This week marks the 60th anniversary of the Genocide Convention, sometimes referred to as the "Never Again" Convention. On this oft-ignored anniversary, we must acknowledge our abysmal failure in preventing the most destructive threat known to humankind -- the crime whose name we should even shudder to mention--genocide.

The enduring lesson of the Holocaust and that of the genocides that followed is that they occurred not simply because of the machinery of death, but because of the state-sanctioned incitement to hatred. As international tribunals have recognized, the Holocaust did not begin in the gas chambers; it began with words. These are the chilling facts of history.

Most important, in all other cases of state-sanctioned incitement to genocide -- the Holocaust, the Balkans, Rwanda and Darfur -- the genocides have already occurred. Only in President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's Iran can we still act so as to prevent a genocide foretold from occurring.

For it is in Ahmadinejad's Iran where one finds the toxic convergence of the advocacy of the most horrific of crimes embedded in the most virulent of hatreds. It is dramatized by the parading in the streets of Teheran of a Shahab-3 missile draped in the words "Israel must be wiped off the map" and underpinned by the words of the Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei that "[t]here is only one solution to the Middle East problem, namely the annihilation and destruction of the Jewish state."

Alarmingly, Iran has already succeeded in developing a long-range missile delivery system for that purpose, and it has assembled enough material to make a nuclear bomb. All this in the context of former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani's open threat that "even one atomic bomb inside Israel will wipe it off the face of the Earth."

Iran has therefore committed the crime of incitement prohibited under the Genocide Convention, and is preparing the means to act on it. As one involved as minister of justice in the prosecution of Rwandan incitement, I can state that the aggregate of precursors of incitement in the Iranian case are more threatening than were those in the Rwandan one.

Canada -- one of the architects of international humanitarian law -- is well-placed to take a leadership role in the international community. It is time for us to assume our responsibility. Let me be clear:Holding Iran to account is not only the right thing to do; it is our duty. For what is so often ignored is that state parties to the Genocide Convention, such as Canada, have not only a right, but an obligation, to enforce the Convention -- and in particular to prevent genocide.

Indeed, the threat of genocide is not independent of the nuclear threat, but is rather the terrifying and vilifying context in which it operates. Disconnecting the genocidal from the nuclear ambitions of Iran only weakens the case against both.

The Genocide Convention, together with other international legal instruments, authorizes a panoply of international legal remedies which Canada could invoke. An application to hold Iran to account should be submitted to the UN Security Council pursuant to Article 8 of the Genocide Convention; an inter-state complaint should be launched against Iran before the International Court of Justice; and UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon should be asked to refer the danger of a genocidal and nuclear Iran to the Security Council as a threat to international peace and security.

Given their genocidal incitement, the cases of President Ahmadinejad and other Iranian leaders can be referred to other UN agencies as well. What is so astonishing is that this criminal incitement by a nuclear weapon-seeking Iran has yet to be addressed by any agency of the UN -- thereby nurturing a culture of impunity that itself is driving a culture of hatred.

The legal remedies to counter state-sanctioned incitement exist, but the leadership has thus far been wanting. This is why I have released a petition -- endorsed by legal scholars, genocide experts and even genocide survivors from around the world -- that extensively presents the factual and legal case against Ahmadinejad's Iran, and that calls upon the international community to act.

Calling Ahmadinejad's Iran to account -- and directly linking its nuclear ambitions to its genocidal incitements --is not simply an option. It is a responsibility -- one envisaged by the Genocide Convention 60 years ago.

-Irwin Cotler is the Member of Parliament for Mount Royal and the former minister of justice and attorney-general of Canada. He is a professor of law (on leave) at McGill University and has written extensively on--and prosecuted for --incitement to genocide.

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