The International Criminal Court (ICC) was established in 2002 by a treaty, the Rome Statute 1998. Its purpose is to hold individuals accountable for serious crimes under international law and to facilitate justice for victims. In Myanmar, it is unlikely that fair trials examining crimes under international law will be possible anytime soon. The ICC exists for these situations, where domestic authorities are unable or unwilling to facilitate justice themselves.
The ICC focuses on the most serious crimes under international law: acts of genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes. These crimes are listed in the Rome Statute and the Court conducts trials against individuals alleged to have perpetrated these crimes.
Importantly, the ICC can only investigate and conduct trials if crimes took place in territory where the ICC has legal jurisdiction. There are four main ways in which the ICC can gain jurisdiction over a territory, and each of them offers a pathway for the investigation of crimes under international law in Myanmar:
These legal grounds provide multiple routes to extend ICC jurisdiction over all crimes in the Rome Statute perpetrated by Myanmar’s military against the Rohingya, including genocide. They also provide routes to extend ICC jurisdiction over all crimes perpetrated against civilians throughout Myanmar since 2002, including crimes perpetrated for many years against ethnic minorities throughout the country, and crimes perpetrated against civilians more broadly and particularly following the attempted coup of February 2021.
With multiple routes to ICC jurisdiction avail-able, and the ongoing widespread commission of human rights violations amounting to the most serious crimes under international law in Myanmar, the international community has a responsibility to ensure that leaders of the Myanmar military are prosecuted for genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes without further delay.
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