropriation and any other form of interference, whether by executive, judicial, administrative or legislative action”.
Only a decision by the ICMP itself to waive these immunities could render it accountable. Thus, the age-old legal principle ‘be you never so high the law is above you’ was cynically sidelined.
Alert observers will note remarkable similarities between the terms of the ICMP Headquarters Agreement and the typical Status of Forces agreement host governments are required to sign with NATO. In both instances, supposedly sovereign states are put in a position of subordination to non-state entities. The latter are empowered to act as they see fit on host government’s territory and entirely without regard for local laws.
We reproduce below for downloading the Bosnia and Herzegovina Headquarters Agreement with ICMP in both English and the local language. On behalf of the Government of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the document was signed, but only in its English-language version, by its Foreign Minister, Jadranko Prlić, who is not even an English speaker. Prlić did not, however, see fit to sign the version of the document translated into his own language that, presumably, he could understand. That curious fact, in addition to the high rank of the Bosnian signer within his own government’s hierarchy and in particular given the nature of his portfolio, implies that in the view of the Bosnian government the ICMP signer represented a foreign power of approximately equal rank. That sends a clear message of neo-colonialist subservience that was probably not unintentional.
Finally, it seems that ICMP’s stint in Bosnia was in the nature of a laboratory experiment in preparation for a globalist project of much greater magnitude. Just as ICTY has served as but a stepping stone to the creation of the International Criminal Court, which was largely constructed upon the practical experience acquired during the operation of the Hague Tribunal, ICMP also has recently been raised to a higher dimension. In December 2014 the Agreement on the status and functions of the International Commission on Missing Persons was signed, providing the commission formally with international personality. The treaty was signed in Brussels by five countries and will remain open for accession by more. It entered into force on 14 May 2015, following ratification by Sweden and the United Kingdom.
The treaty establishes The Hague as the seat of the Commission and establishes a Conference of States Parties, a “Board of Commissioners” (chosen “from among eminent persons”) and a Director-General. Particular note should be taken of Article VII of the Treaty which contains language about ICMP “privileges and immunities” remarkably similar to the terms of “cooperation” imposed upon the Bosnian government.
ICMP Headquarters Agreement with Bosnia 1998 (signed) – in English
Headquarters Agreement between ICMP and Bosnia 1998 (unsigned) – in the local language
Journal of Genocide Studies and Prevention, Vol. 11, 2017:
Schmitt and Mazoori – Jurisdiction Privacy and Ownership
Appointment of ICMP chairman:
US Sec of State Appoints New ICMP Chair
Agreement on the status and functions of ICMP – 2015