After all, international justice should not be regarded as a concept foreign to this part of the world . . . All Asian countries, without exception, are states parties to the four Geneva Conventions, and have thereby agreed to criminalise the grave breaches defined in those treaties, which form a major part of the war crimes contained in the Rome Statute, and to prosecute the perpetrators . . . However, some persistent obstacles remain, often due to misunderstandings . . . Clarifying these matters is crucial for progress to occur 1 . . .we can't continue with this . . . one dimensional kind of: bring it to court and what justice means is legal justice. Justice . . . can be achieved only . . . through a combination of different interventions and measures 2 . . .we talk about all these things and then we ask people to also remember that there is no set chronology or order for how things should happen' 3 . . .Rome was not built in one day. True indeed. But it can also be said that Rome began its decay when it failed to be cognizant of the changing needs of the times 4
International Criminal Justice in Southeast AsiaLegal responses to atrocity crimes do not only result from international norms being transmitted to receptive 'locals'. 5 Instead, they are initiated and modified by a range of actors who adapt arguments and persist with 1 (Song, 2016: 8) 2 Interview I14, emphasis added. See Appendix B for a list of interviewees, who have been kept anonymous to protect those who did not wish to be identified. 3 Interview M1, emphasis added. 4 (Republic of the Philippines, 2013: 2). 5 'Local' represents a subjective viewpoint and is used in this book as shorthand for a cluster of possible such perspectives (recognising that homogeneous localities rarely, if ever, exist in communities of intersecting identities), but normally refers to individuals acting within states (see Section 1.3.2, this chapter; Chapter 7; Shaw & Waldorf, 2010).