- home
- facet
- Rome Statute
Rome Statute
ai generated text
The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court was adopted on July 17, 1998, and entered into force on July 1, 2002, establishing the International Criminal Court (ICC) to prosecute core international crimes, including genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and the crime of aggression. The ICC can only investigate and prosecute these crimes in situations where states are unable or unwilling to do so themselves, and has jurisdiction over crimes committed in the territory of a state party or by a national of a state party, with the exception of crimes authorized by the United Nations Security Council. As of February 2024, 124 states are party to the statute.learn more on wikipedia
Hungary to withdraw from ICC, government says during Netanyahu visit
- 10
- 54
- 9
Israeli Attacks on Gaza Reproductive Healthcare Deemed Genocidal by UN Experts
- 11
- 35
- 1
Philippines arrests ex-leader Duterte in ICC case over drug killings
- 16
- 61
- 7
United States Imposes Sanctions on the International Criminal Court
- 14
- 78
- 12
Argentina withdraws from the World Health Organization
- 9
- 26
- 11
Trump calls Gaza a demolition site, wants to permanently displace Palestinians
- 147
- 407
- 48
US and Israel Officials Meet in Washington Amid Ongoing Discussions Over Second Phase of Gaza Ceasefire
- 15
- 75
- 14
International Criminal Court seeks arrest of Taliban leaders for persecution of Afghan women
- 6
- 18
- 4
Israel and Hamas Announce Ceasefire Agreement
- 76
- 219
- 27
Israel accused by HRW of restricting Gaza water supply in act of genocide
- 7
- 35
- 2
Israel seeks to suspend arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant
- 4
- 22
- 6
Lebanese civilians return home as Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire appears to hold
- 41
- 122
- 12
perspectives
- 1.Israel-Palestine Conflict
- 2.2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel
- 3.US Foreign Policy
- 4.Israel under Benjamin Netanyahu
- 5.Israel Foreign Policy
- 6.US under Donald Trump
- 7.Israel-US Relations
- 8.British Foreign Policy
- 9.Multilateralism
- 10.Islamic Terrorism
- 11.Qatar Foreign Policy
- 12.Hungary under Viktor Orbán
countries
- 1.United States
- 2.Russian Federation
- 3.Israel
- 4.Palestine, State of
- 5.Ukraine
- 6.China
- 7.Lebanon
- 8.Germany
- 9.Iran, Islamic Republic of
- 10.Egypt
- 11.South Africa
- 12.Qatar
organizations
- 1.International Court of Justice
- 2.United Nations
- 3.European Union
- 4.Hamas
- 5.Human Rights Watch
- 6.Hezbollah
- 7.Israel Defense Forces
- 8.White House
- 9.Amnesty International
- 10.UN Security Council
- 11.Republican Party
- 12.Telegram
persons
- 1.Benjamin Netanyahu
- 2.Yoav Galant
- 3.Joe Biden
- 4.Donald Trump
- 5.Vladimir Putin
- 6.Karim Khan
- 7.Muhammad Al-Deif
- 8.Israel Katz
- 9.Anthony Blinken
- 10.Emmanuel Macron
- 11.Itamar Ben Gvir
- 12.Aaron Boxerman