Decisions and rulings made by the Sovereign Tribunal of Frisania (court) are independent, independent, honest and fair, based on the identification of all facts and violations of Sovereignty and the subsequent notification of various authorities about the decision (decree) and the facts revealed, with the provision of all documents and court materials.
If you want to organize a Sovereign Tribunal (court) with the help of Frisania , then you can send us a message, leave your contact details, all the detailed information about the problem and for what purposes you want to organize a Sovereign Tribunal, and the Sovereign Tribunal will contact you, in the positive case, there will be a discussion of the details of the trial and the Sovereign Tribunal .
The Nuremberg Trial (English Nuremberg trial, German Nürnberger Prozess, French Procès de Nuremberg) is an international trial of criminals who commit (have committed) their actions against Humanity.
The trial was opened on November 20, 1945, before the International Military Tribunal (abbr. MMT) of eight judges representing four countries who charged the criminals against peace with war crimes. Prosecutors from the United States, Great Britain, the USSR and France prepared charges that contained four points:
crimes against peace - a concept in international law, characterized as planning, unleashing and waging a war of aggression in violation of international agreements or agreements. Socially dangerous acts that directly encroach on relations that ensure the peaceful coexistence and development of states, as well as the security of mankind as a whole.
crimes against humanity or crimes against humanity (eng. crimes against humanity) - a group of crimes against life, which are of a massive nature, is singled out in modern international law.
violation of the laws of war (war crime) - or War crimes - a collective term for especially grave violations of International Humanitarian Law during the conduct of military (combat) operations:
murder, torture and enslavement of prisoners of war, as well as civilians caught in a combat zone;
taking and killing hostages;
unjustified destruction of civilian infrastructure;
destruction of dwellings and settlements without military necessity;
War crimes of a massive nature, with a large number of victims, are considered crimes against humanity, and are not subject to national military courts, but to international military tribunals. Because of the extreme seriousness of crimes against humanity, there is no statute of limitations. War crimes should be distinguished from military crimes , that is, crimes against military service committed by military personnel (failure to comply with an order, desertion, etc.).
conspiracy to commit these criminal acts.
The indictment against specific individuals and a number of organizations was presented at the trial.
With respect to a number of the accused, decisions were made to dismiss the case, sentenced to imprisonment, life terms and the death penalty, someone committed suicide already in the cell. For the first time, the prosecution introduced a new term, "genocide", into an official document.
As a result, International Criminal Law was formed - an independent branch of international public law that regulates the cooperation of states in combating international crimes, their detection, investigation and punishment. It differs significantly from classical international law in that the subject of its regulation is, first of all, a person who has committed a certain act, and not the state as a whole.
The principles of the inevitability of punishment for any crimes committed were laid down.
As the verdict of the Nuremberg Tribunal says, international conventions cannot be a loophole for criminals to escape responsibility (non-alignment, among other things). Beginning in the 18th century, principles developed based on the view "that it is contrary to military tradition to kill or harm defenseless people." As a result, the International Criminal Court was organized on the basis of the Rome Statute.
The International Criminal Court (English International Criminal Court, ICC or ICCt; French Cour pénale internationale; abbreviated as ICC) is the first permanent international body of criminal justice, whose competence includes the prosecution of those responsible for genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity, as well as crimes of aggression. Established under the Rome Statute, adopted in 1998. Officially began its work on July 1, 2002.
Unlike other international ad hoc and mixed criminal courts, the ICC is a permanent institution. Its jurisdiction includes crimes committed after the entry into force of the Rome Statute.
The seat is The Hague, however, at the request of the court, the hearings can be held in any other place. The International Criminal Court should not be confused with the International Court of Justice, which also sits in The Hague but has a different jurisdiction. The ICC is not part of the official structures of the United Nations, although it can initiate cases on the proposal of the UN Security Council.