Hague Court of Appeal Considers Groundbreaking Cumulative Charging in International Crimes Case
On 11 November at 14:00, the Hague Court of Appeal held a pre-trial hearing in the appeal proceedings against Xaviera S. The suspect was not present but was represented by counsel. A lawyer representing the victims also attended the session.
The primary purpose of the hearing was to consider a proposed amendment to the formal charges against the suspect, as requested by the Prosecutor’s Office.
Advocate-General Veldhuis presented the Public Prosecutor’s proposal to add a new charge to the indictment. This charge concerns an ordinary offence under Dutch criminal law — known as a commune delict — which, under Article 1(4) of the International Crimes Act (Wet Internationale Misdrijven – WIM), can be treated as an international crime when it is closely connected to one.
In addition to the existing charge of pillage (for which the suspect was acquitted at first instance), the Prosecutor’s Office now seeks to add a charge of money laundering, specifically the laundering of property obtained through pillage. According to the prosecution, the suspect used and lived in houses in Syria that had been taken from their rightful owners.
In essence, the prosecution argues that by using these looted properties, the suspect not only benefited from the crime of pillage but also committed money laundering connected to that war crime.
This could be a legal first for the Netherlands: the case would mark the first time that pillage has been charged together with a cumulative ordinary crime of money laundering. There is no known precedent here of pursuing such a combination, making this a potentially groundbreaking development in international criminal jurisprudence for the Netherlands.
On 26 April 2024, the District Court of The Hague issued its judgment in the case against Xaviera S.
The Court found insufficient evidence to support the charge of war crimes (pillaging). It ruled that it could not be established that the houses in which the suspect had lived had been unlawfully seized by ISIL, or that she had knowingly contributed to such acts. She was therefore acquitted of this charge.
However, the Court found her guilty of:
Membership of a terrorist organization (ISIL);
Preparation of terrorist crimes; and
Threatening two Dutch journalists through online statements.
For these offences, the Court sentenced Xaviera S. to 860 days of imprisonment, of which 720 days were suspended under probationary conditions, which meant that she did not have to serve additional prison time beyond what she had already spent in detention.
In determining the sentence, the Court emphasized several mitigating factors: her progress in psychosocial treatment and rehabilitation, as well as the overly long duration of the proceedings.
In addition to the prison sentence, Xaviera S. was sentenced to 480 hours of community service for the threats made against the two journalists. The Court declared the journalists’ compensation claims inadmissible.
Because of her acquittal for the war crime of pillaging and the inadmissibility of the compensation claims, the Public Prosecution Service lodged an appeal against the Court’s verdict.