Todos os artigos de International Criminal Court (ICC)
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Russian President Vladimir Putin is shown in Moscow in March 2022, shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine.
Mikhaul Klimentyev/Sputnik/AFP via Getty Images
The International Criminal Court announced an arrest warrant for Putin and his children’s rights commissioner in March 2023, alleging the illegal abduction and deportation of Ukrainian children.
The Day of Memory for Truth and Justice is held every year in the Plaza de Mayo in Buenos Aires commemorating the victims of the military dictatorship, March 24 1976 to December 10 1983.
Esteban Osorio/Alamy
Hundreds of children were stolen from their parents during the dictatorship in Argentina, but over the years some have been reunited with their families.
A kindergarten in Kharkiv, Ukraine, destroyed by Russian shelling.
Getty Images
The deportation of children during war goes to the heart of important and far-reaching human rights conventions. But bringing perpetrators to justice will be a long and complex process.
Croat leaders Jadranko Prlic, Bruno Stojic, Slobodan Praljak, Milivoj Petkovic, Valentin Coric and Berislav Pusic stand trial at the Hague in 2013.
Creative Commons
The International Criminal Tribunals for Rwanda (ICTR) and for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) have tried dozens of individuals. An investigation looks at how the accused experienced these trials.
Deportation of students, painting by Jacek Malczewski, 1884.
Wikimedia Commons
Centuries before the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the expulsion of individuals or even entire nations was used as a targeted instrument of war.
Presidents Cyril Ramaphosa and Vladimir Putin at the first Russia-Africa Summit in Sochi, Russia, in 2019.
Photos: GCIS
Maria Lvova-Belova, wanted by the ICC along with Vladimir Putin, is one of a handful of women to be prosecuted in international criminal law.
Crime scene? Vladimir Putin visits Mariupol, which Russia captured in May 2022 after the deaths of thousands, including many civilians.
EPA-EFE/Russian presidential press service
The list of crimes for which Putin is considered complicit is long. The question is whether he can be held accountable.
A woman wrapped in the Ukrainian flag shouts through a megaphone during a demonstration in front of the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands, in March 2022.
(AP Photo/Phil Nijhuis)
The International Criminal Court’s charges against Vladimir Putin are likely to have a minimal impact on him, but it does signal that wartime atrocities have consequences — and the world is watching.
This is a digitally generated image of what a city might look like after a war.
Getty Images
Urban spaces are a repository of people’s beliefs, memories and collective conscience.
Thousands of teddy bears with candles on display at a protest in Brussels in February 2023 represented abducted Ukrainian children.
Nicolas Maeterlinck/Belga MAG/AFP via Getty Images
Many genocide classes review the Holocaust or Cambodia’s Killing Fields. A scholar wanted to show that genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing still happen today.
LRA commander Dominic Ongwen at the International Criminal Court in 2016.
Peter Dejong / EPA-EFE
Ongwen’s case ends the blanket amnesty that African courts have always granted ex-child abductees over war crimes
Merrick Garland, center, announcing on Nov. 18, 2022, that he will appoint a special counsel for the Department of Justice investigation into former President Donald Trump.
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
Special counsels are not entirely independent, but they do still help administrations avoid the perception of bias.
Local residents help exhume the body of a 16-year-old Ukrainian girl, killed by Russian forces, in Kherson, Ukraine in November 2022.
Chris McGrath/Getty Images
Prosecuting a leader like Vladimir Putin accused of war crimes is difficult. But the trial of Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic in the early 2000s offers a potential playbook.
Jacinda Ardern addressing the UN General Assembly in September 2022.
Getty Images
Small states have limited power to influence global events, but New Zealand can still up its game in an increasingly lawless and dangerous world.
William Ruto (L, back row), Henry Kosgey (C, back row) and radio presenter Joshua Arap Sang (R, back row), at the ICC in 2011, charged in connection with post-election violence.
LEX VAN LIESHOUT/AFP via Getty Images