Further, an occupying power is 
   obliged, according to Articles 43 and 46, to protect life and take all steps in its power to reestablish 
   and ensure "public order and safety".
   
 
   
    In addition, The Hague Convention for the Protection of 
    Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict, 1954, (to which several members of MNF-I are State 
    Parties) creates a clear obligation to protect "monuments of architecture, art or history, whether 
    religious or secular". Article 4, paragraph 1 notes: "The High Contracting Parties undertake to respect 
    cultural property situated within their own territory as well as within the territory of other High 
    Contracting Parties by refraining from any use of the property and its immediate surroundings or of the 
    appliances in use for its protection for purposes which are likely to expose it to destruction or damage 
    in the event of armed conflict; and by refraining from any act of hostility, directed against such 
    property." 
 
   
    Article 4, paragraph 5, states: "No High Contracting Party 
    may evade the obligations incumbent upon it under the present Article ("Respect for Cultural Property"), 
    in respect of another High Contracting Party, by reason of the fact that the latter has not applied the 
    measures of safeguard referred to in Article 3 ("Safeguarding of Cultural Property")." 
 
   
    The Republic of Iraq has been a High Contracting Party to 
    the Hague Convention on the Protection of Cultural Property since 1967, along with several parties of 
    MNF-I.
 
   
    Article 53 of the 1st Additional Protocol to the Geneva 
    Conventions, 1977, reaffirms these obligations, expressly noting that it is prohibited to: "(a) to commit 
    any acts of hostility directed against the historic monuments, works of art or places of worship which 
    constitute the cultural or spiritual heritage of peoples; (b) to use such objects in support of the 
    military effort; (c) to make such objects the object of reprisals." The United Kingdom, along with several 
    other members of MNF-I (excluding the US) is a State Party to the 1st Additional Protocol.
 
   
    Article 5 of The Hague Convention for the Protection of 
    Cultural Property deals explicitly with occupation. Paragraph 1 states: "Any High Contracting Party in 
    occupation of the whole or part of the territory of another High Contracting Party shall as far as 
    possible support the competent national authorities of the occupied country in safeguarding and preserving 
    its cultural property." Paragraph 2 states: "Should it prove necessary to take measures to preserve 
    cultural property situated in occupied territory and damaged by military operations, and should the 
    competent national authorities be unable to take such measures, the Occupying Power shall, as far as 
    possible, and in close co-operation with such authorities, take the most necessary measures of 
    preservation."
 
   
    Conclusion: Destruction of Al-Askari Mosque is a 
    "war crime"; occupation must protect civilian lives
 
   
    Given that there is no government in Iraq that is recognized 
    as legitimate by the resistance to the occupation, there is no sovereign Iraq outside the resistance at 
    this present time. In the absence of a sovereign Iraqi government, it is the occupying powers of MNF-I 
    that are legally responsible to protect religious and cultural sites of historic significance, like 
    Al-Askari Mosque in Sammara. Their failure to do so — in being a violation of the laws or customs of war — 
    is a "war crime" under the Principles of the Nuremberg Tribunal, 1950.
 
   
    We remind all occupying powers in Iraq that they are legally 
    duty-bound, under the Fourth Geneva Convention and its Additional Protocols, to protect civilian lives in 
    Iraq.
 
    
     The BRussells 
     Tribunal stands against all attempts to incite religious sectarian strife aimed at dividing the people of 
     Iraq.