Difference between revisions of "International Criminal Court"

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|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_criminal_court
 
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_criminal_court
 
|headquarters=The Hague, Netherlands
 
|headquarters=The Hague, Netherlands
|constitues=IGO
+
|constitutes=IGO
|description=An international tribunal to prosecute individuals for war crimes. Over 120 nations in the world have signed up, including almost all of Europe and the Americas, but with several non-signatories including USA, Russia, India and China.
+
|description=An international tribunal to prosecute individuals for war crimes. Neither "international nor a legitimate court, but is most certainly criminal."
 +
|members= Afghanistan, Albania, Andorra, Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Australia, Austria, Bangladesh, Barbados, Belgium, Belize, Benin, Bolivia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Botswana, Brazil, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso, Cambodia, Canada, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Chad, Chile, Colombia, Comoros, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Republic of the Congo, Cook Islands, Costa Rica, Côte d'Ivoire, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Djibouti, Dominica, Dominican Republic, East Timor, Ecuador, El Salvador, Estonia, Fiji, Finland, France, Gabon, Gambia, Georgia, Germany, Ghana, Greece, Grenada, Guatemala, Guinea, Guyana, Honduras, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Jordan, Kiribati, Kenya, Latvia, Lesotho, Liberia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Madagascar, Malawi, Maldives, Mali, Malta, Marshall Islands, Mauritius, Mexico, Moldova, Mongolia, Montenegro, Namibia, Nauru, Netherlands, New Zealand, Niger, Nigeria, North Macedonia, Norway, Palestine, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Samoa, San Marino, Senegal, Serbia, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Suriname, Sweden, Switzerland, Tanzania, Tajikistan, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, Uganda, United Kingdom, Uruguay, Vanuatu, Venezuela, Zambia
 
}}
 
}}
The ''' International Criminal Court''' ('''ICC'''), is, wrote [[Tony Cartalucci]] in 2019 neither "international nor a legitimate court, but is most certainly criminal. It is an institutionalized tool – one of many – used by Western corporate-financier interests to coerce and control nations across the developing world."<ref>https://www.globalresearch.ca/icc-ngos-manifestations-white-mans-burden/5672409</ref>
+
The ''' International Criminal Court''' ('''ICC''') is, wrote [[Tony Cartalucci]] in 2019,{{QB|
 +
:"neither international nor a legitimate court, but is most certainly criminal.
 +
:"It is an institutionalised tool – one of many – used by [[Western]] corporate-financier interests to coerce and control nations across the developing world."<ref>https://www.globalresearch.ca/icc-ngos-manifestations-white-mans-burden/5672409</ref><ref name="Amendments on the crime of aggression">http://www.icc-cpi.int/iccdocs/asp_docs/Resolutions/RC-Res.6-ENG.pdf </ref><ref name=article5>Article 5 of the [http://legal.un.org/icc/statute/99_corr/cstatute.htm Rome Statute]. Retrieved 20 March 2008.</ref><ref name=iccfact>United Nations Department of Public Information, December 2002. [http://www.un.org/News/facts/iccfact.htm ''The International Criminal Court'']. Retrieved 5 December 2006.</ref>}}
  
A permanent international tribunal to prosecute individuals for [[genocide]], [[crimes against humanity]], [[war crime]]s, and the [[crime of aggression]] (jurisdiction for the crime of aggression<ref name="Amendments on the crime of aggression">{{cite web |url=http://www.icc-cpi.int/iccdocs/asp_docs/Resolutions/RC-Res.6-ENG.pdf |title=Resolution RC/Res.6: The crime of aggression |format=PDF |publisher=International Criminal Court |date=10 June 2010 |accessdate=13 March 2011}}</ref> beginning in 2017 at the earliest).<ref name=article5>Article 5 of the [http://legal.un.org/icc/statute/99_corr/cstatute.htm Rome Statute]. Retrieved 20 March 2008.</ref><ref name=iccfact>United Nations Department of Public Information, December 2002. [http://www.un.org/News/facts/iccfact.htm ''The International Criminal Court'']. Retrieved 5 December 2006.</ref>
+
==Official Narrative==
 +
{{YouTubeVideo
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|align=left
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|width=500px
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|caption= Why the US Hates the International Criminal Court
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|date=
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}}
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It is the first and only permanent international court with jurisdiction to prosecute individuals for the international crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and the crime of aggression. The ICC is distinct from the International Court of Justice, an organ of the United Nations that hears disputes between states.
 +
 
 +
===Wikipedia Criticism===
 +
Not normal for [[Wikipedia]], the court already has a own page full of faults with the court. Some governments have refused to recognize the court's assertion of jurisdiction, with other civil groups also accusing the court of bias, focusing too much on [[Europe]] and [[racism]]. Others have also questioned the effectiveness of the court outright. A big vocal opponent of the court is the [[US]].<ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Criminal_Court</ref>
 +
 
 +
==Israeli war crimes==
 +
On 15 November 2023, [[South Africa]] filed a referral to the International Criminal Court for an investigation into alleged [[war crimes]] committed by [[Israel]] in [[Gaza]]. During a state visit to [[Qatar]], President [[Cyril Ramaphosa]] said his country believes [[Israel]] is committing [[war crimes]] and [[genocide]] in [[Gaza]], where thousands of [[Palestinians]] have been killed and hospitals and public infrastructure have been destroyed:{{QB|
 +
:“As South Africa we have accordingly, together with many other countries across the world, referred this whole [[Israeli]] government action to the International Criminal Court.
 +
 
 +
:“We have put through a referral because we believe that [[war crimes]] are being committed there. And of course we do not condone the actions that were taken by [[Hamas]] earlier, but similarly we condemn the actions that are currently underway and believe that they warrant an investigation by the [[ICC]].”}}
 +
 
 +
[[Cyril Ramaphosa|Ramaphosa]]’s ruling [[African National Congress]] party said it would support the motion tabled by the leftist opposition party Economic Freedom Fighters for the country to shut down the Israeli Embassy and cut diplomatic ties with the country.<ref>''[https://apnews.com/article/south-africa-israel-palestinians-icc-referral-6f1dd2b3af534d4d42d56a156968eae4 "South Africa refers Israel to ICC over Gaza attacks as pressure mounts to cut diplomatic ties"]''</ref>
 +
 
 +
==Putin arrest warrant==
 +
{{YouTubeVideo
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|code=8LJ1qTvWjEI
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|align=right
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|width=500px
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|caption=Why the U.S. and Russia Get Away With War Crimes
 +
|date=
 +
}}
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On 17 March 2023, the Prosecutor General of the International Criminal Court, [[Karim Khan]], introduced an arrest warrant for Russian President [[Vladimir Putin]] and his Commissioner for Children’s Rights, [[Maria Llova-Belova]]. The warrant, which accused Putin and Lolva-Belova of conducting the “unlawful deportation” of [[Ukrainian]] children to a “network of camps” across the [[Russian Federation]], inspired a wave of incendiary commentary in [[the West]].
 +
 
 +
US Senator [[Lindsey Graham]], perhaps the most aggressive cheerleader in the [[US Congress]] for war with [[Russia]], proclaimed:{{QB|
 +
“The ICC has an arrest warrant for Putin because he has organised the kidnapping of at least 16,000 [[Ukrainian]] children from their families and sent them to [[Russia]]. It is exactly what [[Hitler]] did in [[World War II]].”}}
 +
The ICC prosecutor [[Karim Khan]] appeared to have based his arrest warrant on research produced by [[Yale University]]’s Humanitarian Research Lab (HRL). Yale HRL’s work was funded and guided by the [[US State Department]]’s Bureau of Conflict and Stabilisation Operations, an entity the [[Biden administration]] established in May 2022 to advance the prosecution of Russian officials.
 +
 
 +
During an interview with [[CNN]]’s Anderson Cooper, Yale HRL’s executive director, Nathaniel Raymond, claimed his report provided proof that “thousands of children are in a hostage situation.” Invoking the [[Holocaust]], Raymond asserted, “We are dealing with the largest network of children camps seen in the 21st century.”
 +
Yet in an interview with Jeremy Loffredo, the co-author of this report, and in his own paper for Yale HRL, Raymond contradicted many of the bombastic claims he made to the media about child hostages. During a phone conversation with Loffredo, Raymond acknowledged that “a large amount” of the camps his team investigated were “primarily cultural education – like, I would say, teddy bear.”
 +
 
 +
Yale HRL’s report similarly acknowledges that most of the camps it profiled provided free recreational programs for disadvantaged youth whose parents sought “to protect their children from ongoing fighting” and “ensure they had nutritious food of the sort unavailable where they live.” Nearly all of the campers returned home in a timely manner after attending with the consent of their parents, according to the paper. The State Department-funded report further concedes that it found “no documentation of child mistreatment.”
 +
Yale HRL based its research entirely on Maxar satellite data, Telegram postings, and Russian media reports, relying on Google translate to interpret them and at times misrepresented the articles in its citations. The State Department-funded unit conceded that it performed no field research for its paper, stating that it “does not conduct ground-level investigations and therefore did not request access to the camps.
 +
 
 +
Unlike the Yale investigators who inspired the ICC’s arrest warrant, Loffredo gained unfettered access to a Russian government camp in Moscow that houses youth from the war-torn [[Donbas]] region. Though it is precisely the kind of centre that Yale HRL – and by extension, the [[ICC]] – have portrayed as a “re-education camp” for Ukrainian child hostages, he found a hotel full of happy campers receiving free classical music lessons in their native [[Russia]]n language from first-class instructors – a “teddy bear,” as Raymond called it.
 +
At The Donbas Express music camp located just outside [[Moscow]], youth told Loffredo they were grateful to have found refuge from the [[Ukrainian]] army’s years-long campaign of shelling and besiegement of their homeland. By fleeing the war in [[Donbas]], these children had escaped a nightmarish military conflict for which Yale HRL and the [[ICC]] have demonstrated little or no concern.<ref>''[https://thegrayzone.com/2023/03/31/iccs-putin-arrest-state-dept-report/ "ICC’s Putin arrest warrant based on State Dept-funded report that debunked itself"]''</ref>
  
 
==Membership==
 
==Membership==

Latest revision as of 03:38, 2 July 2024

Group.png International Criminal Court  
(IGOWebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
International Criminal Court.jpg
International Criminal Court logo.svg
AbbreviationICC
Formation1 July 2002
HeadquartersThe Hague, Netherlands
Type• Law.jpg legal
•  international
Interest ofJohn Bellinger
Membership•   Afghanistan
•   Albania
• Andorra flag.jpg  Andorra
•   Antigua and Barbuda
•   Argentina
• Military help with COVID lockdown in Australia in July 2021.jpg  Australia
•   Austria
•   Bangladesh
•  Barbados
• Belgium.jpg  Belgium
•   Belize
•   Benin
•   Bolivia
•   Bosnia and Herzegovina
•   Botswana
•   Brazil
•   Bulgaria
•   Burkina Faso
•   Cambodia
•   Canada
•   Cape Verde
•   Central African Republic
•  Chad
•   Chile
•   Colombia
•   Comoros
•   Democratic Republic of the Congo
•   Republic of the Congo
•   Cook Islands
•   Costa Rica
•   Côte d'Ivoire
•   Croatia
•   Cyprus
•   Czech Republic
•   Denmark
•   Djibouti
•   Dominica
•   Dominican Republic
•   East Timor
•   Ecuador
•   El Salvador
•   Estonia
•   Fiji
•   Finland
• Eiffel tower police.jpg  France
•   Gabon
•  Gambia
• Georgia country.png  Georgia
•   Germany
• Ghana (orthographic projection).svg  Ghana
•   Greece
•   Grenada
•   Guatemala
•   Guinea
•   Guyana
•   Honduras
•   Hungary
•   Iceland
•  Ireland
•   Italy
•   Japan
•   Jordan
•   Kiribati
•   Kenya
•   Latvia
•   Lesotho
•   Liberia
•   Liechtenstein
•   Lithuania
•   Luxembourg
•   Madagascar
•   Malawi
•   Maldives
•   Mali
•   Malta
•   Marshall Islands
•   Mauritius
•   Mexico
•   Moldova
•   Mongolia
• File:Europe-Montenegro.svg  Montenegro
• Namibia.png  Namibia
•   Nauru
•   Netherlands
•   New Zealand
•   Niger
•   Nigeria
•   North Macedonia
•   Norway
• Annexation.jpg  Palestine
•   Panama
•   Paraguay
•   Peru
•   Poland
•   Portugal
•   Romania
•   Saint Kitts and Nevis
•   Saint Lucia
•   Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
•   Samoa
• San Marino flag.png  San Marino
•   Senegal
•   Serbia
•   Seychelles
•   Sierra Leone
•   Slovakia
•   Slovenia
•   South Africa
•  South Korea
•   Spain
•   Suriname
•   Sweden
•   Switzerland
•   Tanzania
•   Tajikistan
• Trinidad-and-Tobago-Flag.jpg Trinidad and Tobago
•   Tunisia
•   Uganda
• EU-United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom
•   Uruguay
•   Vanuatu
•   Venezuela
•   Zambia
An international tribunal to prosecute individuals for war crimes. Neither "international nor a legitimate court, but is most certainly criminal."

The International Criminal Court (ICC) is, wrote Tony Cartalucci in 2019,

"neither international nor a legitimate court, but is most certainly criminal.
"It is an institutionalised tool – one of many – used by Western corporate-financier interests to coerce and control nations across the developing world."[1][2][3][4]

Official Narrative

Why the US Hates the International Criminal Court

It is the first and only permanent international court with jurisdiction to prosecute individuals for the international crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and the crime of aggression. The ICC is distinct from the International Court of Justice, an organ of the United Nations that hears disputes between states.

Wikipedia Criticism

Not normal for Wikipedia, the court already has a own page full of faults with the court. Some governments have refused to recognize the court's assertion of jurisdiction, with other civil groups also accusing the court of bias, focusing too much on Europe and racism. Others have also questioned the effectiveness of the court outright. A big vocal opponent of the court is the US.[5]

Israeli war crimes

On 15 November 2023, South Africa filed a referral to the International Criminal Court for an investigation into alleged war crimes committed by Israel in Gaza. During a state visit to Qatar, President Cyril Ramaphosa said his country believes Israel is committing war crimes and genocide in Gaza, where thousands of Palestinians have been killed and hospitals and public infrastructure have been destroyed:

“As South Africa we have accordingly, together with many other countries across the world, referred this whole Israeli government action to the International Criminal Court.
“We have put through a referral because we believe that war crimes are being committed there. And of course we do not condone the actions that were taken by Hamas earlier, but similarly we condemn the actions that are currently underway and believe that they warrant an investigation by the ICC.”

Ramaphosa’s ruling African National Congress party said it would support the motion tabled by the leftist opposition party Economic Freedom Fighters for the country to shut down the Israeli Embassy and cut diplomatic ties with the country.[6]

Putin arrest warrant

Why the U.S. and Russia Get Away With War Crimes

On 17 March 2023, the Prosecutor General of the International Criminal Court, Karim Khan, introduced an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Commissioner for Children’s Rights, Maria Llova-Belova. The warrant, which accused Putin and Lolva-Belova of conducting the “unlawful deportation” of Ukrainian children to a “network of camps” across the Russian Federation, inspired a wave of incendiary commentary in the West.

US Senator Lindsey Graham, perhaps the most aggressive cheerleader in the US Congress for war with Russia, proclaimed:

“The ICC has an arrest warrant for Putin because he has organised the kidnapping of at least 16,000 Ukrainian children from their families and sent them to Russia. It is exactly what Hitler did in World War II.”

The ICC prosecutor Karim Khan appeared to have based his arrest warrant on research produced by Yale University’s Humanitarian Research Lab (HRL). Yale HRL’s work was funded and guided by the US State Department’s Bureau of Conflict and Stabilisation Operations, an entity the Biden administration established in May 2022 to advance the prosecution of Russian officials.

During an interview with CNN’s Anderson Cooper, Yale HRL’s executive director, Nathaniel Raymond, claimed his report provided proof that “thousands of children are in a hostage situation.” Invoking the Holocaust, Raymond asserted, “We are dealing with the largest network of children camps seen in the 21st century.” Yet in an interview with Jeremy Loffredo, the co-author of this report, and in his own paper for Yale HRL, Raymond contradicted many of the bombastic claims he made to the media about child hostages. During a phone conversation with Loffredo, Raymond acknowledged that “a large amount” of the camps his team investigated were “primarily cultural education – like, I would say, teddy bear.”

Yale HRL’s report similarly acknowledges that most of the camps it profiled provided free recreational programs for disadvantaged youth whose parents sought “to protect their children from ongoing fighting” and “ensure they had nutritious food of the sort unavailable where they live.” Nearly all of the campers returned home in a timely manner after attending with the consent of their parents, according to the paper. The State Department-funded report further concedes that it found “no documentation of child mistreatment.” Yale HRL based its research entirely on Maxar satellite data, Telegram postings, and Russian media reports, relying on Google translate to interpret them and at times misrepresented the articles in its citations. The State Department-funded unit conceded that it performed no field research for its paper, stating that it “does not conduct ground-level investigations and therefore did not request access to the camps.”

Unlike the Yale investigators who inspired the ICC’s arrest warrant, Loffredo gained unfettered access to a Russian government camp in Moscow that houses youth from the war-torn Donbas region. Though it is precisely the kind of centre that Yale HRL – and by extension, the ICC – have portrayed as a “re-education camp” for Ukrainian child hostages, he found a hotel full of happy campers receiving free classical music lessons in their native Russian language from first-class instructors – a “teddy bear,” as Raymond called it. At The Donbas Express music camp located just outside Moscow, youth told Loffredo they were grateful to have found refuge from the Ukrainian army’s years-long campaign of shelling and besiegement of their homeland. By fleeing the war in Donbas, these children had escaped a nightmarish military conflict for which Yale HRL and the ICC have demonstrated little or no concern.[7]

Membership

Map of the world with parties to the International Criminal Court
  International Criminal Court members
  Signed but not ratified and have accepted the court's jurisdiction
  Signed but not ratified
  Neither signed nor acceded

NATO Impunity

The court echoes a wider culture of impunity for NATO members, so, for example, Radovan Karadžić was jailed for 40 years as a war criminal, but George W. Bush and Tony Blair have not even been charged for committing a war of aggression which is widely understood to have been illegal and which even a UK Deputy Prime Minister termed as auch.[8]


 

Known members

121 of the 122 of the members already have pages here:

MemberDescription
Afghanistan"The graveyard of empires" - Afghanistan has a reputation for undoing ambitious military ventures and humiliating would-be aggressors.
AlbaniaA small country in Southeastern Europe.
AndorraA micro state in Europe. An enclave between France and Spain.
Antigua and BarbudaSmall island nation in the Caribbean Sea, formerly part of the British Empire.
ArgentinaSecond biggest country in South America.
AustraliaA large island nation in the southern hemisphere which is pioneering universal surveillance of its citizenry.
AustriaGerman-speaking republic in Central Europe. Since the end of the Cold War, Austria has become increasingly westernised.
Bangladesh8th most populated country in the world. Formerly part of the British Empire.
BarbadosScenic Caribbean island nation. Formerly part of the British Empire
BelgiumFormer European colonial power
BelizeThe only Central American country which is a Commonwealth realm.
BeninFrench speaking country in West Africa.
BoliviaMountainous country in South America, a large producer of cocaine. Formerly part of the Spanish Empire.
Bosnia and Herzegovinasmall nation in the Balkans.
BotswanaCountry in Southern Africa. Formerly part of the British Empire, Botswana is one of the most sparsely populated countries in the world.
BrazilVery large and not particularly populous country which has made a priority of biofuels.
BulgariaThe poorest country in the European Union.
Burkina FasoAfrican country; formely part of the French Empire.
CambodiaA Buddhist nation in Indochina.
CanadaIf tar sands are counted, Canada possesses the 3rd largest oil reserves of any nation state.
Cape VerdeAfrican island nation. Independence from Portugal in 1975.
Central African RepublicUnstable, poor African country. They speak Sango and French in the CAR.
ChadArabic and French speaking desert nation in North Africa. Formerly part of the French Empire, Chad has seen instability in recent years.
ChileSpanish-speaking MEDC in South America. It occupies a long, narrow strip of land between the Andes to the east, and the Pacific Ocean to the west.
ColombiaColombia is an important state in the trafficking of cocaine to North America.
ComorosObscure island nation off the east coast of Africa. A nation formed at a crossroads of different civilisations, The Comoros is noted for its diverse culture.
Costa RicaAn armyless country between Nicaragua and Panama
CroatiaFormerly part of Yugoslavia, Croatia is westernising at a rapid rate, with membership of the European Union and NATO being achieved relatively quickly after independence.
CyprusA small, divided, island in the Mediterranean. Greek Cyrpus was aggressively pushing the COVID-19/Vaccine in May 2021.
Czech RepublicFormerly communist, central European nation.
Côte d'IvoireThe Ivory Coast.
Democratic Republic of the CongoA large country in central Africa, the majority of the former 'Belgian Congo'.
DenmarkMember of the EU, NATO.
Djiboutismall country in East Africa.
Dominican RepublicCaribbean country; shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti.
East TimorAn island country in Southeast Asia.
EcuadorOffered asylum to Julian Assange.
EireIsland off the coast of Great Britain. Ireland is a member of the EU but not NATO.
El SalvadorA small Spanish-speaking nation state in Central America. Brutal CIA proxy war in the 1980s
EstoniaEstonia is the most northern of the Baltic States. Formerly part of the USSR, now EU and NATO.
FijiOne of the world's first nation states to mandate Covid vaccination for certain adults.
FinlandNordic country, borders Russia.
FranceA European nation, former colonial power, permanent seat on the UNSC
GabonFrench speaking country on the west coast of Africa.
GambiaThe smallest country in mainland Africa.
GeorgiaA former part of the USSR.
Germany"The economic powerhouse of Europe" - Germany dominates the European Union.
GhanaFormerly known as the "Gold Coast", Ghana has one of the most stable governments in Africa. A member of the African Union and the Commonwealth of Nations
Greece"In 2006... the third biggest arms importer after China and India."
GrenadaA Caribbean island, that had a coup in the 1980s.
... further results

 

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References