And the embattled court got plenty of support from
traditional US allies in Europe who stood up against the Trump measure.
“Sanctioning the ICC
threatens the court’s independence and undermines the international criminal
justice system as a whole,” said European Council President António Costa, who
heads the summits of the European Union’s 27 leaders. It was the toughest direct
criticism to a decision by Trump by a top EU official since he took office
again last month.
The White House issued the executive order on
Thursday in response to what it called “illegitimate and baseless actions
targeting America and our close ally Israel”. The US and Israel aren’t members of the court and
don’t recognise it’s authority, and Trump’s order was a response to the arrest
warrant that the ICC issued last year for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu over alleged war crimes in Gaza. Tens of thousands of Palestinians,
including children, have been killed during the Israeli military’s response to
Hamas’ attack on southern Israel that killed around 1,200 people in October
2023. The figure of Palestinians killed is provided by Gaza’s Health Ministry,
which doesn’t distinguish between fighters and civilians.
The Hague-based court said that it “condemns” the
move by the Trump administration. “The Court stands firmly by its personnel and pledges to continue
providing justice and hope to millions of innocent victims of atrocities across
the world,” the court said in a statement.
“We call on our 125 States Parties, civil society and all nations of the world
to stand united for justice and fundamental human rights,” it said...The US
Treasury and State Department will determine which people and organisations
will be sanctioned.
The ICC caught the
wrath of the United States in November, when a pretrial panel of judges issued
arrest warrants for Netanyahu, his former defence minister and Hamas’ military
chief, accusing them of war crimes and crimes against humanity in connection
with the war in Gaza....
On Friday, human rights groups have criticised the
decision. “US sanctions
against ICC officials would be a gift to those around the globe responsible for
mass atrocities. Sanctions are for human rights violators, not those working to
hold rights abusers to account,” Liz Evenson, international justice director at
Human Rights Watch, said in a statement...The
Netherlands, which hosts the court, has also condemned Trump’s order. “The
Netherlands regrets the executive order imposing sanctions on the ICC. The
court’s work is essential in the fight against impunity,” Foreign Affairs
Minister Caspar Veldkamp said in a statement. People in the Dutch
government say the Netherlands has been trying to assist the court in shielding
itself from the fallout.
It is the second time that Trump has gone after the
court. During his previous
term in office, he imposed sanctions on former prosecutor Fatou Bensouda and
one of her deputies over her investigation into crimes committed in
Afghanistan. US President Joe Biden lifted the sanctions when he took office in
2021.