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Home / War and Conflict / WWI War Crime: German Officers Convicted

WWI War Crime: German Officers Convicted

15 Dec

•

Summary

  • German officers convicted for attacking survivors of a WWI sinking.
  • The U-86 submarine officers were found guilty of violating international law.
  • This 1919 precedent is still cited and codified in the Rome statute.
WWI War Crime: German Officers Convicted

An early war crimes case from 1919 saw two German U-86 submarine officers convicted for violating international law. The conviction stemmed from their actions of attacking survivors after the sinking of the Canadian hospital ship Llandovery Castle during the final months of World War I.

The tribunal, established under the Treaty of Versailles, declared the rule against attacking shipwreck survivors as simple and universally known. They dismissed the defense's claim that the officers were merely obeying orders, stating such a command was clearly unlawful.

This landmark judgment, which occurred in Germany, remains a significant legal precedent in international law. Its principles are still invoked today and have been formally codified within the Rome statute of the international criminal court.

This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Disclaimer:
The Llandovery Castle was a Canadian hospital ship sunk in WWI, after which survivors were attacked by a German U-86 submarine.
Two officers of the German submarine U-86 were convicted in 1919 for attacking survivors.
Yes, the precedent set by the U-86 officers' conviction is still cited and codified in the Rome statute.

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