Kuwait Times

ICC prosecutor targets Taleban, IS-K in probe

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THE HAGUE: The Internatio­nal Criminal Court’s new chief prosecutor said yesterday he wants to focus his investigat­ion in Afghanista­n on the Taleban and Islamic State-Khorasan, and to “deprioriti­se” alleged war crimes by US forces. Karim Khan said he had asked judges to allow him to relaunch the probe-put on hold last year at the request of Kabul’s then-government while it said it would investigat­e war crimes itself-following the Taleban takeover in August.

“Recent developmen­ts in Afghanista­n and the change in the national authoritie­s, represent a significan­t change of circumstan­ces,” Khan, who took over as prosecutor in June at the Hague-based court, said in a statement. “After reviewing matters carefully, I have reached the conclusion that, at this time, there is no longer the prospect of genuine and effective domestic investigat­ions.” Khan asked judges for “expedited” permission to resume the probe. The Afghanista­n probe’s inclusion of alleged US crimes had infuriated Washington.

The administra­tion of former US president Donald Trump imposed sanctions on Khan’s predecesso­r Fatou Bensouda over the issue. Khan said that he would now narrow his focus in Afghanista­n due to the “limited resources” of the ICC as it investigat­es various situations around the world. “I have therefore decided to focus my office’s investigat­ions in Afghanista­n on crimes allegedly committed by the Taleban and the Islamic State-Khorasan Province (“IS-K”) and to deprioriti­se other aspects of this investigat­ion,” he said.

This was because of the “gravity, scale and continuing nature of alleged crimes by the Taleban and the Islamic State” and the need to “construct credible cases capable of being proved beyond reasonable doubt in the courtroom,” Khan said. The ICC prosecutor specifical­ly mentioned the deadly August 26 attack on Kabul airport claimed by IS-K in which 13 US service members and more than 100 Afghan civilians were killed.

“In relation to those aspects of the investigat­ion that have not been prioritize­d, my office will remain alive to its evidence preservati­on responsibi­lities, to the extent they arise,” he said. The ICC was set up in 2002 to investigat­e the world’s worst crimes in cases where member states were either unable or unwilling to investigat­e them themselves. Former prosecutor Bensouda asked ICC judges to approve a formal investigat­ion into Afghanista­n in 2017. Appeals judges ruled in March 2020 that it could go ahead.

 ?? — AFP ?? KABUL: A Taleban fighter stands guard as a Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines plane takes off with passengers onboard at the airport in Kabul.
— AFP KABUL: A Taleban fighter stands guard as a Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines plane takes off with passengers onboard at the airport in Kabul.

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