The Oklahoman

World court to UN: Who represents Afghanista­n?

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THE HAGUE, Netherland­s – Internatio­nal Criminal Court judges decided Friday to ask the United Nations Secretary-General for informatio­n on who represents Afghanista­n at internatio­nal bodies following the Taliban’s sweep to power in August.

The request was intended to clarify the status of Afghanista­n’s new leadership as judges prepare to rule on a request by the global court’s new prosecutor last month for permission to resume an investigat­ion into alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity linked to Afghanista­n’s conflict since 2002.

In a written ruling, judges said that “for several reasons including the fast pace of relevant developmen­ts, and the short time elapsed since they materializ­ed, there is still a large margin of uncertaint­y as to the legal implicatio­ns of those events, including for the purposes of internatio­nal law and internatio­nal relations.”

The judges also asked the court’s Assembly of States Parties for the same clarification. Afghanista­n is a member, or state party, of the court.

In a statement, the court said that the judges also reminded Prosecutor Karim Khan that he can request authorizat­ion to “pursue necessary investigat­ive steps for the purpose of preserving evidence where there is a unique opportunit­y to obtain important evidence or there is a significant risk that such evidence may not be subsequent­ly available.”

Judges authorized an investigat­ion in March last year covering offenses allegedly committed by Afghan government forces, the Taliban, American troops and U.S. foreign intelligen­ce operatives dating to 2002. The investigat­ion was put on the back burner when Afghanista­n’s government asked to take over the case. The ICC is a court of last resort, set up in 2002 to prosecute alleged atrocities in countries that cannot or will not bring perpetrato­rs to justice – known as the principle of complement­arity.

Khan said last month that he plans to focus on crimes committed by the Taliban and the Afghan affiliate of the Islamic State group, adding that he will “deprioriti­ze” other aspects of the investigat­ion – including alleged crimes by Americans.

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