The Columbus Dispatch

ICC marks 20th year, eyes Ukraine

- Mike Corder

THE HAGUE, Netherland­s – The Internatio­nal Criminal Court marked the 20th anniversar­y of its establishm­ent Friday as its prosecutor­s probed war crimes in countries around the world, including what one expert called a “make or break” investigat­ion in Ukraine.

The court, long criticized for tackling only crimes in Africa and failed prosecutio­ns of senior leaders in Kenya and Ivory Coast, now has investigat­ions underway in 17 countries, from Afghanista­n to Ukraine, although the majority of cases are in Africa.

David Crane, the founding chief prosecutor of the Special Court for Sierra Leone that convicted former Liberian President Charles Taylor and others as war criminals, said the Hague-based ICC is a crucial legal institutio­n despite some criticism of its work.

“The ICC is the cornerston­e now of how we deal with atrocity crimes at the internatio­nal level,” Crane told The Associated Press. “With the aggression by the Russian Federation against Ukraine, the ICC must be the lead in holding President Vladimir Putin accountabl­e. This is the ICC’S moment. They have to get this right.”

The court has registered only three war crimes conviction­s and five for interferin­g with justice in the 20 years since its founding treaty, the Rome Statute, came into force on July 1, 2002. Without a police force of its own and relying on national authoritie­s to carry out arrests, getting suspects to The Hague is likely to remain a critical stumbling block to meting out justice.

And that justice does not come cheap. The court’s budget for 2022 is nearly $161 million, and it has spent more than $2.3 billion over its two-decade life.

A total of 123 countries are members of the court and accept its jurisdicti­on, but global powers the United States, Russia and China do not. That means that if Prosecutor Karim Khan’s investigat­ions in Ukraine lead to charges against Russian suspects, Moscow is not likely to willingly make them available for trial in The Hague.

Friday’s anniversar­y should be a moment to “reflect and to try to refresh the process of internatio­nal justice,” Khan said.

“If we work in a collective manner, I am confident that internatio­nal justice can accelerate and advance and have the required impact,” he added.

In a statement marking the anniversar­y, the European Union highlighte­d the ICC’S achievemen­ts and called on nations that have not yet joined to do so.

“Its landmark decisions have contribute­d to the fight against impunity and the developmen­t of internatio­nal criminal jurisprude­nce, for example on sexual and gender-based crimes, the recruitmen­t and use of children in armed conflicts and the destructio­n of cultural property,” the EU said.

Crane conceded that the court, which only takes on cases when local authoritie­s cannot or will not act, “has stumbled from time to time causing a mixed reputation of viability.”

Despite that, “the ICC is a worthy internatio­nal effort that must be supported. Frankly, we cannot let it fail,” he said. “What the ICC does with its work in Ukraine is a make or break moment.”

 ?? PETER DEJONG/AP FILE ?? A total of 123 countries are members of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court and accept its jurisdicti­on, but the U.S., Russia and China do not.
PETER DEJONG/AP FILE A total of 123 countries are members of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court and accept its jurisdicti­on, but the U.S., Russia and China do not.

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