human rights protection

ICC marks 20th anniversary with a high-level conference

ICC President Judge Piotr Hofmański delivers the opening remarks of the conference “The ICC at 20: Reflections on the past, present and future” on 1 July 2022
© ICC-CPI

1 July 2022, the International Criminal Court hosted a high-level conference in The Hague to mark the institution’s 20th anniversary. The conference “The ICC at 20: Reflections on the past, present and future” gathered close to 300 participants in The Hague, including representatives of international organizations and tribunals, bar associations, States, academia and civil society, as well as thousands of viewers across the globe.

Speakers discussed the Court’s achievements in its first two decades, specific aspects of the ICC’s operations, and areas in need of further development in the international criminal justice system going forward.

“The ICC has come an incredibly long way in these 20 years,” stated ICC President Judge Piotr Hofmański in his opening remarks. “The ICC’s jurisprudence has broken new ground on matters such as the use of child soldiers, destruction of cultural heritage, and the participation of victims in the judicial proceedings… In this exceptionally busy year, today’s conference offers us a brief moment to stop and reflect on the path the ICC has travelled so far,” he stated.

The keynote speaker of the conference, former ICC President and Chair of the Rome Conference of 1998, where the ICC’s Rome Statute was adopted, Judge Philippe Kirsch emphasized “Whether the ICC could be created today is an open question. Without a doubt, the need certainly is unfortunately still there. Allegations of crimes under the Rome Statute are staggering, including in forms that we all believed belonged to the past. It is equally clear that some national systems are indeed unwilling or unable to ensure their repression, when they are not part themselves in their commission. … Therefore, as we mark the 20th anniversary, there is good reason to celebrate the fact that the ICC was created when it was possible, and in a way that allowed bringing the great majority of states into the system.”

The International Criminal Court is the first permanent international criminal court established to help end impunity for the perpetrators of the most serious crimes of concern to the international community, namely war crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide and the crime of aggression.

The conference sessions are available online on the ICC YouTube Channel.

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Keywords

justice human rights protection International Criminal Court