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31 Sing. L. Rev. 3 (2013)
The Singapore War Crimes Trials and Their Relevance Today

handle is hein.journals/singlrev31 and id is 17 raw text is: Singapore Law Review
(2013) 31 Sing L Rev
THE SINGAPORE WAR CRIMES TRIALS AND THEIR
RELEVANCE TODAY
DAVID J COHEN*
This article is a revised version of the 24h Singapore Law Review Lecture delivered by
Professor David Cohen, Sidney and MargaretAncker Professor Emeritus in Rhetoric and
Classics at the University of California, Berkeley. Professor Cohen is the Director and
founder of the War Crimes Studies Center at the University of California, Berkeley. He
is also Senior Fellow in International Humanitarian Law and the Director of the Asian
International Justice Initiative at the East-West Center in Honolulu, Hawaii. Professor
Cohen has authored numerous publications and directs an international project on the
WWII war crimes trials in Asia, the Pacific, and Europe. He has also monitored and re-
ported on the East Timor trials before the Serious Crimes Panel in Dili and the Ad Hoc
Human Rights Court in Jakarta.
I. INTRODUCTION
In the aftermath of World War II (WWII), the countries that had been occupied by or fought
against Japan determined that there must be accountability for the atrocities systematically
perpetrated by Japanese forces everywhere in the so called Greater East Asian Co-Prosperity
Sphere. Following the pattern that the Allies had also established in Europe with the International
Military Tribunal at Nuremberg (IMT), an International Military Tribunal for the Far East
(IMTFE)' was created to try the highest level Japanese leaders, with one notable exception,
for waging aggressive war and committing war crimes and crimes against humanity in Asian
and the Pacific from 1931 to 1945. The notable exception I referred to was, of course, Emperor
Hirohito, whom the White House and Downing Street decided not to prosecute at that time for
reasons of political expediency. They believed that he could be a useful tool of their policy for
the pacification and democratisation of Japan and decided to use him as such so long as he was so
needed. In the end, he was never prosecuted and the Tokyo Tribunal ended its work in 1948. This
was to be the last international criminal tribunal until the creation of the International Criminal
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in 1993 and the International Criminal Tribunal for
Rwanda (ICTR) in 1994.
Our concern for this present discussion is not with the Tokyo Tribunal, but rather, with
* Executive Director, WSD HANDA Center for Human Rights and International Justice at Stanford
University; Professor of Law, University of Hawaii School of Law.
1  Hereinafter referred to as the Tokyo Tribunal.

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