Meeting in Sweden, the unofficial tribunal charged the United States in 1967 with having committed war crimes in Indochina.
The tribunal charged him with twenty counts of crimes against humanity, including murder, rape and arson, during the liberation war.
The tribunal may also charge defendants with violations of the Geneva Convention on the treatment of war victims.
The tribunal charged the former army lieutenant with being an organizer in the north of the country during the killings.
The tribunal specifically charged the defendants with the killing of 148 Shiites from Dujail, in retaliation for the failed assassination attempt of 8 July 1982.
The tribunal charged him with various crimes, including the rape of a Muslim woman in a Bosnian prison camp.
The tribunal charged him with five counts of crimes against humanity, three violations of the rules of war and a breach of the Geneva conventions.
The tribunal can charge only individuals with crimes, not states, institutions or organizations.
After the 1980 Turkish coup d'état, a military tribunal charged that Gürsel's collection had slandered the Turkish army.
One of them, he said, is that the tribunal is charging Dr. Karadzic with command responsibility for war crimes.