Prosecutors have been given the green light to investigate alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity in Afghanistan
- and beyond its borders – linked to Afghan, Taliban and US troops, the International Criminal Court said on Thursday.
The decision, reached unanimously on appeal by judges at the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague, overturns an earlier decision vetoing an inquiry, on the grounds that it “would not be in the interests
of justice”.
“The Appeals Chamber found that the Prosecutor is authorised to investigate…the crimes alleged to have been committed on
the territory of Afghanistan since 1 May 2003,” the ICC said in a statement, “as well as other alleged crimes that have
a nexus to the armed conflict in Afghanistan and are sufficiently linked to the situation in Afghanistan and were
committed on the territory of other States Parties.”Investigation appeal first made in 2017
The probe will be led by ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda, who made the request to to the ICC’s Pre-Trial Chamber in
November 2017.
At the time, her Office cited grave crimes “and the absence of relevant national proceedings against those who appear to
be most responsible for the most serious crimes”.
The ICC Prosecutor’s request covered alleged abuses committed in Afghanistan since 1 May 2003, as well as other alleged
crimes since 1 July 2002, which were committed by States Parties to the Rome Statute – the 1998 international agreement
that led to the formation of the court.Afghan, Taliban and U.S. forces in spotlight
USpecifically, Ms. Bensouda will be seeking to investigate crimes against humanity and war crimes by the Taliban and
their affiliated Haqqani Network; war crimes by the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) and in particular, members of
the National Directorate for Security (NDS) and the Afghan National Police (ANP).
The ICC Prosecutor is also set to probe alleged war crimes by U.S. military personnel in Afghanistan and by members of
the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in “secret detention facilities” in Afghanistan “and on the territory of other
States Parties to the Rome Statute, principally in the period of 2003-2004”.
In an earlier statement, Ms. Bensouda’s Office said that “that there are no substantial reasons to believe that the
opening of an investigation would not serve the interests of justice, taking into account the gravity of the crimes and
the interests of victims”.
The Prosecutor maintained that her Office’s sole objective was to investigate and prosecute alleged war crimes and
crimes against humanity “independently, impartially and objectively”.
U.S. Secretary of State Michael Pompeo has issued a statement calling the court’s decision “a truly breathtaking action
by an unaccountable political institution, masquerading as a legal body”, adding that it “is all the more reckless” as
it came just days after the signing of a “historic peace deal” between Washington and the Taliban.
“This is yet another reminder of what happens when multilateral bodies lack oversight and responsible leadership, and
become instead a vehicle for political vendettas. The ICC has today stumbled into a sorry affirmation of every
denunciation made by its harshest critics over the past three decades”, he stated.Court can issue summons to ‘no matter who’
For the purposes of its investigation, the ICC Prosecutor can request that the court’s judges issue summons to appear or
arrest warrants “no matter who the perpetrator”, for alleged atrocity crimes committed in connection with the Situation
in Afghanistan, her Office said.
In addition to Afghanistan, the ICC Prosecutor’s Office has been conducting investigations in Burundi, Uganda; the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, Darfur, Sudan; the Central African Republic, Kenya, Libya, Côte d'Ivoire, Mali and
Georgia.
Preliminary examinations have also begun into the registered vessels of Comoros, Greece and Cambodia; as well as into
Colombia, Gabon, Guinea, Iraq/UK, the Occupied Palestinian Territories, Nigeria and Ukraine.