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38 Denv. J. Int'l L. & Pol'y 227 (2009-2010)
Is the Failure to Respond Appropriately to a Natural Disaster a Crime against Humanity - The Responsibility to Protect and Individual Criminal Responsibility in the Aftermath of Cyclone Nargis

handle is hein.journals/denilp38 and id is 227 raw text is: Is THE FAILURE To RESPOND APPROPRIATELY To A
NATURAL DISASTER A CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY?
THE RESPONSIBILITY To PROTECT AND INDIVIDUAL CRIMINAL
RESPONSIBILITY IN THE AFTERMATH OF CYCLONE NARGIS
STUART FORD
On May 2 and 3, 2008, Cyclone Nargis struck Myanmar, devastating large
portions of the Irrawaddy Delta and creating the potential for a massive
humanitarian crisis. Yet, the Myanmar government rejected aid from some
countries, limited the amount of aid entering the country to a fraction of what was
needed, and strictly controlled how that aid was distributed The United Nations
and many governments criticized Myanmar's response to the Cyclone as
inadequate and inhumane, and senior politicians from a number of countries
discussed whether the situation justified invoking the responsibility to protect
doctrine
This article explores several questions, including: (1) whether an inadequate
response to a natural disaster can constitute a crime against humanity and thus act
as the trigger for the responsibility to protect; (2) whether the responsibility to
protect could have been invoked by the international community in response to
Cyclone Nargis; and (3) what countries would have been obligated to do if it had
been invoked
In particular, assuming that the invocation of the responsibility to protect
would have been based on a finding by the Security Council that crimes against
humanity were being committed by the government of Myanmar, would the
international community be obligated to investigate and potentially prosecute the
underlying violations of international criminal law? If so, what venues exist for the
investigation and prosecution of these potential crimes?
I. INTRODUCTION
Cyclone Nargis struck Myanmar on May 2 and 3, 2008.1 It wreaked havoc in
the capital, Yangon, devastated large portions of the Irrawaddy Delta, and resulted
in the immediate deaths of tens of thousands of people.2 Most of the initial deaths
- Stuart Ford, J.D., LLM, is an Assistant Professor at The John Marshall Law School in Chicago;
previously he was an Assistant Prosecutor at the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia.
He has written about crimes against humanity, genocide, collective security and the use of force in
international relations.
1. THE TRIPARTITE CORE GROUP, POST-NARGIS JOINT ASSESSMENT 1 (2008), available at
http://www.aseansec.org/21765.pdf
2. The initial estimates of the death toll were very low, but quickly increased as the scope of the
devastation became apparent. See Tropical Cyclone Kills More Than 350 in Myanmar, N.Y. TIMES,
May 5, 2008, at A10; Seth Mydans, Myanmar Reels as Cyclone Toll Hits Thousands, N.Y. TIMES, May

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