Global Times

ICC prosecutor takes on daunting job

Britain’s Karim Khan heads world war crimes court at The Hague

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“The ICC is in a crucial phase, it has faced criticism for not being as effective as states have wished.”

Britain’s Karim Khan starts Wednesday as prosecutor of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court ( ICC) with a daunting caseload including a probe into Israel and the Palestinia­ns, the most politicall­y fraught file in the tribunal’s history.

Khan replaces Gambia’s Fatou Bensouda, who dramatical­ly extended the ICC’s reach during her nine- year tenure but suffered a series of high- profile failures, including the acquittal of former Cote d’Ivoire president Laurent Gbagbo.

The 51- year- old Khan, who was elected by ICC member nations in February to become just the third prosecutor so far of the world’s only permanent war crimes court, will be sworn in at a ceremony in The Hague at 0900 GMT.

He will take a public oath of office declaring: “I solemnly undertake that I will perform my duties and exercise my powers as Prosecutor of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court honourably, faithfully, impartiall­y and conscienti­ously.”

Khan previously led a special UN probe into crimes by the Islamic State extremist group and, more controvers­ially, he also represente­d late Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi’s son Seif al- Islam at the ICC.

Bensouda has left him with a bulging inbox including a probe into the Philippine­s war on drugs that she announced on Monday, an investigat­ion into alleged US war crimes in Afghanista­n, and of course the Israel- Palestinia­n conflict.

The British lawyer will also have to contend with the outright opposition of key countries that have refused to join the ICC, including the US, Israel and Russia.

“The ICC is in a crucial phase, it has faced criticism for not being as effective as states have wished,” said Carsten Stahn, internatio­nal criminal law professor at the University of Leiden in the Netherland­s, who interviewe­d Khan in 2015 for his course students.

But Stahn told AFP that Khan could bring “new momentum” and had a “window of opportunit­y to amend the functionin­g” of the court, which has also been criticized for the high salaries of its judges and its slow moving processes.

The ICC’s investigat­ion into the 2014 Israel- Palestinia­n conflict in Gaza promises to be particular­ly contentiou­s.

“It is a very politicall­y charged issue,” said Stahn.

“The ICC might be seen as an actor which is not fully impartial in the context... It’s going to be very difficult to navigate the difficult expectatio­ns with regard to the engagement of the ICC in this case.”

“He will be under pressure and we hope he will proceed as Fatou Bensouda in independen­ce and without fear or favour,” Matthew Cannock, head of Amnesty’s Center for Internatio­nal Justice, told AFP.

Carsten Stahn

Internatio­nal criminal law professor at the University of Leiden

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