International Criminal Court

international law
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Also known as: ICC
Quick Facts
Date:
1998 - present
Headquarters:
The Hague
Areas Of Involvement:
war crime
genocide
Related People:
Jack Smith

International Criminal Court (ICC), permanent judicial body established by the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (1998) to investigate, prosecute, and try individuals accused of genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity and to impose prison sentences upon individuals who are found guilty of such crimes. On July 1, 2002, after the requisite number of countries (60) ratified the agreement, the court began sittings. It is headquartered in the Netherlands at The Hague.

The ICC was established as a court of last resort to prosecute the most heinous offenses in cases where national courts fail to act. Unlike the International Court of Justice, which hears disputes between states, the ICC handles prosecutions of individuals. The court’s jurisdiction extends to offenses that occurred after July 1, 2002, that were committed either in a state that has ratified the agreement or by a national of such a state.

Although the Rome Statute was widely praised (some 140 countries had signed the agreement by the time it entered into force), few countries in the Middle East or Asia joined. Further, by 2002, China, Russia, and the United States had declined to participate, and the United States had threatened to withdraw its troops from United Nations peacekeeping forces unless its citizens (both military and civilian) were exempted from prosecution by the ICC. Nevertheless, within five years of its first sitting more than 100 countries had ratified the treaty. All member countries are represented in the Assembly of States Parties, which oversees the activities of the ICC.

The ICC’s first hearing, held in 2006, was to decide whether charges should be brought against Thomas Lubanga, who was accused of recruiting child soldiers in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Lubanga’s trial, the first conducted by the ICC, began in January 2009, and in March 2012 the court found him guilty and later imposed a 14-year prison sentence.

In May 2007 the court issued arrest warrants for a government minister and a militia leader in Sudan for their roles in war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by Sudanese forces in Darfur. The ICC issued a similar warrant in March 2009 for Sudanese Pres. Omar Hassan Ahmad al-Bashir—the first time the court sought the arrest of a sitting head of state.

In November 2019 the ICC began an investigation into crimes within its jurisdiction allegedly committed by the armed forces of Myanmar (Burma) against the Rohingya, a Muslim community concentrated in Myanmar’s Rakhine (Arakan) state.

In March 2022, soon after Russia launched a large-scale military invasion of Ukraine, the ICC announced an investigation into possible crimes committed in Ukraine by Russian armed forces. In March 2023 the ICC issued a warrant for the arrest of Russian Pres. Vladimir Putin, charging him with responsibility for the war crimes of unlawful deportation of Ukrainian children and unlawful transfer of Ukrainian children from areas of Ukraine occupied by the Russian military to the Russian Federation.

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The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Brian Duignan.