Investigation by the Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court
Ukraine has a long and complicated relationship with the International Criminal Court. On 20 January 2000, Ukraine signed the Rome Statute of the ICC. In the following year the Constitutional Court of Ukraine decided that Ukraine could not ratify the Rome Statute as it contradicted Article 124 of the Constitution of Ukraine as a complementary to the national justice institution[455].
Following the Revolution of Dignity in 2013 and the outbreak of the armed conflict in Ukraine, there had been increasingly frequent discussions among government officials at various levels about engaging the International Criminal Court in the investigation of those events. As a result, the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine adopted two declarations recognising the Court's jurisdiction. The first declaration concerned the events of Maidan between 21 November 2013 and 22 February 2014[456]. The second concerned the consequences of the armed conflict on the territory of Ukraine in relation to the annexation and occupation of Crimea and armed hostilities in Donetsk and Luhansk regions[457]. As the second declaration covered the period from 20 February 2014 with no end date, the ICC also has jurisdiction over events after 24 February 2022. The declaration specifically draws attention to the actions of ‘...senior officials of the Russian Federation and leaders of the terrorist organisations “DPR” and “LPR”...’[458].
Despite the fact that the Office of the Prosecutor of the ICC had been presenting its preliminary conclusions on the situation in Ukraine since 2015, the issue of joining the ICC as a full-fledged state party had not been on Ukraine’s political agenda for many years. However, during the negotiations on Ukraine's membership in the European Union, the ratification of the Rome Statute was identified as one of the key conditions. On 16 September 2014, the Association Agreement between Ukraine and the European Union and the European Atomic Energy Community was ratified[459]. Article 8 of the Agreement stipulates that ‘The Parties shall cooperate in promoting peace and international justice by ratifying and implementing the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) of 1998 and its related instruments’. In response to this provision, the Ukrainian Constitution was amended in 2016 to enable the consideration of the ratification of the Rome Statute. This amendment entered into force on 30 June 2019[460]. Although the need to join the ICC has been discussed at the legislative level multiple times since 2019, it is yet to happen. The key reservation against ratification is that the Ukrainian military is against ratification along with various other excuses. One of the most recent official decisions of the Ukrainian government states that the issue of ratification of the Rome Statute will be considered within one year after the end/termination of martial law in Ukraine[461].
On 2 March 2022, the ICC Prosecutor opened an investigation into the situation in Ukraine following the referral by 43 ICC states parties pursuant to Article 14 of the Rome Statute[462].
Since March 2022, the ICC Prosecutor Karim A.A. Khan KC has already visited Ukraine five times[463]. The ICC investigators are working directly in the field, with a total of 42 investigators, experts, and other Court personnel were deployed to Ukraine[464]. In particular, these include experts from the Netherlands provided by the country in support for the ICC investigation. All communication between the Office of the ICC Prosecutor and the Ukrainian authorities is carried out through the Office of the Prosecutor General, following the amendments to the Criminal Procedure Code of Ukraine[465].
In March 2023, the ICC issued arrest warrants for Vladimir Putin and Maria Lvova-Belova on charges of alleged war crimes, namely the unlawful deportation and unlawful transfer of children from Ukrainian territory to the Russian Federation under Articles 8(2)(a)(vii) and 8(2)(b)(viii) of the Rome Statute[466]. In March 2023, an agreement was signed to open a "field office" of the International Criminal Court in Ukraine[467].
On March 5, 2024, Pre-Trial Chamber II of the Court issued new arrest warrants for the systematic attacks on energy infrastructure between 10 October 2022 and 9 March 2023 as war crimes under Articles 8(2)(b)(ii), 8(2)(b)(iv) and crimes against humanity under Article 7(1)(k) of the Rome Statute[468]. On June 24, 2024, as part of the investigation into these facts, Pre-Trial Chamber II of the Court announced two new arrest warrants for Sergei Shoigu and Valery Gerasimov[469].
The key milestone for Ukraine's cooperation with the ICC was the ratification of the Rome Statute and its accession to the Court's system as a full-fledged state party on 1 January 2025[470]. When ratifying the Rome Statute, Ukraine also made a declaration under Article 124 of the Statute. The ratification law states: ‘Ukraine declares that, for a period of seven years after the entry into force of the Rome Statute for Ukraine, it does not recognize the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court over the crimes set forth in Article 8 (as amended) when the crime is alleged to have been committed by its nationals’[471]. It should be noted that Article 124 was deleted by the Assembly of States Parties back in 2015, as it did not comply with the spirit of the Statute and threatened to deprive victims of justice[472]. However, the amendment did not enter into force because it did not receive the required number of signatures. The implications of this article remain uncertain and depend on the Court's interpretation and decision.
The International Criminal Court remains the main accountability mechanism for grave crimes committed in the territory of Ukraine. Its investigation of the Ukraine situation is of interest not only to Ukraine but also other states. Additional financial support and engagement of experts from other countries to assist the investigation create an expectation of tangible outcomes from the ICC for this situation. At the same time, it is important to objectively assess the Court's capacity pertaining to its work in Ukraine:
The Court's jurisdiction over Ukraine excludes the crime of aggression
— Considering the requirements of the Rome Statute as well as strict limitations of the Kampala Amendment, the Court cannot consider the crime of aggression committed against Ukraine. The ICC Prosecutor also explicitly mentioned these constraints in his statement on the opening of the investigation[473].
The ICC does not have the resources to investigate all the crimes committed in Ukraine
— According to the statistics of the Ukrainian authorities, alleged violations of international criminal and humanitarian law in Ukraine are recorded daily and number is in the hundreds of thousands. Taking into account the Court's capacity, one cannot say that it will investigate absolutely all grave international crimes. The most optimistic forecasts suggest that the ICC will take up to five cases, but further consideration of other crimes will be left to either Ukraine’s domestic system or a special accountability mechanism should one be established in future[474].
It is unclear which individuals will be prosecuted by the Court
— Ukraine expects that the ICC will be able to prosecute senior officials of the Russian Federation, referring to the fact that ‘their immunity is irrelevant to the prosecution by the Court.’[475] The court’s updated policy on situation completion takes into account the availability of perpetrators to stand trial. Therefore, potentially, when identifying potential perpetrators before the ICC, it is possible to consider not only top, but also mid-level perpetrators, but ultimately will depend on the possibility of execution of arrest warrants issued by the Court[476]. At the same time, the progress of the cases of persons covered by the arrest warrants depends on their detention and transfer for further prosecution by the Court. Despite the fact that the ICC is currently considering the possibility of resolving certain proceedings in absentia, these proceedings will not cover the consideration of the merits of the case without the accused.
Cooperation of the ICC with Ukrainian authorities has a number of obstacles under national legislation of Ukraine
— On 3 May 2022, the Criminal Procedure Code of Ukraine was amended to include provisions on cooperation with the International Criminal Court[477]. The ability of the Office of the ICC Prosecutor to collect evidence, access crime scenes, approach witnesses and detainees is carried out within the constraints determined by Ukrainian law and in accordance with the procedures established for investigations in Ukraine. Ukraine’s often restrictive regulations (such as the powers of the Prosecutor General to ultimately decide whether the ICC investigators will have access to the necessary information) may adversely affect Ukraine's cooperation with the ICC and jeopardise the quality of the ICC’s investigation.
Communication on behalf of Ukraine and the ICC is carried out by the Office of the Prosecutor General, with various structural units involved in the process.
— The issue of international legal cooperation is under the authority of the relevant department at the Office of the Prosecutor General, which in turn has a separate unit for cooperation with the ICC. In addition, specialised unit within the War Crimes Department of the OPG is tasked with responding to the requests from the OTP of the ICC which they receive in relation to the investigations the Department is responsible for. There is also a unit that ensures cooperation with the JIT, which includes the ICC among their members. The coherency of internal communication processes within the OPG also affects the nature of its cooperation with the Court, given the scope of powers vested in the Prosecutor General in this domain. On the other hand, the excessive powers of the Prosecutor General to decide on granting the ICC staff permission to conduct procedural actions in Ukraine means there is broad scope for arbitrary decision-making.
The Court needs to continuously attract additional resources to conduct investigations.
— Every year, the Assembly of States Parties to the ICC approves the Court's budget for the following year, which allocates funds depending on the workload in the situations of ongoing investigations and preliminary examinations. States which referred Ukraine’s situation to the ICC so far have been supporting the Court's investigative efforts. But this support has mostly been by way of voluntary contributions rather than increasing the Court's regular budget in proportion to the number of investigations and overall resources required and secondments. For example, the Netherlands sent its own experts to join the team of investigators from the Office of the ICC Prosecutor in Ukraine[478]. The continuation of the ICC’s work in Ukraine will require the continued support of States Parties, both in terms of expertise and funding[479]. Voluntary contributions make the ICC vulnerable and dependent on the will of the states; moreover disproportionate distribution of the resources internally results in some of the Court’s organs lacking the capacity to perform their functions in accordance with their mandate.
The ICC is vulnerable to external sanctions which may be imposed by powerful non-States Parties.
— On 6 February 2025, the US President issued an executive order ‘Imposing sanctions on the International Criminal Court’, which stipulates the imposition of sanctions against the ICC for investigating, prosecuting, detaining or arresting representatives of the United States or its allies, unless these states have consented to the relevant jurisdiction and actions of the Court[480]. The decision was made in connection with the arrest warrants issued by the ICC against Benjamin Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant[481]. The first person to be sanctioned under President Trump's order was ICC Prosecutor Kareem Khan. On 9 January, the US House of Representatives supported the bill H.R.23 ‘Illegitimate Court Counteraction Act’, which provides for broad sanctions against the Court. It was later passed to the Senate and ultimately failed to be adopted[482]. This draft law, however, may again be submitted for consideration and adopted in parallel with the US President executive order.It is difficult to fully assess the extent of the negative impact of sanctions on the ICC, in particular given that their scope may change over time. In any case, they impede the ICC's investigations in all situations, including Ukraine, and jeopardise its political legitimacy[483]. The further functioning of the Court will depend on the support of the states parties to the Rome Statute, in particular the EU countries, which must ensure the full functioning of the institution, the availability and use of financial resources, and cooperation with service providers[484].