• About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Awards
Menu
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Awards
Facebook-f Twitter Youtube
  • HOME
  • Ireland/Europe
  • Eastern Partnership
  • Americas
  • Asia/Pacific
  • Africa/Middle East
  • Security
  • Climate
  • Interviews
  • About
  • HOME
  • Ireland/Europe
  • Eastern Partnership
  • Americas
  • Asia/Pacific
  • Africa/Middle East
  • Security
  • Climate
  • Interviews
  • About
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Awards
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Awards
Facebook-f Twitter Youtube


Helping You Understand the World
with Original Interviews, News
& Analysis from Ireland,
the EU and around the Globe

www.diplomacyireland.eu

DS 7 Long Image copy
  • HOME
  • Ireland/Europe
  • Eastern Partnership
  • Americas
  • Asia/Pacific
  • Africa/Middle East
  • Security
  • Climate
  • Interviews
  • About
Menu
  • HOME
  • Ireland/Europe
  • Eastern Partnership
  • Americas
  • Asia/Pacific
  • Africa/Middle East
  • Security
  • Climate
  • Interviews
  • About
Helping You Understand the World with Original Interviews, News & Analysis from Ireland, the EU and around the Globe www.diplomacyireland.eu
Keshk Square
Art of Coffee 500x500
Miena-Nougat-almondcoconutlemonhero
Soma 500x500
Airmid 500x500
Revolut Black 500x500
Wicklow Moinier 500x500
Holo Kombucha 500x500
Munster Mediation 500x500
Dublin Herbalists 500x500
Dublin Distillery 500x500
EPIC 500x500
Lucozade 500x500
Dingle Chocolates
Turkish Black 500x500
Britvic 500x500
Oriel New 500x500
Revolut White 500x500
Munster Brewery 500x500
Jeanie Johnston 500x500
Turkish White 500x500
Dublin Herbalist No2 500x500
Fantastic Flavours 500x500
Ribena Bottles 500x500
Ribena 500x500
Wrist Pocket 500x500
Milseologe
Inis Fragrance 500x500
Machado Beard Oil 500 x 500
  • HOME
  • Ireland/Europe
  • Eastern Partnership
  • Americas
  • Asia/Pacific
  • Africa/Middle East
  • Security
  • Climate
  • Interviews
  • About
Menu
  • HOME
  • Ireland/Europe
  • Eastern Partnership
  • Americas
  • Asia/Pacific
  • Africa/Middle East
  • Security
  • Climate
  • Interviews
  • About
Home News & Analysis

Ireland Nominates Fergal Gaynor for Election as ICC Prosecutor

Editor by Editor
6 April 2021
in News & Analysis
0
0
SHARES
31
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

by Miceál O’Hurley
Diplomatic Editor

 

The Hague — Ireland has nominated Judge Fergal Gaynor for election as the next Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC).  Ireland is a committed supporter of the ICC, which is a central element of the framework for international criminal justice and accountability.

Minister of Foreign Affairs – Simon Coveney, T.D.

Speaking about the nomination, the Minister for Foreign Affairs, Simon Coveney T.D., said, “I am very pleased to nominate Judge Fergal Gaynor for election as the next ICC Prosecutor. The ICC needs a strong, experienced and effective Prosecutor who will exercise sound judgment and lead the ICC in the coming years. Judge Gaynor combines experience of civil and common law systems, strong management skills and an independent and principled vision for this vital role. I believe he will make an excellent Prosecutor.”

Gaynor, born to Irish parents then teaching in Malawi, was raised in Westmeath.  He studied law at Trinity College (Dublin) and Cambridge.  Since 2001, Gaynor has specialised in international criminal justice.  Prior to his nomination by Ireland, Gaynor served on prosecution teams pursuing leading members of the Bosnian Serb leadership, the Khmer Rouge and the Interim Government of Rwanda.  In 2020, he was one of six new judges appointed to a special court in the Hague to hear matters relating to crimes committed during the war in Kosovo.

 

Election of the Prosecutor

ICC Prosecutor Nominees – Khan, Gaynor and Sastresana Fernández  (Image Courtesy – Justiceinfo.net)

The Prosecutor of the ICC is an instrumental officer of the Court, heading the Office of the Prosecutor, which is responsible for investigating and prosecuting individuals for alleged genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes in circumstances where States are unwilling or unable to hold the perpetrators accountable.  The election for the ICC Prosecutor is expected to take place at the upcoming, New York hosted, Second Resumed Session of the 19th Assembly of States Party to the Rome Statute.  There are 123 States eligible to vote in the election.  The Prosecutor is elected by an absolute majority of votes which are cast by secret ballots.

Currently, there are three nominated candidates for election as ICC Prosecutor, Judge Fergal Gaynor (nominated by Ireland); Mr. Karim Khan, Q.C. (Nominated by the United Kingdom); and, Mr. Carlos Castresana Fernández (Nominated by Spain).  Nominations by State Parties to the Rome Statute are eligible to nominate further candidates up to Wednesday, 10 February at 5:00 p.m. (GMT).

 

ICC Agenda Includes Ground-Breaking, High Profile Prosecutions

ICC Prosecutor – Ms Fatou Bensouda

The term of the current Prosecutor, Ms Fatou Bensouda, ends in June 2021.  Ms. Bensouda has been widely praised for reinvigorrating the ICC with aggressive but measured high level investigations and prosecutions.  Noted for being cautious, Bensouda sometimes sought clearance from the ICC before pursuing investigations or prosecutions where novel issues of law or jurisdiction were concerned, almost always prevailing.  Her stewardship over the Office of the Prosecutor at the ICC has been widely hailed by legal scholars and human rights advocates alike, often to the frustration of responsible parties who strenuously objected or previously considered themselves beyond the reach of the ICC.

 

Israel-Palestine
The ICC announced that it has jurisdiction in Palestine, clearing its chief Prosecutor to investigate alleged atrocities despite fierce Israeli objections.  Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, lashed out at the ruling and made clear Israel would act to “protect our citizens and soldiers in every way from legal persecution”.  Bensouda had earlier announced her intention to open a formal inquiry into alleged war crimes in the occupied West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip.  Owing to Palestine’s status as an ‘Occupied Territory’ rather than a ‘Sovereign Country’ Ms. Bensouda delayed action until the ICC, sitting at the Hague, affirmed the ICC had authority to act in Palestine.  The decision came on the heels of Palestinian Authority using its UN Observer Status (gained in 2012) to join the ICC and therefore ground its call for an investigation into Israeli actions.  The ICC has made clear it will also investigate conduct of the Gaza-based Hamas organisation.

Protestors Outside ICC in The Hague – 2020 (Photograph: Peter deJong/AP)

The investigation is expected to enquire into conduct following the 2014 war between Israel and Hamas. The ICC has indicated it is particularly concerned over the alleged extrajudicial killings of more than 200 Palestinians, including more than 40 children were allegedly killed by Israeli occupation forces.  In a landmark argument, Bensouda stated there was a ‘reasonable basis‘ to believe that Israel had committed war crimes by resettling Israelis into the West Bank.  The Fourth Geneva Convention, to which Israel is a signatory, prohibits the resettlement or transfer of civilians into occupied lands.  Under numerous Resolutions, most notably in 1979 and 1980, the UN, employing international law, concluded Israel is an occupying power violating international law by resettling Israelis into the West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights, which are deemed to be Palestinian Territories.  UN Security Council Resolution 446 specifically cited Israel’s violation of the 4th Geneva Convention to call upon Israel to cease resettlement of Israelis into the occupied territories.  Israel refutes that the Fourth Geneva Convention gives de jour jurisdiction over the Palestinian Occupied Territories and do not apply to their settlements..

 

Russia-Ukraine

Ukrainians Protest Alleged Russian Persecution of Tatars in Crimea (Getty Images Photo)

In December 2020, Bensouda made further headlines by announcing the ICC had concluded its investigation into war crimes allegedly committed by Russia in Crimea and Eastern Ukraine following the 2014 attempted annexation of Crimea by Russia and the outbreak of hostilities in Eastern Ukraine.  Russia had effectively ended its cooperation with the ICC following a damning report in 2016.  Russia, while a signatory, has steadfastly refused to ratify the Rome Statute.  However, the ICC concluded it has authority over Russian citizens who may have committed certain crimes on Ukrainian territory based upon Ukraine’s accepting the ad hoc jurisdiction of the ICC.  Following Ukraine’s complaint, initiated in 2015, based upon hostilities following the 2014 Maidan events, the ICC took up the matter.  As with the ICC’s reasoning In RE: Israel, the ICC determined that Crimea, which is recognised as Ukrainian sovereign territory, is considered occupied territory under international humanitarian law (IHL) and Russia’s militarily was additionally involved in the conflict in eastern Ukraine (paras 158, 169-170), which brings Russian Federation citizen’s conduct under the purview of the ICC.  Russia’s position that they have failed to ratify the Rome Statute and have withdrawn their signature from it does not, in law, preclude them from ICC jurisdiction.

Beyond complaints of extrajudicial killings of Ukrainians, many of them ethnic Tatar minorities, and numerous abuses of human rights and war crimes, Russia is considered to have illegally resettled at least 140,000 Russian into Ukraine’s Crimea since 2014.  As access to Crimea is severely restricted, there is no way of verifying the number of Russians resettled in Crimea, but human rights organisations claim the figure to be more than 250,000 Russians resettled illegally in Crimea.  Moreover, Ukrainian citizens, including the indigenous Tatars, complain of being forced to leave their homeland under Russian occupation and forcibly settled with Russian citizenship against their will.

 

United States-Afghanistan

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Attorney General William Barr Announce Revocation of ICC Prosecutor Bensouda’s Visa to Travel to the US – June 2020 (US State Department Photo)

The ICC has also vigourously pursued investigations into the conduct of the United States and its citizens during its more-than-a-decade-long war in Afghanistan.  Despite the US not being a signatory to the Rome Statute, the ICC accepted jurisdiction only to see President Donald Trump order Bensouda barred from entering the United States as part of sanctions designed to intimidate the ICC.

A March 2020 ruling by the Appeals Chamber of the ICC sitting at The Hague announced the ICC could proceed with its investigation into war crimes allegedly committed by the United States and its citizens.  This groundbreaking decision may, for the first time, see US citizens appear as defendants before the ICC, a step that alarms the US.  While the Biden Administration generally rejects the unilateralism and isolationism that marked the Trump era it continues to remain aloof of submission to ICC jurisdiction.

Bensouda previously announced the ICC had gathered enough information to prove that US forces had “committed acts of torture, cruel treatment, outrages upon personal dignity, rape and sexual violence” in Afghanistan between 2003-2004.  Moreover, she has asserted that the US allegedly extended their sphere of illegal conduct by operating covert CIA facilities in Poland, Romania and Lithuania where the US stands accused of employing torture and numerous other human rights abuses in what the US euphemistically called ‘extraordinary rendition‘.

The ICC is additionally looking into war crimes allegedly committed by the Taliban.

Tags: CrimeaElectionFatou BensoudaFergal GaynorFernandezICCIrelandIsraelKhanKosovoMiceal O'HurleyPalestinianPompeoProsecutorRussiaSimon CoveneySpainTrumpUKUkraineUNUSWar Crimes
Previous Post

Minister Simon Coveney Agrees Second Joint Plan of Action for Enhanced Cooperation with Germany

Next Post

Minister Thomas Byrne on the Northern Ireland Protocol at the Oireachtas Joint Committee on EU Affairs

Editor

Editor

Next Post

Minister Thomas Byrne on the Northern Ireland Protocol at the Oireachtas Joint Committee on EU Affairs

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.

Stay Connected test

  • 23.9k Followers
  • 99 Subscribers
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Dr. Sasa – UN Envoy of the National Unity Government (Myanmar) to Receive Special Award

Dr. Sasa – UN Envoy of the National Unity Government (Myanmar) to Receive Special Award

10 December 2021
Friend, Activist and Humanitarian Dies – Martin Reuther, R.I.P.

Friend, Activist and Humanitarian Dies – Martin Reuther, R.I.P.

7 November 2021
Is Ireland Undermining EU Sanctions Against Russia?

Is Ireland Undermining EU Sanctions Against Russia?

2 January 2023
His Excellency Mr. Ophir Kariv to Receive Diplomatic Service Medal with Honours

His Excellency Mr. Ophir Kariv to Receive Diplomatic Service Medal with Honours

14 November 2021
Live from Rome – What Is Next for Catholic Church?

Live from Rome – What Is Next for Catholic Church?

0
Interview with EU High Commission About Growing Tigray, Ethiopia Aid Crisis

Interview with EU High Commission About Growing Tigray, Ethiopia Aid Crisis

0
An Tanaiste Simon Coveney TD meets with book ambassador Sarah Fitzgerald

An Tanaiste Simon Coveney TD meets with book ambassador Sarah Fitzgerald

0
Brexit, Ireland and the Ukrainian Factor

Brexit, Ireland and the Ukrainian Factor

0
Live from Rome – What Is Next for Catholic Church?

Live from Rome – What Is Next for Catholic Church?

30 April 2025
Despite Measurable Progress – The West Mutes Syrian Agency

Despite Measurable Progress – The West Mutes Syrian Agency

23 April 2025
Botswana’s International Relations and Diamonds Shine at ADF 2025

Botswana’s International Relations and Diamonds Shine at ADF 2025

16 April 2025
Trump Continues to Undermine Ukraine

Trump Continues to Undermine Ukraine

6 March 2025

Recent News

Live from Rome – What Is Next for Catholic Church?

Live from Rome – What Is Next for Catholic Church?

30 April 2025
Despite Measurable Progress – The West Mutes Syrian Agency

Despite Measurable Progress – The West Mutes Syrian Agency

23 April 2025
Botswana’s International Relations and Diamonds Shine at ADF 2025

Botswana’s International Relations and Diamonds Shine at ADF 2025

16 April 2025
Trump Continues to Undermine Ukraine

Trump Continues to Undermine Ukraine

6 March 2025

│ Contact Details

Mailing Address

Diplomacy in Ireland - The European Diplomat
Miceal O'Hurley
16 Carleton Village Apartments
Youghal, Co. Cork P36 H213

Phone Number

Telephone | WhatsApp: +353 86 107 0017

E-mail

editor@diplomacyireland.eu

Social Links

Facebook Twitter Youtube

│ Latest News

Battle for Myanmar’s Seat at UN Deferred by China-US Brokered Deal

New York City Mayor Collaborates with Secretary General on UN Vaccine Mandate – Russia Protests Amongst Collegiality by Others

Ireland’s September Presidency of the UNSC Has Daunting Programme – Afghanistan and Peacekeeping Tops List

Foreign Direct Investment in focus on ‘In Conversation This Week’ with Dan Bilak, Esq., Senior Counsel, Kinstellar – Leading Independent Law Firm in Emerging Europe, Turkey and Central Asia

Minister Byrne Welcomes the Publication of Eurofound’s Report on “Social Factors Shaping Optimism and Pessimism Among Citizens”

Battle for Myanmar’s Seat at UN Deferred by China-US Brokered Deal

Live from Rome – What Is Next for Catholic Church?

Despite Measurable Progress – The West Mutes Syrian Agency

Botswana’s International Relations and Diamonds Shine at ADF 2025

Trump Continues to Undermine Ukraine

Erdoğan Signals Openess to Broker Ukraine-Russian Peace Deal

│ Sitemap

Home
Ireland/European Union
Eastern Partnership (EaP)
Americas
Africa/Middle East
Asia/Pacific
Security
Climate
Interviews
VIdeos
About Us

│ Our GDPR Policy

Click Here to see our GDPR Privacy Policy

© Copyright 2020, All rights reserved.

Home
About
Diplomatic List
Contact