Statement of ICC Prosecutor, Karim A. A. Khan KC, to the United Nations Security Council on the Situation in Libya, pursuant to Resolution 1970 (2011).
Statement
of ICC Prosecutor, Karim A. A. Khan KC, to the United Nations Security Council
on the Situation in Libya, pursuant to Resolution 1970 (2011).
Mr President, Distinguished
Delegates, it’s a great privilege to have the opportunity once again to brief
the Security Council this morning.
I would like to express my
thanks to my brother, His Excellency the Permanent Representative of Libya to
the United Nations, for his attendance.
Mr President, Excellencies, it
was two and a half years ago when I first had the opportunity to brief the
Council in relation to the Libya situation, and in those remarks, through the
lens of Libya, I called for what in effect was a paradigm shift for a new
and constructive, new dynamic with this Council. I emphasised to all
members of the Council on that day that I would prioritise referrals to the
Court made by the Security Council, I would do my utmost to ensure more
resources were given to Security Council-referred situations, and I also
expressed the view that, in my respectful opinion, for too long the situation
in Libya and also Darfur had been allowed to drift. And I was committed to use
my best efforts, with the excellent colleagues that work in the Office, to
change things, to bring a new dynamic, and to give impactful, credible results
that we could show to the people of Libya, the victims in Libya, and also to
the Security Council.
And it was six months after
that initial briefing that I outlined and presented a renewed strategy in
relation to Libya. I detailed four key lines of inquiry that we would take
forward in order to deliver meaningfully, and I set out publicly benchmarks that
would be applied to our work so we could collectively measure progress being
made towards justice and accountability and the rule of law, and we could also
candidly discuss challenges that we could address together.
It’s my respectful view that
over the last 18 months we have indeed reinvigorated this work, and we have set
a basis for the successful realisation of the objectives I set out in the
strategic vision I detailed in April 2022. And whilst, as an officer of
the Court, I can’t – I am constrained in detailing all the progress that’s been
made, I can say that we have made strong progress in line with this renewed
strategy.
In the last six months alone,
as reflected in the report that we’ve lodged with the Secretariat, the Libya
Unified Team has completed 18 missions in three geographic areas. They have
collected more than 800 pieces of evidence, including video and audio material.
They have taken more than 30 statements – interview statements, screening
statements. And we’ve made significant progress in relation to the 2014-2020
period in terms of alleged crimes in detention centres in that period. We’ve
continued to provide concrete, tangible, and meaningful support in relation to
national proceedings involving crimes against migrants. And only in March, at
the end of March, I hosted members of the Joint Investigative Team at
headquarters in The Hague, in which we and the Team further detailed how we
could achieve synergies to make sure the crimes against these most vulnerable
individuals are properly investigated and prosecuted. Our work is moving
forward with increased speed and with a focus on trying to deliver on the legitimate
expectations of the Council and on civilians, on the people of Libya.
And today, in this, my sixth
report to the Council, the 27th in total, I think that we have a
landmark moment by announcing a roadmap in relation to what could be the
completion of the investigative stage in terms of Resolution 1970.
In presenting this roadmap that’s detailed with greater specificity in the report, I want to be clear, we’re not cutting and running, we’re not finding a way to exit stage left, we’re not gradually foreshadowing a curtailing of our work, a lack of focus, energy, or vigour, we’re not saying that we can’t deliver. That’s something I professionally cannot accept. It’s something I think the Council should not and would not accept, because you have referred a very serious matter to the International Criminal Court under Chapter VII realising that justice was essential for the people of Libya. Rather, the roadmap I have detailed in the report represents, I think, a genuine, a dynamic vision for the fulfilment of the mandate that you entrusted to us. It details a focus set of activities that we’ll implement, God willing, in the next 18 months and beyond to significantly expand the impact of our action in the Libya situation.
ICC Prosecutor Karim A.A. Khan
KC addresses members of the UN Security Council and H.E. Mr. Taher M. T.
El-Sonni, Permanent Representative of Libya to the United Nations, on 14 May
2024. UN Photo/Manuel Elías
And the roadmap is a
collective work. We are not the only operator on the international level. We
have to work shoulder to shoulder with the authorities in Libya, with the
Council, with all State Parties.
And there are positives. Only
last month, my Deputy Prosecutor, Nazhat Shameem Khan, the Deputy Prosecutor of
the Court with responsibility for the Libya situation, had a successful mission
to Tripoli, had a productive meeting with the Attorney General, and also met
with different civil society actors in Tripoli and also in Tunis. In the last
reporting period, more than 25 such engagements between my Office and civil
society organisations, and Libyan civil society in particular, have taken
place, and we’ve also continued a dialogue with the Council through
working-level briefings last month, outlining and trying to flesh out and give
more details as to the proposed roadmap.
And based upon that, I present
respectfully two key phases that are detailed in the written document.
The first is the intention,
the hope, the target to complete the investigative stage from now and by the
end of 2025. That’s the investigative stage of the situation. Of course, it’s
not going to be easy. It’s going to require cooperation, candour, a can-do
attitude from my Office, but also from the authorities in Libya. But that
period, hopefully, will give rise to even more additional applications for
warrants of arrest and also greater support by my Office to national
proceedings in Libya. Complementarity is a foundation of the Rome Statute, but
burden sharing is linked to that principle of complementarity, trying to
understand from the Libyan colleagues, the Libyan Attorney General, where their
problems are and trying to forge ahead with this principle that the rule of law
can be effective and must be applied equally. In addition, and linked to that,
we hope, and again it requires work, it requires focus, but we are trying to
improve and reinvigorate our approach to fugitive tracking, to arrests. And with
the help of Registry colleagues, the aim would be to give effect to arrest
warrants and to have at least initial proceedings start before the Court in
relation to at least one warrant by the end of next year.
The second part is judicial
and complementarity [activities], because if that goes to plan, following the
end of 2025, we want to move posture and try to help and support Libya. That
can start now: technical assistance, burden sharing, trainings, know-how, use
of artificial intelligence, technology, and technical skills of building these
types of cases. And focus, again with Libyan colleagues, on arrest and
tracking. And in parallel to all of that, we want to deepen on every level our
relationship with the Libyan authorities under complementarity. It can’t just
be with the Attorney General and the Deputy Prosecutor, or with myself and
other individuals; it needs to penetrate all strata of the Libyan authorities.
And they should know that they have in the Office of the Prosecutor, men and
women that are not driven by any political imperative or interest but are
really trying to give life and give purpose to the principle of equality before
the law and the value of the lives that have been lost in Libya to date.
Crucially, the roadmap, I
think, is something that the victims of Libya can look to as not hot air, not
spin, but something impactful and meaningful to advance their right to justice.
And I think it presents an opportunity to meaningfully deliver on Resolution
1970 that you passed in 2011.
But that is not a given,
because we need continued, increased support from Libya. We need to walk
shoulder to shoulder, together, not for our own individual interests or the
interests of the ICC or for a government, but for the interests of humanity and
the people of Libya.
And I think recently we’ve had
very positive news. Multiple-entry visas have been issued by the Libyan
authorities. That allowed my Deputy Prosecutor to go last month. There were
missions also in December last year, forensic experts also went last year. The meeting
between Deputy Prosecutor Nazhat Shameem Khan and His Excellency Al Sidieg Al
Sour, the Attorney General, I think, was extremely important, particularly
with regard to burden sharing and being candid in terms of what we can do and
the mutual roles of the authorities and the ICC, and starting and deepening a
dialogue that will strengthen not only the rule of law, but hopefully we can
work and help strengthen together the Attorney General’s Office as well, if
that is something the Libyan authorities wish to avail themselves of – that
cooperation and technical assistance.
We anticipate in the next
period there will be further missions from members of my Office to Tripoli. I
think there’s enthusiasm – I don’t think that’s pitching it too high – of our
opening an office in Tripoli. I think that will help complementarity, it will
help the investigations, it will help the discharge of Resolution 1970 and the
Rome Statute obligations. And so, plenty of positive news, given what I said
previously on the difficulties caused by the lack of visas. In addition to the
meeting with the Attorney General, it’s only right, Mr President, if I can also
applaud and thank positively His Excellency Mr Zeiad S. S. Daghim, the
Ambassador of Libya to the Kingdom of The Netherlands. I think his arrival has
ushered in also increased candour, partnership, and dialogue that is being felt
in terms of the cooperation, and I wish to applaud him and the Libyan
authorities for that change.
But to march forward it does
require solutions, not problems to every solution that is presented. This is a
choice. It’s mindset also, from my Office and from the Libyans. The world is
very imperfect. The law has some fundamental requirements that can’t be
airbrushed away or diluted, but it can be a solution to problems that exist.
And in my first briefing to the Council on this situation, I hoped,
I prayed, I intimated that there was an opportunity that if a cause could
unite this Council, naively perhaps, but I believed and hoped it would be the
cause of international criminal justice. Which State is in favour of genocide,
war crimes, or crimes against humanity? Which State doesn’t want to be a
protector of the vulnerable? Which State does not want to be on the side of
legality and against the kinds of violations that we see in so many parts of
the world? And notwithstanding all the difficulties that surround us in a very
often dysfunctional world, a world in which too many people feel exposed to the
elements, I still think this presents an opportunity, if we work together, if
we realised that continuing business as usual will lead us to the abyss and
beyond, to do the right thing and look at people that have little shelter, that
have suffered enormously for many different reasons, and that the rule of law
must count for them.
So, a paradigm shift is still
needed. It’s not going to be achieved by words, or a strategy, or a roadmap.
It’s something that we all, individually, as States, as the Council, and as
Libya, and my Office, we have to really try to be servants of something bigger
than ourselves. If we can allow the law to breathe at this moment, if we can
recognise that different States and different interests have certain situations
that are politically difficult for them but realise that there’s value in an
International Criminal Court that is not part of the political discourse, but
is trying and endeavouring to be deaf to the noise but applying something that
should be pristine and valuable, which is a yardstick of human conduct that
should bind us all to keep us away from that abyss that I mentioned, it could
yet be a moment of reawakening to change direction. Because otherwise, when one
looks at Libya, when one looks at other situations in the world, whether it’s
Ukraine, or whether it’s Palestine, or whether it’s the Rohingya, or whether
it’s any other place one wishes to look at, we see issues.
And so, this is the time, I
think, for the law to be allowed to breathe, as the Council has found, as a
precondition for stability and international peace and security, which are
direct responsibilities of the Council. To do that, Mr President, we need to
understand that the Rome Statute, the Geneva Conventions, customary
international law, and the UN Charter are part of the tapestry of civilisation
that will allow us to survive this present inclement weather, this present
perilous moment that we’re facing. If we are real and sincere that every human
life matters equally, the rule of law must apply in Libya as it must in every
other situation. We can only do that with your help, your support, your
solidarity for something otherwise, that can be rendered irrelevant but
something that can’t, and that is the law.
Mr President, thank you so
much for the opportunity. I always remain ready and willing to engage with the
Libyan authorities and also this Council. Thank you.